Intermusica Artists' Management

 

 

Intermusica represents Boris Giltburg worldwide

Manager:
Susie McLeod

Assistant to Artist Manager:
Felix Kemp

Other Links:

Emerging Artists 2012

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Boris Giltburg

Piano

“Richter and Rubinstein are this pianist's keyboard gods, and his playing has already been plausibly compared with theirs; here his weightless, crystalline sound brought out the purity of Liszt's lyricism and the luxuriance of his effects. There was no question of the audience letting this bright, brilliant creature go without giving an encore, and when it came – Liszt at his most ethereal – it was breathtaking." - Independent, August 2010: BBC Proms debut

“Richter and Rubinstein are this pianist's keyboard gods, and his playing has already been plausibly compared with theirs; here his weightless, crystalline sound brought out the purity of Liszt's lyricism and the luxuriance of his effects. There was no question of the audience letting this bright, brilliant creature go without giving an encore, and when it came – Liszt at his most ethereal – it was breathtaking."
Independent, August 2010: BBC Proms debut

Born in 1984 in Moscow, Boris Giltburg began his piano studies with his mother at the age of five. He has lived in Tel Aviv since early childhood, where he studied with Arie Vardi. He has received many awards for international competitions, notably at Santander (top prize and Audience Prize, 2002) and the Rubinstein (2nd prize and Best Classical Concerto, 2011).

Since his breakthrough appearance with the Philharmonia in 2007 Giltburg has been an annual visitor to the Royal Festival Hall in London, and made his BBC Proms debut in 2010 with the BBC Scottish Symphony. Recent European concerto engagements have included the DSO Berlin, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, Royal Flemish Philharmonic, Malmo Symphony and Swedish Radio Symphony.

Having toured the USA as a teenager with the Israel Chamber, he made his North American orchestra debut in 2007 with the Indianapolis Symphony. As a result of an audition with Zubin Mehta, Giltburg made his debut with the Israel Philharmonic in February 2005, and is a regular guest of the Jerusalem Symphony (with whom he played Rachmaninov 3 in Spring 2011). He made his Tokyo debut in 2005, toured China for the first time in 2007 and played with the Hong Kong Philharmonic in 2010. He has toured South America several times a season since 2002.

He has collaborated with conductors such as Alsop, Altrichter, Fruhbeck de Burgos, Brabbins, Dohnanyi, Entremont, Karabits, Grant Llewellyn, Lintu, Luisotti, Petrenko, Pletnev, Saraste, Segerstam, Sinaisky and Soltesz.

Giltburg has played recitals to audiences across Europe in major venues such as the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Vienna Konzerthaus, Munich Herkulessaal, Paris Louvre, Zurich Tonhalle, Wigmore Hall, London’s Southbank Centre, at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples and Madrid Sony Auditorium. Festival appearances have included the Klavierfest am Ruhr, Schwetzingen, Luzern, Piano aux Jacobins and Cheltenham where he was Artist in Residence in 2007 and remains a regular visitor. He regularly plays chamber music with members of the Israel Philharmonic.

In 11/12 Giltburg makes his London Philharmonic debut under Neeme Jaervi at the Royal Festival Hall (Rachmaninov 2); plays Dohnanyi’s Nursery Variations with the Danish Radio Symphony under Vasily Petrenko, and returns after several previous visits to the Malmo Symphony for Brahms 2, the Bournemouth Symphony for Chopin 1 and the Prague Symphony for Shostakovich 2. He appears in recital from Vancouver to Tel Aviv, taking in Prague, Stuttgart and the Wigmore Hall on the way.

Giltburg has recorded for the EMI Debut label (Mussorgsky, Prokofiev and Scriabin) and has a live recital DVD available on VAI. He was shortlisted for the Royal Philharmonic Society Young Artist Award 2008.

Boris Giltburg is represented worldwide by Intermusica.

August 2011 / 500 words. Not to be altered without permission. Please destroy all previous biographical material.

