

Eva Gevorgyan at the Filarmonica di Trento
Astonishing playing from this beautiful ‘Mélisande’ of the piano with her complete abandon to her senses that was hypnotic and quite overwhelming.


A master pianist and very fine musician who could spontaneously recreate all she played with such searing intensity that I could swear that her waist length hair seemed to reach her toes by the end of a phenomenal recital.


A Liszt ‘Dante’ Sonata that I have never heard with such passion and ravishing delicacy as she depicted Liszt’s vision of Heaven and Hell with vibrant intensity and a palette of sounds and emotions that was astonishing .
If Franck’s ‘Prélude, Chorale and Fugue’ was given an unusual improvisatory freedom she managed to give an architectural shape to it as she had with Liszt. A pianist who has a vision that brings vividly to life all she does with a technical mastery that passes unnoticed, such is the beauty of sound and prismatic sense of colour that she spontaneously creates.The César Franck was very intense and free with continual fluctuations of tempo as her temperament took wing. A kaleidoscopic palette of colour that were washes of sound. Adding a bass note to the transition to the chorale, giving more depth and beauty to all that she was carving out of the keys with the sensibility of a pointillist painter. A very dramatic entry of the fugue that was then allowed to flow very freely and rather quickly with some rather excessive rubati and clouding of the pedal, as her passionate involvement came to the boil with almost uncontrolled passion. A remarkable performance of Gould like freedom of someone who had a personal vision of a work that is usually heard with the restraint of a more respectful believer


But the real highlight of an extraordinary recital was Rachmaninov’s 8 Études Tableaux op 33, where she turned each study into a miniature tone poem of glowing radiance with fearless abandon, as she allowed her poetic vision to command her fingers and shape each miniature study, transforming them into a Pandora’s box of gleaming jewels. A remarkable fantasy and mastery with chameleonic changes of character and colour. A ravishing sumptuous outpouring of melody in the second that gradually increased in intensity leading to the third, that was of mystery and menace. There was a subtle shading to the sounds as the music spoke with immediacy and even tenderness. A melodic line chiselled over a sumptuous accompaniment created by deep chiming bass notes. A capricious playful opening to the fourth that was played with great character building to a climax of passionate frenzy where Eva’s sense of balance never lost sight of the story line of this master story teller. Streams of notes to the fifth played with true wizardry of astonishing freedom, like a spring suddenly liberated. An aristocratic nobility to the sixth in E flat before the magical radiance and glowing beauty of the seventh. The final Grave in C sharp minor was a true cauldron of a Scriabinesque nightmarish vision and prepared us for Liszt and Dante, after a brief pause, for us all to catch our breath after such an overwhelming performance.
A programme played without an interval left us all astonished exhilarated and not a little exhausted by the intense atmosphere that had invaded this beautiful hall .

Even Liszt ‘s depiction of Raphael’s ‘Sposalizio’ was brought to a climax with burning conviction where the composer’s poetic reaction to such purity was overturned by an accompaniment of transcendental octaves that almost tipped the balance between war and peace! It was Eva’s innate sense of balance throughout the recital, though, that even here she never lost sight of the overall line which was always revealed with sumptuous beauty. Living every moment of the ‘Dante ‘Sonata with an evil glint in her eye as she declared her intent at the opening. The sudden vision of heaven was indeed heavenly and of whispered glowing beauty. Inner counterpoints glowing as Eva allowed them to appear like jewels sparkling in the depths. Liszt’s vision gradually growing in intensity and desperation with playing of transcendental mastery of a performance that was the most convincing that I have ever witnessed in the concert hall.
But this was just a foretaste of what was to come with three encores, one more astonishing than the other.
Liszt’s ‘Campanella’ played with a pianistic perfection and the finesse of the pianists of the Golden age of piano playing when pianist were magicians of sound and not merely jugglers of the notes.
Our Mélisande then seduced us with an Armenian cabaret song: Babajanian ‘s ‘Sayat Novu’, played with beguiling insinuating rubato and such subtle whispers that we could happily have danced with her all night .
But ‘our’ Eva soon brought us back to earth with a hair raising account of Bizet’s ‘Habañera’ alla Volodos . A case where the disciple has overtaken her master, as streams of notes were ‘merely’ gold and silver sounds that she spread over the keyboard with the ease and perfection of the legendary pianists of the past age of Lhevine Godowsky and Rosenthal . Horowitzian streaks of lightening ,there were too, igniting this cauldron of notes as we listened with disbelief to such an overwhelming display of mastery.


