List of Sendai International Music Competition winners
Sendai International Music Competition |
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Sendai International Music Competition logo |
Awarded for |
Exceptional piano and violin performance |
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Country |
Japan |
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Presented by |
Sendai International Music Competition |
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First awarded |
2001 |
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Last awarded |
2010 |
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Official website |
http://simc.jp/simc/top_en/ (English) |
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The Sendai International Music Competition is a tri-annual violin and piano music competition held in Sendai, Japan, presented in association with the Sendai International Music Competition Organizing Committee, City of Sendai and the Sendai Cultural Foundation.[1] In the competition there is no overall winner, rather there are six winners each from the violin and piano categories, with the first-placed winners receiving the highest prize. Although the competition is international, most award-winners have been from either Europe or Asia. The first award-winner from outside those continents was American Sean Kennard, who finished fifth in the 2004 competition's piano category.
The competition consists of four stages: a pre-selection round, followed by a preliminary round, and then the semi-final and the final rounds in which all pieces are performed with an orchestra.[2] The competition is split into two categories: violin and piano.[3] The number of contestants who progress from the preliminary round to the semi-finals cannot exceed 12 and the contestants passing through to the final cannot exceed six.[2] In the preliminary, semi-final, and final stages of the competition the performances are chosen from a predetermined repertoire; the contestants must choose a different piece for each round.[4] The judging panel decides the placing of the prizewinners from first through sixth.[2]
The first competition was held in 2001. Most of the twelve winners were from Asia, with Chinese Mengla Huang topping the violin category and the Italian Giuseppe Andaloro taking first prize in the piano section. In the second tournament in 2004, the competition received a more worldwide range of winners; contestants coming from Asia, Europe and North America finished in the prize winning places. Japanese Saeka Matsuyama won the violin part in the final and Xiaotang Tan from China came in first place in the piano category. In the 2007 finals, which contained five Russian contestants, the violin section was topped by Russian Alena Baeva while in the piano category the Japanese Yuya Tsuda came first. The 2010 violin competition was won by the German/South Korean Clara-Jumi Kang, while Vadym Kholodenko of Ukraine won the piano competition. As of 2013 there have been five competitions with the next to be contested in 2016.[5]
Prize winners
2001
2004
Category |
Place |
Prize winners |
Country |
Violin |
First |
Saeka Matsuyama |
Japan |
Second |
Maksim Brylinskiy |
Ukraine |
Third |
Dan Zhu |
China |
Fourth |
Andreas Janke |
Japan |
Fifth |
Valya Dervenska |
Bulgaria |
Sixth |
Yuki Manuela Janke |
Japan |
Piano |
First |
Xiaotang Tan |
China |
Second |
Masataka Takada |
Japan |
Third |
Michael Namirovsky |
Israel |
Fourth |
Elizaveta Dmitrieva |
Russia |
Fifth |
Sean Kennard |
USA |
Sixth |
Florence Boissolle |
France |
2010
2013
References
External links