Concerto Repertoire

BACH
Concerto in D minor BWV 1052
BARTOK
Concerto No.3
BEETHOVEN
Concerto No.1 in C major
Concerto No.2 in B-flat major
Concerto No.3 in C minor
Concerto No.4 in G major
Concerto No.5 in E-flat major
BRAHMS
Concerto No.1 in D minor
Concerto No.2 in B-flat major
CHOPIN
Concerto No.1 in E minor
Concerto No.2 in F minor
DOHNANYI
Nursery Variations (from 11/12 season)
GERSHWIN
Rhapsody in Blue
Piano Concerto in F
GRIEG
Piano Concerto
HAYDN
Concerto for clavier and orchestra in D Major Hob CVIII:11
LISZT
Concerto No.1
MEDTNER
Concerto No.3 (from 11/12 season)
MOZART
Concerto No.15 in B flat major, K450
Concerto No.19 in F major, K459
Concerto No.20 in D minor, K466
Concerto No.23 in A major, K 488
Concerto No.24 in C minor, K 491
Double Concerto for 2 pianos K365
PROKOFIEV
Concerto No.1
Concerto No.2
Concerto No.3
RACHMANINOV
Concerto No.1 in F sharp minor
Concerto No.2 in C minor
Concerto No.3 in D minor
Concerto No.4 in G minor (from 11/12 season)
Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini
SAINT-SAENS
Concerto No.2 in G minor
SCRIABIN
Piano Concerto
SHOSTAKOVICH
Concerto No.1 Op.35
Concerto No.2 Op.102
TCHAIKOVSKY
Concerto No.1 in B flat minor Op.23
Concerto No.3 in E flat major Op.75

Sample Recital Programmes 2011/12


Programme I

BACH
Partita No.6 in E minor, BWV.830
SCHUMANN Papillons, Op.2
***

RAVEL Sonatine
MUSSORGSKY
Pictures at an Exhibition

Programme II

PROKOFIEV
Sonata No.4 in C minor, Op.29
FRANK Prelude, Chorale and Fugue
***

BARTOK Six dances in Bulgarian rhythm (from Mikrokosmos Vol. 6)
LISZT Sonata in B minor

Sample Programme 2012/13

BACH
Largo from Organ Sonata in C major, BWV 529/2 (arr. Samuil Feinberg)
SCHUBERT Wanderer Fantasy, Op.2
SCHUMANN Papillons, Op.2
***

RACHMANINOV 2-3 Selections from Etudes-Tableux
PROKOFIEV
Sonata No.8

Back to Top

Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra / Chopin Piano Concerto No. 1
“Following the orchestral introduction of themes Giltburg’s penetrating articulation promised a virtuoso performance, and so it was. Nothing anonymous here with poetic felicities in abundance and silken ropes of notes.

The central movement’s lyrical sentiments were deliciously drawn and the finale’s dancing gait saw Giltburg’s dazzling fingerwork fully rewarded, returning with an encore.”
Bournemouth Echo, October 2011

Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra / Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 1
“Giltburg is already a true master in conveying what this particular concerto is all about.
This Opus 1, more than Rachmaninov’s later ones, gives the soloist the honest-to-goodness freedom to indulge in excitable virtuosity. Never for a second do you hear a melody at the expense of darkly swirling left-hand accompaniments. Everything is articulated with sterling clarity and perfect sense.

Such candour as Giltburg displays can be dangerous. Not here. He never impeded Rachmaninov’s winged lyricism by any form of literalness. Already in the opening movement Korsten and Giltburg form a real partnership in their approach. Through this the mercurial quality of the writing is projected with charisma and joint flexibility.

There is a heartening feeling of repose in the Andante with the pianist demonstrating some textural clarity which reminded one in particular passages of Ravel. In the Allegro Vivace finale, Giltburg’s fleet-fingered ardour was solely put in place to convey the composer’s intentions through his highly developed fluency, passion and stylistic integrity. A performance no one would ever want to forget…”
IOL, July 2011

Recital at Ruhr Klavier-festival, Dortmund / Bach (arr. Busoni), Beethoven, Liszt, Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Schumann
“The Russian's touch is lyrical but powerful...He played Tchaikovsky's "May" and "August" from the "Seasons", and indeed Liszt's "La Leggierezza" with great technical precision. He gave an exemplary performance in the contrasting moods of Prokofiev's 3rd War Sonata, with its emphatic rhythms, and Rachmaninov's "Liebesleid" which he gave as his first encore.”

