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Joyce Yang
pianist

Joyce Yang first came to international attention in 2005 when she won the silver medal at the 12th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition.  The youngest contestant at 19 years old, she took home two additional awards: Best Performance of Chamber Music (with the Takács Quartet), and Best Performance of a New Work.  In 2006 Yang made her celebrated New York Philharmonic debut alongside Lorin Maazel at Avery Fisher Hall along with the orchestra's tour of Asia, making a triumphant return to her hometown of Seoul, South Korea.

In the last decade, Yang has performed solo recitals and collaborations with the world's top orchestras and chamber musicians through more than 1,000 debuts and re-engagements.  She received the 2010 Avery Fisher Career Grant and earned her first Grammy nomination (Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance) for her recording of Franck, Kurtág, Previn & Schumann with violinist Augustin Hadelich.

Other notable orchestral engagements have included Chicago Symphony, Los Angelese Philharmonic, The Philadelphia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Hong Kong Philharmonic, BBC Philharmonic, as well as the Toronto, Vancouver, Sydney, Melbourne, and New Zealand symphony orchestras.  She was also featured in a five-year Rachmaninoff concerto cycle with Edo de Waart and Milwaukee Symphony.

As an avid chamber musician, Yang has collaborated with the Takács Quartet for Dvorak - part of Lincoln Center's Great Performers series - and Schubert's "Trout" Quintet with members of the Emerson String Quartet at the Mostly Mozart Festival at Lincoln Center.  Yang has fostered an enduring partnership with the Alexander String Quartet and together released three celebrated recordings under Foghorn Classics.

As a champion of new music, Yang has premiered and recorded a World Premier discography of Michael Torke's Piano Concerto with Albany Symphony and David Alan Miller (Albany Records) in 2015, Jonathan Leshnoff's Piano Concerto with Kansas City Symphony (Reference Recordings) in 2019, and premiered Reinaldo Moya's Piano Concerto with Bangor Symphony in 2021.

Yang's discography includes celebrated solo discs (Collage and Wild Dreams, Avie Records), where she "demonstrated impressive gifts" (The New York Times).  Yang also released a live-performance recording of Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 with Denmark's Odense Symphony Orchestra (Bridge Records), which International Record Review called "hugely enjoyable, beautifully shaped...a performance that marks her out as an enormous talent."

Yang began the 2023-2024 season as Artist-in-Residence for Grant Park Music Festival and as guest artist with Aspen Music Festival among others, followed by performances in New Zealand with New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and in Australia with Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.  This season, Yang continues to present her wide range of repertoire in over 30 cities playing 10 different piano concerti, solo recitals, and chamber music.

Born in Seoul, South Korea, Yang received her first piano lesson from her aunt at the age of four.  She quickly took to the instrument, which she received as a birthday present.  In 1997, Yang moved to the United States to begin studies at the pre-college division of The Juilliard School with Dr. Yoheved Kaplinsky.  She graduated from Juilliard with special honor as the recipient of the school's 2010 Arthur Rubinstein Prize, and in 2011 she won its 30th Annual William A. Petschek Piano Recital Award.  She is a Steinway artist.