0
Yuja Wang
Yuja Wang
Chinese pianist
1
Gabriela Montero
Gabriela Montero
Venezuelan musician
2
Ilya Itin
Ilya Itin
Russian pianist
3
Evgeny Kissin
Evgeny Kissin
Russian classical pianist
4
Thomas Adès
Thomas Adès
British composer, pianist and conductor
5
James Loughran
James Loughran
British conductor
6
Vanessa Benelli Mosell
Vanessa Benelli Mosell
Italian pianist
7
Paavo Berglund
Paavo Berglund
Finnish conductor and violinist
8
Vilde Frang
Vilde Frang
classical violinist
9
Jan Lisiecki
Jan Lisiecki
Canadian pianist
10
Joseph Alfidi
Joseph Alfidi
pianist, composer and conductor
11
Philip Edward Fisher
Philip Edward Fisher
British musician
12
Sarah Chang
Sarah Chang
violinist
13
John Lill
John Lill
English classical pianist
14
Nobuyuki Tsujii
Nobuyuki Tsujii
Japanese pianist and composer (1988-)
15
Yannick Nézet-Séguin
Yannick Nézet-Séguin
Canadian conductor and pianist
16
Gil Shaham
Gil Shaham
Israeli musician
17
Daniel Blumenthal
Daniel Blumenthal
German-born American classical pianist; Professor at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Brussels
18
Truls Mørk
Truls Mørk
Norwegian cellist.
19
Simon Rattle
Simon Rattle
British conductor
20
Conrad Tao
Conrad Tao
American musician
21
Horacio Gutiérrez
Horacio Gutiérrez
Cuban-American pianist
22
José Feghali
José Feghali
Brazilian musician
23
Javier Perianes
Javier Perianes
Spanish musician
24
Alexandre Da Costa
Alexandre Da Costa
Canadian violinist
Simon Trpčeski
Macedonian musician

Simon Trpčeski

Intro
Macedonian musician
Record Labels
Awards Received
Spellemannprisen in classical music
Music

Simon Trpcheski (Simon Trpčeski), OMM (Macedonian: Симон Трпчески, pronounced [ˈsimɔn ˈtr̩ptʃɛski]) (born September 18, 1979, in Skopje, Yugoslavia), is a Macedonian classical pianist.

The youngest of three children, his father was a judge and his mother a pharmacist. In 2002, he received his degree in music from the Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, Macedonia (now North Macedonia), where he studied with Professor Boris Romanov. By then he had already made his debut in recital at London's Wigmore Hall in 2001 and had won prizes in international competitions in the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, and Italy.

Trpčeski was chosen to join the two-year BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artists scheme in 2001, which further launched his profile to a wider audience. Since 2005 he has made a rapid series of debuts with orchestras worldwide—including the New York Philharmonic, the San Francisco Symphony, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, the Hong Kong Philharmonic, and the Toronto Symphony—and has made recital tours in the United States, Europe, and Asia. In December 2005 he appeared for the first time in the International Piano Series in London, and he has performed with English orchestras including the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra with which he has recorded all the Rachmaninov Piano Concerto's, the London Philharmonic and London Symphony Orchestras, the Hallé Orchestra, the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. In Scandinavia, he has performed with the Stockholm, Bergen, Gothenburg, and Helsinki orchestras and the Swedish Chamber Orchestra.

Trpčeski's first recital recording—an EMI Classics Debut Series compact disc including music of Tchaikovsky, Scriabin, Stravinsky and Prokofiev—received both the Editor's Choice and Debut Album awards from Gramophone magazine. Trpčeski shifted to EMI's main label with his second disc; it and its two successors comprise single-composer recitals of Rachmaninoff, Chopin, and Debussy respectively.

In both his concert appearances and his recordings, Trpčeski has received enthusiastic responses from critics and the public alike. Recently in Vancouver, BC Canada (January 23, 2016), he played Liszt's Piano Concerto No. 2 in A Major with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra under guest conductor Otto Tausk. He received an overwhelming standing ovation. (Allegro- Magazine of the VSO. Vol. 21, Issue 2)