"Kraft hat der Russe und einen sanglichen Anschlag. In Busonis Bearbeitung von Bachs Violin-Chaconne hörte man das. Russisches Repertoire liegt dem 27-Jährigen. Die Monatsbilder en Mai und August aus Tschaikowskys "Jahreszeiten"-Zyklus spielte er präzise und technisch überlegen - wie auch zuvor Liszts Studie über die "Leichtigkeit". Exemplarisch zeigte Giltburg seine zwei Pianistenseelen in der rhythmisch markanten dritten Kriegssonate von Prokofjew und dem folgenden Liebeslied von Rachmaninow als erste Zugabe."
Ruhr Nachrichten, June 2011

Wigmore Hall Recital / Chopin, Prokofiev, Ravel
“Boris Giltburg is already well-known here thanks to stunning concerto performances. If his Wigmore recital was pitched at a decibel level more suited to the Royal Festival Hall, it still made a splendid evening. Chopin’s Ballades came clothed in glorious raiment, with three Mazurkas arrestingly turned, and Prokofiev’s Piano Sonata No. 6 sounding more Russian than usual; Ravel’s La Valse made a volcanic conclusion. Giltburg [has] a winning platform manner.”
Michael Church, International Piano Magazine, May 2011

“It isn’t every day young pianists are compared to the great Richter, but Boris Giltburg has been on more than one occasion. In a sense, you can hear why: his Chopin Ballades at the Wigmore sounded gloriously poetic and free as he pushed and pulled at their tempi. It was old-school, but magical and quite ravishing too.”
Andrew Mellor, Classic FM Magazine, May 2011

Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra / Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No.1
“...Giltburg used plenty of virtuosic effects, but as part of a varied range of expression. Both soloist and conductor emphasised the lyrical, contemplative aspects of the work. This was an interpretation which reinforced the work’s carefully placed contrasts, where islands of tranquillity are set against dramatic outbursts. Giltburg played the climax of the first movement (the powerful solo cadenza) with authority but without excessive force... Giltburg held his own throughout the performance; his Andante also had a rich emotional range with many tender passages.”
Svenska Dagblad, March 2011

Recital / Sony Auditorium, Madrid
“The most extraordinary thing about Giltburg is that he puts his transcendental technique to the service of the music without any intention of self-display. Racy speed, overwhelming climaxes, a rich shielding of sonorous colours, impressive dynamic contrast: all of this he delivers in a spontaneous, natural way to communicate to us the sensations he feels through the music he interprets. One detail that stands out is the little use he makes of the left pedal. He achieves the pianos and pianissimos with the fingers of both hands and we know how difficult and delicate this is. It’s a long time I have not experienced something like this in a young pianist....an exceptional recital, in every way”
Mundoclasico, February 2011

Recital with SWR Symphony Orchestra / Chopin Ballades
“Right from the opening unison chords – threatening and resigned by turns – Giltburg was clearly determined to avoid empty virtuosity, but to use it as a creative force justified by the particular emotional landscape. Giltburg resisted the temptation to break loose ahead of time....He played with delicate, subtle rubato. The rich colours were carried by a sonorous bass line, and the inner voices were kept in check.”
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 5 Feb 2011

Malmö Symphony Orchestra / Shostakovich Piano Concerto No. 2
“Boris Giltburg’s performance was completely free of exaggeration and personal mannerisms. It was of course technically very good…conveying depth and power. His phrasing and sense of dynamic were perfectly matched, creating an exemplary musical whole. He managed to lead the orchestra with this interpretation, which resulted in a wonderful overall impression.”
Skånska Dagbladet, November 2010

