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MEDIA CONTACT: Judy Moore at (847)
491-4819 or jkm229@northwestern.edu
PDF version of this press release
Additional story links: | CBS
News | New
York Times | Playbill |
Richard Goode Awarded Jean Gimbel Lane Prize
in Piano Performance
EVANSTON, Ill. --- The Northwestern University School of Music
today (April 3) announced that pianist Richard Goode is the inaugural
winner of the $50,000 Jean Gimbel Lane Prize in Piano Performance.
The biennial award was established in 2005 to honor pianists
who have achieved the highest levels of national and international
recognition.
Goode, a New York native, has been hailed worldwide for music
making of tremendous emotional power, depth and expressiveness.
He is internationally recognized as one of today's leading interpreters
of Beethoven.
In addition to receiving a $50,000 cash award, the Jean Gimbel
Lane Prize winner spends two to three non-consecutive weeks in
residency at the School of Music engaging in master classes,
chamber music coaching and lecturing. He or she also performs
a public recital during one of the residency weeks.
Goode's initial Northwestern residency will take place the week
of March 6-9, 2007, with a public recital scheduled for March
9, at Pick-Staiger Concert Hall on the University's Evanston
campus.
"It is an honor to be the first recipient of the Jean Gimbel
Lane Prize in Piano Performance," said Goode. "I remember
with pleasure the sympathetic atmosphere of the School and the
high musical level in the master classes in prior years. I have
happy memories, as well, of playing in Pick-Staiger -- for me,
one of the finest small concert halls in the country. I very
much look forward to these coming visits to Northwestern."
"Richard Goode's impeccable and distinctive artistry is
unrivaled, and his presence on campus will be a true inspiration
to our students," said School of Music Dean Toni-Marie Montgomery.
"We are profoundly grateful to Jean Gimbel Lane and her
husband Bill Lane, for making this prize possible. School of
Music students and faculty, members of the University campus
community and local arts patrons will benefit from the various
activities during Mr. Goode's residencies."
Prize donor Jean Gimbel Lane is a 1952 graduate of Northwestern
University who majored in art history. Mrs. Lane and her husband,
Bill, live in the San Francisco Bay area.
Mrs. Lane noted, "Although I did not major in music at
Northwestern, music has been an important part of my life for
many years. Bill joins me in congratulating Richard Goode. May
his presence on campus be an enriching experience for him as
well as for Northwestern students, faculty and the community
at large." Mrs. Lane also acknowledged the efforts of Dean
Montgomery, who helped the Lanes develop this gift to support
piano studies.
Among Goode's other prizes are the Avery Fisher Prize, First
Prize in the Clara Haskil Competition and a Grammy Award with
clarinetist Richard Stoltzman. Goode has appeared with all the
major American and European orchestras and performs regularly
at the Edinburgh International Festival and BBC Proms, an annual
music festival of promenade concerts in London.
He has been heard in recital at Amsterdam's Concertgebouw, the
Salzburg Festival, London's Barbican Center and Queen Elizabeth
Hall as well as Carnegie Hall and other noted American venues.
This season he is featured at New York's Carnegie Hall as a "Carnegie
Perspective" artist and will present numerous concerts and
lecture/recitals there.
Goode is an exclusive Nonesuch label recording artist and has
made more than two dozen recordings representing a wide range
of repertoire. That repertoire includes a complete Beethoven
sonata cycle that was nominated for a 1994 Grammy Award. He is
as co-artistic director of the Marlboro Music School and Festival
with pianist Mitsuko Uchida.
For more biographical information on Goode visit his
artist info at Frank Salomon Associates.
Founded in 1895, the Northwestern University School of Music
is one of the oldest degree-granting music schools in the United
States, combining the resources of a world-class private research
university with conservatory-level musical training. Located
just north of the cultural center of Chicago, the school is home
to 620 undergraduate and graduate students and a world-renowned
faculty of more than 125, many of whom are members of the Chicago
Symphony and Chicago Lyric Opera orchestras.
Students may participate in 16 major ensembles that perform
a wide variety of repertoire. School of Music alumni are involved
in major arts institutions and universities worldwide in performance,
music administration and teaching.
The School of Music also sponsors the Michael
Ludwig Nemmers Prize in Musical Composition, a $100,000 biennial award established
in 2004. Its first recipient was John Adams.
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