Grigory
Lipmanovich Sokolov (Russian: Григо́рий Ли́пманович Соколо́в; born April 18, 1950) is a Russian concert pianist.
Sokolov began
studying the piano at the age of five and he entered the Leningrad Conservatory's
special school for children at the age of seven to study with Leah Zelikhman.
After graduating from the children's school he continued studying at the Conservatory
with Moisey Khalfin. At 12, he gave his first
major recital in Moscow, in a concert of works by Bach, Beethoven, Schumann, Chopin,
Mendelssohn, Rachmaninoff, Scriabin, Liszt, Debussy, and Shostakovich at the
Philharmonic Society. At age 16, he
came to international attention when the jury at the 1966 International Tchaikovsky
Piano Competition, headed by Emil Gilels, unanimously awarded him the Gold
Medal. It seems this may have been a surprising result: "16-year old
Grisha Sokolov who finally became the winner of that competition was not taken
seriously by anyone at that time."
In fact, despite the international prestige of
his Tchaikovsky Competition success, Sokolov's international career began to
flourish only towards the end of the 1980s. It has been said that his not defecting and the limited travelling
allowed under the Soviet Regime were to blame. This is contradicted by the fact that Sokolov gave US tours in 1969,
1971, 1975, and 1979, as well as numerous recitals elsewhere in the world such
as Finland and Japan. "Sokolov's life as a touring soloist is quite
overcrowded. He tours a great deal in both his motherland and abroad."
The 1980s seem to have proved something of a
stumbling-block to Sokolov's career in the US. "In the beginning, I played
a lot of single concerts in America, in 1969, '71 and, I think, 1975. After
that there was a break in relationships between the U.S. and the Soviet
Union--they were disconnected by the Afghanistan War. One tour in the U.S. was
cancelled in 1980. Then all cultural agreements between the two countries were
cancelled." In addition, during the breakup
of the former Soviet Union, Sokolov played no concerts outside Russia. He is now a well-known figure in concert halls around
Europe, but much less so in the U.S. Sokolov has released relatively few recordings to date and released none for a 20-year
span from 1995 to 2015. But in 2014 he
signed a contract with Deutsche Grammophon to release recordings of some of his
live performances, and in 2015, he released a
2-CD live Salzburg recital featuring two sonatas by Mozart, Chopin's cycle of
24 Preludes, and encore pieces by Scriabin, Chopin, Rameau, and Bach.
In March 2009, it was reported that Sokolov
cancelled a planned concert in London because of British visa requirements
demanding that all non-EU workers provide fingerprints and eye prints with
every visa application (he also cancelled his 2008 concert on seemingly similar
grounds). Sokolov protested that such requirements had echoes of Soviet
oppression.
When asked, Sokolov
cited the following pianists as having inspired him in his years of studies:
"Of those whom I heard on the stage I'd like to name first of all Emil
Gilels. Judging by the records, it was Rachmaninoff, Sofronitsky, Glenn Gould, Solomon
[and] Lipatti. As to esthetics, I feel most close to Anton Rubinstein."
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