Recital at Hessischen Rundfunk, Frankfurt / Bach (arr. Busoni), Grieg, Liszt, Albeniz & Rachmaninov
"Boris Giltburg’s recital was immediately arresting and, indeed, it was very striking to see the care he took to shape every single note and,thanks to his limitless technical prowess and supreme control, to let the emotionally-charged soundscape unfurl.”
Frankfurter AllgemeineZeitung, October 2010

BBC Proms debut
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra & Martyn Brabbins / Liszt Piano Concerto No.1

"...Giltburg's stunning performance ... Richter and Rubinstein are this pianist's keyboard gods, and his playing has already been plausibly compared with theirs; here his weightless, crystalline sound brought out the purity of Liszt's lyricism and the luxuriance of his effects. There was no question of the audience letting this bright, brilliant creature go without giving an encore, and when it came – Liszt at his most ethereal – it was breathtaking."
The Independent, August 2010

"…wonderfully fluent…"
The Guardian, August 2010

"He’s a smiling, elfin presence, and he made Liszt’s concerto seem a fleet-footed and glittery thing, the lyrical moments quiet and inward rather than showy."
The Telegraph, August 2010

"Boris Giltburg took full advantage of his unexpected Proms debut with playing of bravura and rhetoric, diablerie and elegance. With fine support from Brabbins and the BBCSSO, not least contributions of the utmost camaraderie from clarinettist Yann Ghiro, Giltburg brought fresh impetus and romance to this concentrated piano concerto. His encore was welcome and special, a spellbinding account of Liszt’s La Leggierezza (the second of his three Concert Studies), a glittering surface decorating a nebula of sepulchral tones."
Classical Source, August 2010

Deutsche Radiophilharmonie / Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No.2
“The young Russian Boris Giltburg, without being at all ostentatious or self-aggrandising, brought his reading of the composer's intentions to bear, in that he played this Romantic/symphonic solo concerto as a partner rather than an opponent of the orchestra... His playing was faultless.”
Pfaelzischer Merkur, May 2010

“There was harmonious accord between conductor, soloist and orchestra as regards the development of sound, the structure of the work and the way the themes were brought out. Whether in the virtuosic solo passages or the controlled orchestral tuttis, everything joined in keeping this opulent and brilliant sound-world from becoming weighed-down. The soloist employed his talents in making music with the orchestra, saving demonstrations of prowess for the virtuosic passages, and seeking to knit together the orchestral and solo parts...”
Rheinfalz, May 2010

Gilmore International Keyboard Festival / Beethoven, Rachmaninov, Prokofiev & Liszt
“Seemingly, Giltburg was born to play Beethoven… Boris Giltburg is one to watch closely.”
Michigan Live, December 2009

Philharmonia Orchestra & Vassily Petrenko / Grieg Piano Concerto
“Giltburg produced a big and generous sound. What’s more its richness totally related to the fantasy of his phrasing. The way Grieg’s lyric fancies opened to his touch here made you understand why this piece is so adored.”
Edward Seckerson, The Arts Desk, November 2009

Hay-on-Wye Festival / Bach arr. Busoni, Grieg & Rachmaninov
“I was left shaking and speechless by the superlative music-making of Boris Giltburg… a breathtakingly musical rendition of Grieg’s Sonata in E minor, op.7, and a technically ravishing, emotionally sensitive interpretation of Rachmaninov’s second piano sonata in B-flat minor.”
The Spectator, May 2009

Orquesta Filarmonica de Buenos Aires / Chopin Piano Concerto No.2
“If it’s true that every generation has it’s own outstanding performers, Boris Giltburg is one of the most eminent of his”
La Nacion, May 2009

Philharmonia Orchestra & Nicola Luisotti / Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto
“Then, following on from his Rachmaninov last year, Giltburg chose another Russian warhorse, Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No 1. As one expects from a young pianist of the Russian school, he has a big bear of a technique, ready to face down the most fearsome technical challenges. There is musicianship too, but it is his determination to get every note exactly as he wants it that gave this performance its distinction – not just his grasp of the barnstorming moments, but the unruffled precision of his double octaves, the evenness of his thirds, the weighting of each note in the melodies.”
Financial Times, January 2009

