JAY GOTTLIEB was born in New
York, where he was an honors graduate of the High School of
Performing Arts while simultaneously studying at the Juilliard
School. He received a Master of Arts degree from Harvard University,
where he performed and organized concerts and taught piano,
composition and harmony.
He worked closely for many years in Paris with
Nadia Boulanger, as well as with pianists Robert Casadesus,
Yvonne Loriod and Aloys Kontarsky, and composers Lukas Foss,
Stefan Wolpe, Olivier Messiaen, Maurice Ohana, Georges Aperghis,
Luciano Berio, Pierre Boulez, Sylvano Bussotti, John Cage,
George Crumb, György Ligeti, Betsy Jolas, Oliver Knussen,
Giacinto Scelsi, Ralph Shapey.
JAY GOTTLIEB is a Laureat of the Yehudi Menuhin
Foundation. He has received a Martha Baird Rockefeller Foundation
Grant, National Endowment for the Arts Grant, Lili Boulanger
Memorial Prize, French Government Grant, First Prize in the
International Improvisation Competition in Lyons, the Festival
Estival de France Prize, and the Master Award for Excellence
in Performance at the Berkshire Music Festival, Tanglewood.
He has taken part in such music festivals as
Berlin, Darmstadt, Frankfurt, Cologne, Rome, Milan, Turin,
the Biennale of Venice, Amsterdam, Aldeburgh, Almeida (London),
Huddersfield, Extasis (Geneva), Zurich, Madrid, Seville, Autumn
Festival in Warsaw, Autumn Festival in Paris, La Roque d'Anthéron,
Musica in Strasburg, Octobre en Normandie, Manca in Nice,
Avignon, Les Musiques in Marseille, Piano aux Jacobins in
Toulouse, Lille, Orléans, Bourges, Metz, Nancy, International
Keyboard Institute and Festival in New York, Tanglewood Festival,
Montreal, Macao, among many others.
JAY GOTTLIEB has appeared as soloist in the United
States with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, National Music
Week Symphony, Pierre Monteux Domain Orchestra, and the Group
for Contemporary Music in New York, in China with the National
Symphony of China, in Great Britain with the London Sinfonietta,
in Switzerland with the Orchestre du Rhin; in Germany with
the Hessicher Rundfunk Orchestra, in Italy with the Orchestra
della R.A.I., in France with the Orchestre Philharmonique
de Radio-France, L'Orchestre Symphonique d'Europe, L'Orchestre
du Capitole de Toulouse, the Polish National Radio Orchestra,
members of the Orchestre de Paris, and with various French
ensembles including Musique Vivante, Ars Nova, Itinéraire,
Alternance, 2e2m, Denojours, the Percussions de Strasbourg,
the Contemporary Chorus, Musicatreize, Accentus. He has worked
with such conductors as Pierre Boulez, Seiji Ozawa, Kent Nagano,
Michael Tilson Thomas, Aaron Copland, Lukas Foss, Gunther
Schuller, Robert Craft, Gilbert Amy, Arturo Tamayo, Paul Méfano,
Diego Masson, Michel Plasson, Pascal Rophé, Ronald
Zollman and Laurence Equilbey.
JAY GOTTLIEB has concertized extensively throughout
the United States, Canada, Europe, South America, Asia and
Africa and has made numerous appearances on major radio and
television stations. He has produced several series of broadcasts
for France-Musique and France-Culture devoted entirely to
American music. He continues to give lectures, lecture-concerts
and master classes on multiple aspects of twentieth- and twenty-first-century
music, including at the Paris Conservatory, where he is also
regularly invited to serve as a jury member for their Piano
Examinations, Music School of Indiana University in Bloomington,
Juilliard School, International Keyboard Institute and Festival
in New York, Ecole Normale and Schola Cantorum in Paris, American
Conservatory in Fontainebleau.
He is regularly invited to be a jury member for international
piano competitions, and is Chairman of the Jury for the International
Contemporary Piano Competition for Youth in Fribourg, Switzerland.
In 2006, he was appointed to the Advisory Board of the Swiss
Global Artistic Foundation, for which he is a regular performer
and speaker.
At the Centre Acanthes of the Avignon Festival
(along with Boulez, Dutilleux and Xenakis) he gave lectures,
master classes and a recital in which he premiered Alessandro
Solbiati's "Piano Sonata". JAY GOTTLIEB has given
and continues to give many world premieres, often of works
written for and dedicated to him. Examples are the "Etudes"
of Magnus Lindberg, Poul Ruders, Gilbert Amy, Maurice Ohana,
Oscar Strasnoy (an on-going series under the banner "International
Etudes"), "Gemelli" by Sylvano Bussotti, "Voyants"
by Barbara Kolb (premiered in the Théâtre des
Champs-Elysées in Paris), "Jay" for piano
and seven brass instruments by Franco Donatoni (premiered
at the Pompidou Center in Paris), the Piano Concerto by Ivar
Frounberg (premiered in the Amplitudes Festival in Copenhagen),
the Piano Concerto by Antonio Chagas Rosa, the "Concerto-Fantaisie"
by Betsy Jolas, the Piano Concerto by Régis Campo,
"Premier Livre Pour Piano" also by Régis
Campo, "Toy" for Piano and the Percussions de Strasbourg
by Oscar Strasnoy, "Jazz Connotation" by Bruno Mantovani,
"Volubile" by Yan Maresz, "32 For Piano"
by Stuart MacRae, "Trinity" by Lukas Ligeti and
"Temps posés, temps mélés"
by Benoît Delbecq.
JAY GOTTLIEB is the author of a comprehensive
series of articles on twentieth-century piano music for Piano
magazine, and is co-author of Ten Years With the Piano of
the Twentieth Century, published in Paris by the Cité
de la Musique.
He recorded the soundtracks for the films "La
Discrète" by Christian Vincent and "Sonate"
by George Allez. He has recorded for Philips, RCA, CRI, Harmonia
Mundi, Auvidis, Pianovox-Sony, Ogam, Erato, Milan, Universal,
Salabert-Actuels, Opus111, Aeon and Signature (Radio-France).
His recordings of piano music by John Adams, Philip Glass,
John Cage and Charles Ives were awarded the "Choc"
in Le Monde de la Musique in 1998, 1999, 2000, and 2001 respectively,
while in January 2001 his John Cage recording won a "Diapason
d'Or". He was awarded the Grand Prix du Disque by the
French Recording Academy in 1995, 2002, 2004 and 2005.
JAY GOTTLIEB has been selected to represent the
USA worldwide through the Arts America Program of the USIA,
a division of the State Department. His name is included in
"The World Who's Who of Musicians", "Who's
Who in American Music", "American Keyboard Artists"
and "Outstanding Young Men of America".
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