I heard a day's worth of the qualifying rounds of the Rostropovich Cello Competition here in Washington this summer. The final rounds of this prestigious competition were held in Paris, from November 9 to 20. Of the several cellists I heard that day, I was most impressed with French cellist Yves Dharamraj (graduated from Yale, now studying with Joel Krosnick at Juilliard). As it turns out, my estimation in that case matched with that of the jury, and Dharamraj was awarded the chance to go on to Paris. There hasn't been much reported in the press over the course of the last couple weeks, but the final results are coming out of Paris. According to the competition's Web site, Dharamraj played the first round on November 11 at the Conservatoire National de Région de Paris, but that was as far as he went. This is no shame to him, as he plays extremely well and the competition is terribly fierce.
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All six finalists apparently chose to play the Shostakovich op. 107 concerto. As challenging as that must have been for an audience, journalists report that the public stayed and was largely made up of young people, which is a good sign. Marie-Elizabeth Hecker was born in 1987 in Zwickau, and she has already made a recording, in 2004, of the Kodály sonata. (I can't find it anywhere.) Shortly before the competition in Paris, she gave a concert in Brooklyn, at Barge Music, with her brother, pianist Martin Hecker, on October 29 and 30. There is a picture of her playing at the competition in this article.
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