“Luisotti and the Philharmonia Orchestra were sympathetic accompanists to Boris Giltburg in a fresh-faced approach to Tchaikovsky’s ubiquitous First Piano Concerto. Giltburg’s mannerism-free and crisply articulated playing was a joy, so too his refusal to turn the solo part into a self-aggrandising vehicle…”
Classicalsource.com, January 2009

RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra & Hannu Lintu / Shostakovich Piano Concerto No.2
“Moscow-born, Tel Aviv-trained Boris Giltburg played it with exuberant, cartoonish exaggeration, as a kind of dazzling, mid-20th-century musical hokum.“
Irish Times, January 2009

DSO Berlin / Prokofiev Piano Concerto No.3
“The audience's favourite was the russo-israeli pianist Boris Giltburg. He relished Prokofiev's 3rd Piano Concerto as though he were sampling champagne. His bone-dry precision had a playful effect, and it was a pleasure to watch his hands during the passage-work. He didn't try to gloss over the work's countless abrupt changes and contrasts, but embraced them like a mother embraces her over-excitable children.”
Der Tagesspiegel, December 2008

Tampere Philharmonic & Hunna Lintu / Scriabin Piano Concerto No.3
"The concert introduced to Tampere audiences a genuine piano virtuoso. Russian born Boris Giltburg charmed them with his brilliant technique in a Scriabin concerto full of youthful energy."
Helsingin Aamulehti, November 2008

"Scriabin´s Piano Concerto F minor… was played by a brilliant talent, 24 year old Israeli Boris Giltburg.

His Chopin-inspired solo playing was poetically glittering and sublimely singing. Together with Hannu Lintu he created in the concerto a spontaneous wave of emotion that swung between being dreamy and emotional charged."
Helsingin Sanomat, November 2008

Queen Elizabeth Hall / Beethoven, Scriabin, Rachmaninov & Schumann
“At only 24, the young Russian had the audacity to start his debut South Bank recital with Beethoven's transcendent last Sonata, Op.111, the piece you traditionally never follow. We'll be hearing a lot more of Boris Giltburg.

But there was clear thinking behind the apparent madness throughout his programme and to start the Beethoven, as he did, after a protracted and concentrated silence in which the required energy was visibly revving up inside him, made the maestoso introduction uncommonly intense with Giltburg hunched over the keyboard leaning into every dissonance.

The explosive allegro appassionato was all the more precipitous for it - a classical allegro unhinged, its only semblance of sanity to be found in tiny diversions to a calmer and more formal music. There is devilish energy in the fantastic rhythmic clarity of Giltburg's playing. But the bigger challenge was to come: the profound calm of the ensuing Arietta with its extraordinary heaven-bound variations.

…Scriabin's Sonata No.4 in F-sharp aspired to the same lofty regions and Giltburg looked and sounded well at home amongst its heady, diaphanous harmonies. He was simply dazzling in the second movement prestissimo which is entirely about rhythmic scintillation and mastery of the extremely tricky contradiction between lightness and weight. He did.

No doubts, either, about his Rachmaninov and a storming performance of the massively symphonic Etude-Tableau No.7 in C minor. The sonorities here were magnificently rich and commanding with the grimly insistent second idea marking time towards the climactic panoply of funeral bells - a moment bigger than either piano or hall could contain.

