Vol. XXV No. 1
September 2009

Bachauer Winners Take Risks, Reap Rewards

Although prestigious in name, Bruno Walter Orchestra Studio isn’t known for hosting the leading spectacles of artistic achievement. Located in the dusty bowels of Juilliard’s windowless interior, the facility known affectionately as “Room 309” instead offers a woodshed for aspiring musicians to hone their craft. Each year, thousands of students pass through its doors—taking auditions, playing in master classes, rehearsing for orchestra concerts—in anticipation of those special moments when the fruits of their labor are finally realized atop the stages of Tully, Fisher, or Carnegie. 309 is Juilliard’s boiler room, with its machinery perpetually grinding and churning to keep it afloat the waters of pre-eminence.

Michael Brown (left) and Eric Zuber, winners of the 2009 Gina Bachauer Piano Competition. (Photo by Peter Schaaf)

But don’t let the fanciful imagery fool you: Room 309 isn’t all charm. Ask any piano major at Juilliard what they think of the space, and you’re likely to get a rather unfavorable response. For some of the more sensitive types, possibly even a sob story. Each May, 309 transforms into a purgatory for anxious pianists attempting to demonstrate in 15 minutes what they have achieved in the past 1,500 hours squatting on black wooden boxes elegantly furnishing the practice rooms a floor above. Once the jury has reached its verdict, a lucky few are selected to return to Room 309, this time vying for top prize in Juilliard’s illustrious Gina Bachauer Piano Competition.

“I find the atmosphere of playing in a room for our own teachers, sitting behind a table, very frightening,” said Michael Brown, one of a pair of pianists to win this year’s Bachauer competition. And it’s true: the setting is hardly comforting. Pitting each student 20 feet from a row of stern faculty members seems more akin to a parole hearing than a musical performance. Brown added: “The challenge is to be able to put oneself in another, perhaps friendlier environment that would prove more conducive to good music-making.”

These friendlier places shouldn’t be too hard on the imaginations of either Brown or 2009 Bachauer co-winner Eric Zuber. Both have made a habit in recent years of performing in the world’s most prestigious concert venues. Zuber’s recent engagements have spanned the globe, from the Kennedy Center in Washington to the Sydney Opera House. In 2007 he gave his Carnegie Hall debut—a performance that New York Times critic Allan Kozinn described as “irresistibly fluid,” demonstrating a range of expression “from vividly crisp articulation to broad-boned impetuousness.” Not your average jury-sheet.

Brown’s record deserves comparable accolades. He has been heard in virtually all of the major venues in New York City, most recently in a performance last month with violinist and Juilliard graduate Arnaud Sussmann as part of Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival. In June, Brown played in George Perle’s memorial concert in Merkin Hall in honor of the late composer and theorist—the program included the likes of Leon Fleisher, Seymour Lipkin, and Fred Sherry. “It was rather intimidating to share the stage with those giants,” Brown remarked, with characteristic humility.

As winners of the Bachauer competition, Brown and Zuber have the privilege of playing for an audience far bigger than would fit in any of the aforementioned halls, over the airwaves of 96.3 WQXR-FM and on the Web at wqxr.com, when the concert will be broadcast live from Juilliard’s Paul Hall.

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Event Information
Michael Brown and Eric Zuber, Pianists

Paul Recital Hall
Wednesday, Sept. 30, 9 PM

Winners of the 2009 Gina Bachauer Piano Competition Free; no tickets required

Event Calendar