SOL-LA Music Academy - Music Builds Humanity

events:

6/7
St. Anne School Concert
2015 Colorado Avenue, Santa Monica, 7:00pm

6/9
Solo Recital - SOL: 1:30pm - 2:45pm
Solo Recital - LA:     3:00pm - 4:15pm    

6/16
Group Performance: 11:30am - 1:00pm
Solo Recital - TI:        1:45pm - 3:00pm
Solo Recital - DO:      3:15pm - 4:30pm 

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Anders Martinson

Anders Martinson

Anders Martinson made his national television debut as a pianist in 1988 at the age of fifteen performing on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show. By eighteen, he was concertizing throughout the United States and abroad. He made his Los Angeles Philharmonic debut under Esa-Pekka Salonen in 1991, and his New York recital debut at Carnegie's Weill Hall the following year where he received a rave New York Times review. European debuts in Rome and London soon followed.

Martinson has won numerous competitions and garnered multiple awards. In 1991, he placed 2nd in the prestigious Robert Casadesus International Piano Competition, and 1st in both the solo and concerto categories of the Joanna Hodges International Piano Competition, in each case as the youngest competitor. In 1992, again as the youngest competitor, he won 1st place in the international D'Angelo Young Artist Competition. Martinson received the United States Presidential Scholar Award in 1991, and the Gilmore Foundation Young Artist Award in 1992, which recognized him as an outstanding young American pianist.

In early 1992, Martinson’s concert career was cut short by focal dystonia (the misfiring of certain specialized neurons in the brain) which affected the control of his right hand, and forced him to cancel all future performances, including engagements in Zurich and Sao Paolo. Subsequently, he attended Yale University, where he turned his attention to conducting. Martinson took over as Music Director of the Berkeley Orchestra at Yale in 1994. During his final two years there, he guided the orchestra to a new level, drawing full crowds to the performances, and building the 45-piece chamber orchestra into a 75-piece orchestra capable of performing standard orchestral literature. He completed his Bachelor of Arts in Music in 1996 and accepted one of the top awards bestowed on graduates at Commencement, the David Everett Chantler Award. He also received the New Prize for his work as the director of the Berkeley Orchestra.

In 2004, Martinson decided to focus on teaching piano. Currently, he teaches privately out of his studio in Santa Monica.