Biographie Juan Guillermo Vizcarra


Juan Guillermo Vizcarra
is one of the leading Peruvian pianists of his generation, whose performances have been heard far beyond his native land: the Peruvian newspaper El Comercio called him a ‘rare case of extraordinary talent which is called to shine in the international scene’. He has received numerous honours in international competitions, among them the gold medal of the Third Béla Bartók International Piano Competition in 1995 in Lima, the silver medal of the Second Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart International Piano Competition in 1991, also in Lima, and the bronze medal of the ird Ludmila Knezkova International Piano Competition in Canada in 2004. Juan Vizcarra has performed as orchestral soloist and recitalist in Canada, Chile, Mexico, Russia and the United States. Back home in Peru he is a frequent guest soloist of the Peru National Symphony Orchestra, Philharmonic Orchestra of the University of Lima and other major Peruvian orchestras. In 2006 he was invited to perform with the National Symphony Orchestra in Lima for the annual anniversary concert of Filarmonia, the main Peruvian classical radio station. His most recent appearance at home was a performance of the Liszt First Piano Concerto with the Peru National Symphony Orchestra. Future performances include a solo recital at the 2015 American Liszt Society Festival, ‘Franz Liszt and Damnation’.

His training was international, too. In 1988 he graduated from the National University of San Agustin, Arequipa-Peru, receiving a Bachelors of Music in Piano Performance. In 1999 he studied at the Rimsky Korsakov Conservatory in Saint Petersburg. From 1999 to 2001 he studied at the National Conservatory of Music in Lima, a er which he was appointed as faculty member of the National Conservatory, remaining until 2003. In 2005 he finished the Artist Diploma Program at the Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas, and in 2009, also at twentieth centuries.2 Stradal also arranged a huge number of Bach’s works, and – as can be heard on the current disc – many works of Wagner, particularly excerpts from the operas. A more unusual Wagner transcription is Stradal’s two-hand arrangement of the Wesendonck Lieder as piano pieces without voice. …

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