Vol. XXIV No. 2
October 2008

Recipes for Pianistic Success

Do you have secret ingredients that set your favorite dish apart from your friends'? Those secret ingredients are much like the unique stories that help explain how musicians develop into the artists they are. These special recipes for success set performers apart on stage, no matter how similar their diligence, hard work, and excellence may be. This is especially apparent in the two winners of this year’s International Bachauer Piano Competition, Yoonjung Han and Naomi Kudo, who both began playing piano early on, but with their own spices tossed in the mix.

Yoonjung Han (left) and Naomi Kudo are this year's winners of the Gina Bachauer International Piano Competition. (Photo by Peter Schaaf)

For Yoonjung, it all began in her birthplace of Korea, at age 3, after one fateful afternoon nap. When she awoke, her mother had stepped out of the apartment, so she leaned out the sixth-floor window to look for her mother on the street. She slipped out of the window and was stuck outside holding on to the windowsill when the fifth-floor resident, a pastor’s wife, happened to look up from reading her Bible and helped Yoonjung back to safety. After the shock and minor injuries she sustained during the incident, Yoonjung took a year off from school. Feeling idle and bored, she asked for a piano. Since then, her family has also become religious, influenced by their neighbor.

Quickly excelling at the instrument, Yoonjung made her solo debut at 13, performing Beethoven’s Third Piano Concerto with the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra. At 15, she received the Most Promising Young Artist award from the Korean Minister of Culture after winning the grand prize in the Korea National Music Competition, and moved overseas to study with Victoria Mushkatkol in Juilliard’s Pre-College Division. Away from home before she had had a chance to learn how to cook, Yoonjung depended heavily on her rice cooker. Her father stayed with her for her first semester, but Yoonjung soon found herself independent and fending for herself in the big city. Although she had wanted to come to the States for the performance opportunities, she reflects on her difficult time: “I won’t do that to my daughter. I’ll keep her [at home] until she gets married.”

After earning her bachelor’s degree at the Curtis Institute of Music, where she studied with Eleanor Sokoloff, Yoonjung is now in her second year of the master’s degree program at Juilliard, studying with Robert McDonald. At 23, she has already performed as a soloist with the Buffalo Philharmonic, Fort Collins Symphony, Houston Symphony, Mississippi Symphony, Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra, and Milan’s I Pomeriggi Musicali, among others. She has won the gold medal at the Nena Wideman Piano Competition and the Kosciuszko Foundation Chopin Piano Competition, second prize at the Ettore Pozzoli International Piano Competition, and fifth prize at the Helsinki Maj Lind International Competition.

Yoonjung says she feels that she made a musical breakthrough with the competitions and festivals that she attended this past summer. She performed the Mozart Piano Concerto No. 22 in E Flat, K.482, at the Banff Center with the festival orchestra there, playing her own written eingangs and cadenzas, and won the gold medal at the World Piano Competition in Cincinnati. “I used to be obsessed with perfection,” she observes, “but learned that it’s more heart than fingers. It’s a talent and a joy that you can give to people, but you really have to love the music, not fame.” She says she finally feels emotionally free to connect with the audience.

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Event Information
Gina Bachauer International Piano Competition Winners Concert

Paul Hall
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 9 p.m.

Broadcast live on WQXR's Young Artists Showcase, hosted by Robert Sherman Free event; no tickets required