Then to Schumann's quirky, playful, touching comedy of life and love - Carnaval. Here, in marked contrast to the Beethoven at the other end of the programme, there was joy and a spirit of delight in the madness, something which Giltburg with his amazingly mature sensibilities clearly relished exploring. He's the real thing, alright.”
Independent, November 2008

Schwetzingen Festspiele / Bach, Beethoven, Franck, Scriabin and Prokofiev
"Giltburg played the Beethoven op.101 with a light touch, sensitively illuminating its spring-like qualities...We thought we had already been treated to Giltburg's communicative powers in full, but he went on to astonish his listeners, raising his game to an unbelievable extent with an inexhaustible array of special effects in his performances of Prokofiev's Sonata No.7."
Schwetzinger Woche, May 2008

“From start (Liszt) to finish (Prokofiev), Boris Giltburg's recital brought to light an aspect of virtuosity neglected by many of his peers: the close relationship between art and technique."
Schwetzinger Zeitung, May 2008

City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra / Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No.3
“Richly coloured and crisply articulated, inner lines lively and clearly drawn, Giltburg's assured, mature reading mesmerised a transfixed audience…”
Birmingham Post, January 2008

China Tour 2007 - Recital in Kunming
"…Boris Guiltburg, an exciting and versatile piano performer from Israel mesmerized his audience with his flair at a concert in Kunming. Having a finger dance on black and white keys of piano, Boris displayed fine technique in pieces of Beethoven's Sonata Op. 111, Chopin's Ballade No. 1 and Prokofiev's Sonata No. 8 Op. 84…which received enthusiastic applause and tremendous response from the audience.
Kmon On-Line, November 2007

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra / Grieg
"[Boris Giltburg] produced a compelling performance of the A minor concerto, full of thundering but seemingly effortless passages and dramatic flourishes."
Liverpool Echo, September 2007

Malmö Symphony Orchestra / Rachmaninov
"The Israeli pianist, who is barely 23 years old, gave a phenomenal performance of Rachmaninov's second piano concerto. ... the fineness of detail in his playing was quite simply brilliant."
Kvälls Posten Expressen , September 2007

Cheltenham Festival / Schubert, Chopin and Payne
"Giltburg was fully in command, supple and agile, tasteful and wise to the organic nature of the piano's decorative writing."
The Telegraph, July 2007

In recital for VAI DVD
"From Giltburg, we get calm, assured attention to the music at hand. The results are very special. Giltburg plays like a young Richter... His program seems designed to show his interpretive range… Giltburg has a fearsome technique that gives extraordinary strength and clarity of line to Bach's Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue. He displays excellent taste in everything he plays here. The Liszt Sonata in B minor is breathtaking in its full-throated power and poetic interludes."
American Record Guide , May-June 2007

Mussorgsky, Prokofiev and Scriabin on EMI
"A brilliant performance of this striking yet technically challenging cycle from one of today's most exciting young pianists."
BBC Music Magazine , August 2007

"Giltburg captures the mood of the work with extraordinary authority for one so young, evidently relishing the intensity of the music, as well as its brilliance in the finale…his is a reading which is thoroughly persuasive, notable for its tonal variety and intelligent pacing as well as its startling virtuosity.  Altogether a very fine début recital."
International Record Review , July-August 2006

"Giltburg captures [Scriabin's Second Sonata]'s post-Chopinesque candour here to perfection.  In Prokofiev's towering Eighth Sonata, as in the Musorgsky, he faces inevitable comparisons with the very greatest, Sviatoslav Richter, turning in an equally valid reading….He's surely more convincing than any other interpreter."
BBC Music Magazine , June 2006

Miami International Piano Festival / Bach, Schubert, Scriabin and Liszt
"Giltburg opened the Festival on May 11 with an exciting display of interpretive freedom. Bach's Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue had stunning exhilaration. The clarity of Bach's inner voicings was but one example of Giltburg's technical mastery. He brought tremendous extremes of volume and dynamics to Schubert's Wanderer Fantasy. Giltburg's subtle, imaginatively lyrical flights were often beguiling. With big boned virtuosity to burn, he sailed through Scriabin's Sonata-Fantasy No.2 in G-sharp minor with marvelous freedom and inflected the Chopinesque filigree with rippling beauty. In Liszt's huge Sonata in B Minor, Giltburg's penchant for adventurous, unconventional phrasing took center stage. His was a fascinating traversal in the true Liszt mold - delicate, flaming, and exciting. As encores, Giltburg brought romantic languor to Rachmaninoff's witty take on Fritz Kreisler's Liebesfreud and jazzy power to Gershwin's Rialto Rhythms.
The Israeli pianist Boris Giltburg, who made his American debut at the 2004 Miami International Piano Festival, returned to offer some fiery pianism. His wildly improvisatory performance of Beethoven's Concerto No.3 in C Minor was in the Russian tradition. Giltburg's brilliant, free wheeling cadenza in the first movement was spellbinding. He played the Largo twice as slowly as most pianists. Giltburg sailed into the Rondo finale at lightning speed with a vivid demonstration of impressive technical facility. This pianist is certainly individualistic."
Entertainment News & Views, May 2006

