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Ryszard Bakst (4 April 1926 25 March 1999)[1] was a Polish pianist and distinguished piano teacher.[2][3]


Background


The grave of Ryszard Bakst at the Powązki Military Cemetery
The grave of Ryszard Bakst at the Powązki Military Cemetery

Bakst was a descendant of the Russian artist Léon Bakst.[citation needed] His teachers were initially his mother and pianist Józef Turczyński, then Abram Lufer (who had won 4th Prize at the 1932 Chopin International Piano Competition) and later Konstantin Igumnov and Heinrich Neuhaus at the Moscow Conservatory, and finally with pianist Zbigniew Drzewiecki.[citation needed]

Bakst was a prize winner at the IV International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw in 1949 and performed in Europe and the United States the Far East and numerous other places around the world.[citation needed] He was particularly known for his interpretations of Chopin but also played composers as diverse as Aaron Copland and Juliusz Zarębski.[4]

He immigrated to Great Britain in 1968 and did not return to his beloved Poland until 1988 when he was feted in a televised concert at the Warsaw Philharmonic Hall.[citation needed]

Among the most gifted students he taught, according to Bakst himself,[citation needed] are Andrew Wilde and Pawel Skrzypek, and, for her complete Bach performances, Jill Crossland.[citation needed] Others whom Bakst held in high regard[citation needed] are Alicja Fiderkiewicz, Janusz Olejniczak and Ronan O'Hora, whilst the long list of other students includes the highly successful Paul Lewis as well as Marta Karbownicka, Graham Scott, Robyn Koh, Mark Anderson, Matthew Schellhorn, Peter Seivewright, Timothy Horton, David Moss and many others.[citation needed] He also gave lessons to popular music artists, such as Don Airey of Deep Purple.[5]

During lessons he could be so inspired and inspiring, but also had a reputation as a highly disciplined and strict task-master often making enormous demands on the most gifted students.[citation needed] His attention to sound (Artur Rubinstein was frequently mentioned) was legendary and any deviations from the text would be immediately picked up.[6]

His students were devoted to him and he very rarely took on new students such was the demand for his services.[citation needed] He died after complications from diabetes mellitus and was cremated in North Manchester.[citation needed]


References


  1. "RYSZARD BAKST (1926 – 1999) Polish pianist". Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  2. "PIANO RECITAL GIVEN BY RYSZARD BAKST". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  3. "Ryszard Bakst". Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  4. "Ryszard Bakst." Scotsman [Edinburgh, Scotland], 21 Apr. 1999, p. 20. Gale OneFile: News, https://link-gale-com.libraryproxy.tulsacc.edu/apps/doc/A82966004/STND?u=odl_tcc&sid=STND&xid=0e20ce67. Accessed 21 Sept. 2020.
  5. "Great Russian Pianists". Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  6. "Bakst Ryszard". Retrieved 26 July 2021.



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