Beautiful Trento awaited us and calmed the air after the wonderful torrid atmosphere that this young master had created at the Filarmonica this evening.

Pianista russa-armena, Eva Gevorgyan è una delle voci più promettenti della scena musicale internazionale. La sua tecnica impeccabile e la straordinaria sensibilità musicale le hanno valso numerosi premi, tra cui il Primo Premio al Concorso Robert Schumann di Düsseldorf. A soli 21 anni, ha già calcato i palcoscenici più prestigiosi, come la Royal Albert Hall di Londra e la Mariinsky Concert Hall di San Pietroburgo, collaborando con orchestre di fama mondiale. Tra le sue numerose vittorie, spicca la sua performance al Concorso Chopin di Varsavia, tra le finaliste più giovani di sempre. Eva è una vera e propria ambasciatrice della musica classica, portando la sua arte in luoghi e occasioni sempre nuove, dalle grandi sale da concerto alle corsie di ospedali fino alle scuole, dove la musica diventa un ponte di comunicazione e speranza. Con una personalità magnetica e un’espressività fuori dal comune, Eva è riuscita a conquistare anche il pubblico più giovane, che trova nelle sue interpretazioni una passione autentica e travolgente.
Eva Gevorgyan (born 15 April 2004) is a Russian-Armenian pianist and composer renowned for her exceptional talent and numerous accolades in international competitions, including first prize at the 2018 Cleveland International Piano Competition for Young Artists and second prize at the 2019 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition for Outstanding Juniors. Born in Moscow, she has performed as a soloist with prestigious orchestras such as the Mariinsky Orchestra,Dallas Symphony Orchestra, and Warsaw Philharmonic, and released her debut album featuring works by Chopin and Scriabin in 2022 on the Melodiya label. As a Yamaha Young Artist, Gevorgyan has garnered recognition for her precise articulation and sonorous touch, drawing comparisons to Russian piano luminaries like Emil Gilels and Bella Davidovich Gevorgyan began her musical studies in Moscow and has since trained with distinguished pedagogues, including Natalia Trull at the Central Music School of the Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory, from which she graduated in 2022, and Stanislav Ioudenitch at the Escuela Superior de Música Reina Sofía in Madrid. Her early exposure came through competitions and appearances, such as her debut at the Royal Albert Hall. By age 15, she had already secured prizes in over 40 international piano and composition contests across countries including the United States,Germany,Italy and Spain , establishing her as one of the leading young virtuosos of her generation. Among her most notable achievements is her participation in the 2021 International Chopin Competition where she reached the finals and received a special prize, as well as the 2023 Prix du Bern in Switzerland and the 2019 Discovery Award from the International Classical Music Awards.Gevorgyan has appeared at renowned festivals like Verbier, La Roque d’Anthéron, and the Klavier-Festival Ruhr—where she received a scholarship from Evgeny Kissin in 2020. Recent engagements include her 2024 recital debut at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, with upcoming debuts such as with the Brussels Philharmonic in 2025; in 2025, she also performed with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and made her debut at Berlin’s Konzerthaus.
| Interview With Eva Gevorgyan- an Inspiring Young Pianist |
by Fanny Po Sim Head November 7th, 2023
