Canadian Pianist Jaeden Izik-Dzurko Talks Profession, And His Toronto Live performance At Hugh’s Room Stay

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Pianist Jaeden Izik-Dzurko (Photograph courtesy of the artist)

Canadian Jaeden Izik-Dzurko was the First Prize winner on the Hilton Head Worldwide Piano Competitors, the Maria Canals Worldwide Music Competitors, and the twentieth Paloma O’Shea Santander Worldwide Piano Competitors — all in 2022.

Two years later, he’d comply with up by turning into the primary Canadian Grand Prize Laureate in an instrumental version of the Concours musical worldwide de Montréal (CMIM). He’d additionally garner a first prize win on the 2024 Leeds Worldwide Piano Competitors within the UK, receiving the Dame Fanny Waterman Gold Medal.

The Leeds prize consists of performances throughout Europe, and a whirlwind of appearances whereas he’s additionally finding out. In October 2024, his debut EP was launched on Warner Classics, consisting of excerpts from his Leeds Competitors efficiency.

Jaeden be performing an intimate recital at Hugh’s Room Stay in Toronto on March 23 in a sequence curated by pianist Angela Hewitt and Eric Friesen. We caught up with him to ask about competitions, profession and music.

Jaeden Izik-Dzurko: The Interview

The Leeds win was a crowning achievement for the BC native. The years of competitions and the preparations for them had been formidable.

“I think about the Leeds one to be my final competitors,” he says. “I’m just a little bit happy that I can shut the e book on that chapter.”

Together with technical abilities, naturally, competitions require quite a lot of nerve and psychological preparation. However, it was time to cease pondering when it comes to besting the competitors. “Nearly spiritually,” he says, “to have this ceaseless rating happening — it’s just a little bit perverse.”

Nonetheless, the expertise was invaluable when it comes to getting ready him for a life on worldwide phases. “I feel for grooming a performing artist, the piano competitions flex and develop a whole lot of actually indispensable muscle mass.”

With varied stipulations, competing internationally additionally tends to contain studying mountains of repertoire. “It turned more and more troublesome,” he says. Juggling a rising performing schedule, together with the journey concerned, was prohibitive.

As to his successful type, he says he saved his give attention to the music. “I attempt to take the view that you just preserve […] the jury and their preferences out of your thoughts as a lot as doable,” he says. “It’s troublesome to attempt to conform to the tastes of another person, and that’s in all probability the recipe for catastrophe.”

As a substitute of the judges, he saved his thoughts on the viewers, and his important love of the music.

“That’s a bit of recommendation that I’d supply to any younger artist going into competitions,” he says.

As a way to an finish, he’s now specializing in performing and persevering with his research. “Now that I’ve concluded my competitors experiences, it’s turning into clear to me that it’s just one part of creating a profession,” says Izik-Dzurko.

As he factors out, whereas competitions could enable you to enhance method and broaden repertoire, there are nonetheless essential issues like creating relationships with collaborators and presenters, and the continued concern of creating an impression in your viewers, to be thought-about.

Today, his schedule is split between Germany, Italy, and worldwide journey.

“I reside in Germany, and I journey to Italy about each month for classes,” he explains. He’s finding out in Germany as properly.

His spring agenda consists of an prolonged keep in Rome for classes and a chamber music examination, and a recital in Arezzo earlier in March earlier than his North American live performance dates.

In Recital: Hugh’s Room Stay March 23

He’ll hit Kelowna on March 21 earlier than his Toronto recital on the 23. Jaeden can be performing a program that features new preparations of recital repertoire, some he’s performing for the primary time.

  • J.S. Bach: Partita for keyboard No. 4, BWV 828
  • Sergei Rachmaninoff: Preludes, Op. 23
  • Frédéric Chopin: Piano Sonata No. 3 in B minor, Op. 58

“It’s comparatively new music,” he says. “I’ve a whole lot of love for Rachmaninoff,” he provides. “It’s one in all my very own musical strengths.”

He cites performing Bach as one of many luxuries of leaving the competitors world behind. “It’s a little bit of a celebration of now not being constrained by competitors tips.” Nonetheless, he’s grateful for what the competitors repertoire taught him. “A few of the items that I’ve performed in a whole lot of competitions I’ve actually grown with.”

After his Toronto gig, he’s heading east to Québec, then a recital for Société Professional Musica in Montréal earlier than dates throughout South Korea by means of April and Might.

  • Discover extra details about his Toronto recital [HERE].

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