Meng-Chieh Liu,
劉孟捷 piano
Recipient
of the prestigious Avery Fisher Career Grant, Meng-Chieh Liu first made
headlines in 1993 as a 21-year-old student at The Curtis Institute of
Music when he substituted at last minute's notice for André Watts at the
Academy of Music in Philadelphia. The concert earned high acclaim from
critics and audience alike, and was followed by a number of widely
praised performances, including a recital at the Kennedy Center and a
concert on the Philadelphia All-Star Series. Already an accomplished
artist at the time, Mr. Liu had made his New York orchestral debut two
years earlier.
Following Mr. Liu's triumph in Philadelphia, an appearance with the
Philadelphia Orchestra was immediately scheduled, but it was not to be.
The stellar beginning of his career was abruptly halted by a rare and
debilitating illness that affected his connective tissues. Hospitalized
and almost immobile for a year, doctors believed his chances for
survival were slim and, should he survive, playing the piano would be
"absolutely impossible." With arduous determination and relentless
physical therapy, Mr. Liu has been restored to full health and is now
once again performing on the concert stage. Since then, he has performed
throughout the world as a soloist in recitals and with orchestras under
conductors Christoph Eschenbach, Gustavo Dudamel and Alan Gilbert. In
2002, Liu received the Avery Fisher Career Grant and the Philadelphia
Musical Fund Society Career Advancement Award. A sought-after musician
and strong advocate of chamber music, Liu performs in music festivals
across the globe and has worked with international musicians Shmuel
Ashkenasi, David Soyer, Bernard Greenhouse, James Buswell, Wendy Warner
as well as the Borromeo and St. Lawrence Quartets. Liu also collaborates
with artists in varied disciplines, such as Mikhail Baryshnikov and the
White Oak Dance Project, among other dance companies. His concerts have
been heard over the airwaves around the world, and a biography on his
life was broadcast on Taiwanese National Television.
Born in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, Meng-Chieh Liu began his piano studies early,
and at age thirteen was accepted by The Curtis Institute of Music to
study with Jorge Bolet, Claude Frank, and Eleanor Sokoloff, and received
first prizes in the Stravinsky, Asia Pacific and Mieczyslaw Munz piano
competitions. Since 1993, Liu served on the piano and chamber music
faculties at The Curtis Institute of Music where he coordinated the
piano chamber music program from 1999-2009, and in 2006, he joined the
faculty at Roosevelt University. Liu also joined Chicago Chamber
Musicians in the fall of 2009, and now serves as co-Artistic Director of
the ensemble, where performances have already been acclaimed for his
"faultless, discreetly balanced pianism" (Chicago Classical Review).
(2011)
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