Eva Gevorgyan, a young and exceptionally talented pianist, has taken the music world by storm with her remarkable achievements. At the tender age of 19, she won the 2018 Cleveland International Piano Competition for Young Artists and the second prize winner of the 2019 Van Cliburn Young Artist Competition. Her passion for music and dedication to her craft have been the driving force behind her success. In this interview, Eva shares her journey and insights on what it takes to succeed as a pianist. Get ready to be captivated by her story.
When did you start playing the piano? How did you discover your love of piano?
I started playing piano at the age of 5. My mother studied viola at Moscow State Conservatory, and there was always music playing throughout my childhood. I visited concerts from the age of 2.5 and could listen to the whole Mozart symphony. At the age of 3, I asked my mother to present me a violin, but I couldn’t get the sound I like, so I took it apart very promptly. And after this, my mother said – now only piano, it will be quite difficult to break. It’s a funny story, but from an early age, I was captured by music. So I started my piano lessons, and when I was 7, I entered Central Music School, where I studied for 11 years.
Does practicing the piano take up most of your day?
Yes, it does! Playing piano inspires me, and this is what I really love. Also, I study chamber music, collaborative piano, piano accompaniment, music literature, and theory, so most of my day I spend with piano. It’s an amazing feeling when you can share your love for music with the audience.
Do you enjoy playing solo or chamber more?
I enjoy both – actually, I like music itself and feel great when I play solo or chamber or with orchestras. I have a wonderful trio team at Reina Sofia School of Music – we will play a chamber music concert consisting of trios by Haydn,Dvorák and Shostakovich at the end of January.
You are only 19 years old, but you have been traveling the world doing performances and competitions. What is your goal? If you don’t mind sharing.
Rachmaninov said: “Music must be loved. Music should come straight from the heart and talk only to the heart”. My goal is to reach everyone’s heart with my music, no one should stay indifferent. I believe that art is the best and the most natural way to unite people.Is there any specific repertoire that you want to learn?
It was my dream to learn and perform all concertos by Rachmaninoff this season. Until now I played concertos no 1, 2 and 4 and Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini (yesterday was the first time I performed Concerto No. 4 at the Cervantino Festival in Guanajuato, Mexico), next month I will play Concerto No. 3 with Ontario Philharmonic Orchestra in Canada, and in April I will play all of them in two evenings.
I would like to learn Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue and all of Beethoven’s concertos. Also, I would love to play pieces written by Armenian composers.
Would you like to share some of your upcoming performances or CD releases with us?
In November, I will fly to Canada to play at the Bach Festival in Montreal – I am preparing a special program for this festival with Bach pieces in the first part. Afterward, I am going to Oshawa to play Rachmaninoff’s Concerto No. 3 with the Ontario Philharmonic and Maestro Marco Parisotto. In December, I will perform at Palermo Festival in Italy, then will perform Rachmaninoff’s Concerto No.1 with Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra and Maestro Gabriel Feltz, and at the end of December, I will perform Beethoven’s Concerto No. 3 with young and talented conductor Maximilian Haberstock in Germany at Gewandhaus.
What do you like to do when you are not playing the piano?
When I have free time I meet with my friends, sometimes we go to the cinema or to the pool. I adore traveling, discovering new interesting places on our earth, and trying new unusual food. I love playing with my dog, my tiny chihuahua Busya. Also, I like playing table tennis.