"In 2004 Giltburg demonstrated a hugely impressive technique, and it was clear that the 22-year old pianist has honed his prodigious arsenal to an even finer point.  In a challenging program, Giltburg blazed through the most demanding passages flawlessly and with a textural clarity and digital power that were even more commanding than in his last appearance. 
The tortuous difficulties of Liszt's epic Sonata in B minor seemed to vanish in Giltburg's hands.  Rarely will one hear this music tackled with such extraordinary strengh and security.  The pianist skillfully held the vast single-movement structure together, the fusillade of notes and myriad complexities thrown off with remarkable finish."
Sun Sentinel, May 2006

Jovellanos Theatre, Gijón / Schubert and Liszt
"..Boris will have a place amongst the great pianists of the 21st century ... a lively Fantasia, moving, marvellously accented in the first part, contained and stately in the second section, and tense in the final part, calm and transparently contrapuntal in the Fugue. Undoubtedly, Boris has technical ability, but he has musicality as well, colour and structural understanding of the work. "
El Comercio , January 2006

Herkulessaal, Munich  / Beethoven, Scriabin and Prokofiev
"[His performance of Scriabin's 2nd sonata] was free in execution and bereft of any superficial mannerisms, in his attempt to express it as one long breath. The same went (with minor exceptions) for Prokofiev's 8th Sonata."
Sueddeutsche Zeitung , December 2006

Concierto de la Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional in Buenos Aires / Prokofiev
"a virtuosity founded on notable technical ability … as well as a brilliant and nuanced touch - such as distinguishes the great pianists"
La Nacion , September 2005

Recital in Montevideo, Uruguay
"From his round and ample sound, to his subtle and delicate touch, from his virtuoso playing to his dramatic vehemence, from his martial execution to his cantabile phrasing, everything was present in Giltburg's performance, who upon finishing …was deservedly met with a standing ovation… Nuances, colours, moods and emotions were exposed with interpretational maturity, making this performance the evening's most brilliant, a performance with special intellectual and emotional insight."
Klasicaa Magazine, September 2005

Recital at the Teatro San Carlo, Naples
"When referring to a twenty-one year old pianist, one normally talks about the future: how good he might be, how famous he might be…  In the case of Boris Giltburg, who made his debut last Monday at the San Carlo theatre, having taken first prize at the Vendome competition, there is no need for risky predictions: his style, which is in equal measures virtuosic and refined, already merits considerable attention."
Il Mattino , May 2005

"Busoni's virtuosic arrangement of the Bach did not present the slightest difficulty to Giltburg, who at some points, such as in the storm of fast scales, repeated notes and chords, moreover displayed an assurance and calm reminiscent of the great concert performers.  In the Beethoven sonata, which requires wisdom, sensitivity, intelligence and extraordinary energy, the young pianist interpreted the immortal and colossal score with resolute control and expressiveness in equal measures. ... It is only right and proper to say, that a new genius of the keyboard has been born"
Napoliú , May 2005

"[H]e boasts a pianistic talent that, for technical temperament and above all stylistic elegance, outstrips many of the young athletes of the keyboard who have been distinguished, as he was at the 2003 Vendome Prize in Lisbon, in leading international competitions. ... At twenty one years old, Boris Giltburg has the pianistic elegance of the masters"
Corriere del Mezzogiorno , May 2005