1 April 1873. Semyonovo, Starava Russa, Russian Empire. 28 March 1943 Beverly Hills California
The Études-Tableaux (“study pictures”), Op. 33, is the first of two sets of piano études composed by Sergei Rachmaninov (the other being his opus 39 ). They were intended to be “picture pieces”, essentially “musical evocations of external visual stimuli”. But Rachmaninoff did not disclose what inspired each one, stating: “I do not believe in the artist that discloses too much of his images. Let [the listener] paint for themselves what it most suggests.”However, he willingly shared sources for a few of these études with the Italian composer Ottorino Respighi when Respighi orchestrated them in 1930 Rachmaninov composed his Opus 33 Études-Tableaux between August and September of 1911, the year after he completed his Opus 32 Preludes, and while the Opus 33 shares some stylistic points with the Preludes, the pieces are very unlike them. Rachmaninoff composed his Opus 33 at his country estate, Ivanovka, a place whose rural setting offered the peace and tranquillity necessary to stimulate his creativity.
8 studies:
Grave (C♯ minor)
Allegro non troppo (F minor)
Allegro (C major)
Grave (C minor)
Moderato (D minor)
Non Allegro—Presto (E♭ minor)
Allegro con fuoco (E♭ major)
Moderato (G minor)

César Franck, photographed by Pierre Petit
César-Auguste-Jean-Guillaume-Hubert Franck (French pronunciation: 10 December 1822 – 8 November 1890) was a French composer, pianist,organist and music teacher born in present-day Belgium.
He was born in Liege (which at the time of his birth was part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands). He gave his first concerts there in 1834 and studied privately in Paris from 1835, where his teachers included Anton Reicha .After a brief return to Belgium, and a disastrous reception of an early oratorio Ruth, he moved to Paris, where he married and embarked on a career as teacher and organist. He gained a reputation as a formidable musical improviser, and travelled widely within France to demonstrate new instruments built by Aristide Cavaillé-Coll
Prélude, Choral et Fugue, FWV 21 was written in 1884 by César Franck with his distinctive use of cyclic form.Franck had huge hands ,wide like the span of emotions he conveys,capable of spanning the interval of a 12th on the keyboard.This allowed him unusual flexibility in voice-leading between internal parts in fugal composition, and in the wide chords and stretches featured in much of his keyboard music.Of the famous Violin Sonata’s writing it has been said: “Franck, blissfully apt to forget that not every musician’s hands were as enormous as his own, littered the piano part (the last movement in particular) with major-tenth chords… most pianistic mortals ever since have been obliged to spread them in order to play them at all.”The key to his music may be found in his personality. His friends record that he was “a man of utmost humility, simplicity, reverence and industry.” Louis Vierne a pupil and later organist titulaire of Notre-Dame, wrote in his memoirs that Franck showed a “constant concern for the dignity of his art, for the nobility of his mission, and for the fervent sincerity of his sermon in sound… Joyous or melancholy, solemn or mystic, powerful or ethereal: Franck was all those at Sainte-Clotilde.”In his search to master new organ-playing techniques he was both challenged and stimulated by his third and last change in organ posts. On 22 January 1858, he became organist and maître de chapelle at the newly consecrated Sainte Clotilde (from 1896 the Basilique-Sainte-Clotilde), where he remained until his death. Eleven months later, the parish installed a new three-manual Cavaillé-Coll instrument,whereupon he was made titulaire.The impact of this organ on Franck’s performance and composition cannot be overestimated; together with his early pianistic experience it shaped his music-making for the remainder of his life.
Franck’s original plan, according to his pupil Vincent d’Indy, was to write a plain Prelude and Fugue ,the decision to include a central section, separate from, yet linking, the Prelude and Fugue, came later (again according to d’Indy).However this central section became the emotional core of the work, its ‘motto’ theme used as a symbol of redemption and as a unifying principle at the climax of the Fugue.
Saint-Saëns made his tart observation about the piece that the ‘chorale is not a chorale and the fugue is not a fugue’ (in his pamphlet ‘Les Idées de M. Vincent d’Indy’).Alfred Cortot described the Fugue in the context of the whole work as ‘emanating from a psychological necessity rather than from a principle of musical composition’ (La musique française de piano; PUF, 1930). It is as if a ‘fugue’, as a symbol of intellectual rigour, was the only way Franck could find a voice to express fully the hesitant, truncated sobs of the Prelude and the anguished, syncopated lament of the Chorale. Not that the Fugue solves the problem—this is the function of the ‘motto’ theme; but the rules of counterpoint have given the speaker a format in which the unspeakable can be spoken.
There are two motivic ideas on which the whole work is based: one, a falling, appoggiatura motif used in all three sections and generally chromatic in tonality ; the other a criss-crossing motif in fourths (the ‘motto’ theme, which appears first in the Chorale section and then again as a balm at the point where the Fugue reaches its emotional crisis. The first motivic idea is clearly related to the Bach Cantata ‘Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen’, and also to the ‘Crucifixus’ from the B minor Mass; the other idea appears as the ‘bell motif’ in Wagner’s Parsifal.