KZN Philharmonic / Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No.1
"Giltburg infused the music with playfulness and humour, and the right degree of tranquility where necessary.  The final movement gallops along with great excitement and is full of beautiful melodies. There is lovely dialogue between soloist and orchestra, especially the flute and winds, culminating in the exhilarating finale in which Giltburg's virtuosity was so evident. A remarkable performer, he confirmed this with beautifully executed encores by Kreisler and Rachmaninov."
Kwana Newspaper, February 2005

"[The] 20 year-old Boris Giltburg, who was born in Moscow and now lives in Israel, gave a performance of exceptional brilliance and clarity.  He is a handsome young man who sits so far from the keyboard that I thought he might have some difficulty in reaching the notes. Never fear, he was in total control throughout this difficult and demanding work, with no hint of a false note or wrong accent. He has big hands, and they became a blur of speed in the rapid octave passages. His style of playing is flamboyant but unaffected, and his extreme technical prowess extended to a beautiful singing tone in the concerto's expressive passages, especially in the slow movement."
Artsmart , February 2005

Recital / Bach, Schumann and Mussorgsky
"In contrast to other compatriots of the same generation who rely upon their technical bravura, Giltburg's interpretation uncovered hidden depths of meaning."
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , March 2004

Recital / Beethoven, Scriabin, Albéniz and Schumann
"One would not expect a pianist aged 20 to have the emotional depth and wisdom of the great maestros; however, with his technical assurance, clarity of sound, and overwhelming musicality Giltburg is destined to go far."
El País Madrid , June 2004

Orquesta de la Comunidad de Madrid / Rachmaninov Piano Concert no. 3
"His interpretation of Rachmaninov's third piano concerto is that of a great musician.  We shall remember it as a jewel with three facets; the first facet was the elegant perfection of his sound, right from the opening phrase.  The second was his skill and discipline at mastering the work's technical difficulties: the octaves and repeated notes did not sound like a well-performed technical exercise rather an attractive musical gesture.  Thirdly, he impressed with his precocious maturity as a creator. "
Diario la Razón, April 2004

Recital / Beethoven, Franck and Scriabin
"The young pianist Boris Giltburg … possesses a maturity of interpretation that amazes one after hearing his impressive concert, a colossal avalanche of sound…"
El Correo de Vitoria, March 2003

"Giltburg plays with freshness and imagination, he approaches the works from a global perspective and with careful stylistic sensibility. He possesses a special ability to bring out with independence and clarity the polyphonic lines in the keys. It is as though each of his fingers has its own mind and its own heart."
El Comercio, Gijón, March 2003

London Symphony Orchestra/Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos / Bartok Piano Concerto no. 3
"So hat der Wettbewerb doch wieder erbracht, was man schon immer von Wettbewerben forderte: Ein Musiker wurde entdeckt, auf den man in Zukunft hören wird, ja hören muss. Er ist noch sehr jung, aber er besitzt Wachheit wie unbedingte, konzentrierte Emphase. Nichts, so ist zu vermuten, dürfte ihn von seinem künstlerischen Weg ablenken."
NMZ, October 2002

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BBC Proms debut
Boris Giltburg receives critical acclaim for BBC Proms debut Boris Giltburg received critical acclaim for his BBC Proms debut when he jumped to to perform Liszt Piano Concerto No.1 with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and Martyn Brabbins in August. In other recent performances, Giltburg has appeared with the DSO Berlin, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, Deutsche Radiophilharmonie, Royal Flemish Philharmonic and Prague Symphony. He is a very...

Documents

Boris Giltburg - Emerging Artist Download
Boris Giltburg biography Download
Boris Giltburg EMI disc reviews Download
Boris Giltburg Independent review Download
Boris Giltburg press quotes Download
Boris Giltburg repertoire (concerto) Download
Boris Giltburg sample recital programmes 2011/12 Download
Boris Giltburg short biography Download

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  • Boris Giltburg performs Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No.3 with Asher Fisch and the Israel Philharmonic at the Rubinstein Competition.