Marie Blanche Selva (Catalan Blanca Selva i Henry, 29 January 1884 – 3 December 1942) was a French pianist, music educator, writer and composer of Spanish origin.Blanche Selva was the only French pianist of her time to specialise in Czech music, and she was consequently very popular in Czechoslovakia. She continued to tour and work as a concert pianist in Europe By the age of 20 she had performed all of J.S. Bach’s keyboard works in 17 recitals.Between 1906 and 1909 she premiered all four books of Albéniz’s Iberia .In January 1925 Selva moved to Barcelona from Paris where she founded her own music school and performed in a duo with violinist Joan Massià. In 1930 she developed a paralysis that ended her performing career, but she continued teaching, writing and composing.Blanche Selva was active as a translator and transcriber. But her main work is a monumental 7-volumes work on piano technique:L’Enseignement musical de la Technique du Piano, Paris from 1916 to 1925 This book propose a radically new approach to piano playing. Her predilection for big arm gestures and her detailed descriptions of the most unusual types of attack, combined with the constant attention to the resulting tone-colour, make his book a unique contribution to the history of the piano and its literature.
Here is a historic recording of her playing César Franck in 1928 https://youtu.be/IdlM-nK8ppM


Années de pèlerinage S.160.S 161 S 162 S 163 is a set of three suites . Much of it (the first suite in particular) derives from an earlier work, Album d’un voyageur, his first major published piano cycle, which was composed between 1835 and 1838 and published in 1842. Années de pèlerinage is widely considered as the masterwork and summation of Liszt’s musical style. While the first two offerings are often considered music of a young man, the third volume is notable as an example of his later stylel. Composed well after the first two volumes, it displays less virtuosity and more harmonic experimentation.
“Deuxième année: Italie” (“Second Year: Italy”), S.161, was composed between 1837 and 1849 and published in 1858 by Schott. Nos. 4 to 6 are revisions of Tre sonetti del Petrarca (Three sonnets of Petrarch ), which was composed around 1839–1846 and published in 1846.
- Sposalizio (Marriage of the Virgin ) a painting by Raphael
- Il penseroso (The Thinker), a statue by Michelangelo
- Canzonetta del Salvator Rosa (Note: this song “Vado ben spesso cangiando loco” was in fact written by Giovanni Bononcini
- Sonetto 47 del Petrarca
- Sonetto 104 del Petrarca
- Sonetto 123 del Petrarca
- Après une lecture du Dante :Fantasia quasi Sonata
The title Années de pèlerinage refers to Goethe’s famous novel of self-realization, Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship , and especially its sequel Journeyman Years (whose original title Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre meant Years of Wandering or Years of Pilgrimage, the latter being used for its first French translation). Liszt clearly places these compositions in line with the Romantic literature of his time, prefacing most pieces with a literary passage from writers such as Schiller,Byron or Senancour, and, in an introduction to the entire work, writing:
Having recently travelled to many new countries, through different settings and places consecrated by history and poetry; having felt that the phenomena of nature and their attendant sights did not pass before my eyes as pointless images but stirred deep emotions in my soul, and that between us a vague but immediate relationship had established itself, an undefined but real rapport, an inexplicable but undeniable communication, I have tried to portray in music a few of my strongest sensations and most lively impressions





























































































