Sunday, October 06, 2024 | 5:30 pm

Isata Kanneh-Mason, piano

The Yale Gordon Young Artist Concert

Location: Shriver Hall

The Yale Gordon Young Artist Concert

Isata Kanneh-Mason opens the season with a powerful solo debut following two sold-out chamber music performances at Shriver Hall Concert Series. “A profound and greatly gifted artist who radiates warmth, joy, and much-needed musical sunshine” (Gramophone), the chart-topping British pianist performs an inventive program featuring a bravura Haydn work and Chopin’s masterful final sonata, a thrilling journey of virtuosity and emotional depth.

Kanneh-Mason "brings real verve and excitement." —The Guardian

What You'll Hear

Isata Kanneh-Mason 2023_s04-011_credit David Venni.SQUAREjpg.jpg

Isata Kanneh-Mason

Pianist Isata Kanneh-Mason offers eclectic and interesting recital programs with repertoire encompassing Franz Joseph Haydn and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Fanny Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann, Frédéric Chopin and Johannes Brahms to George Gershwin and beyond. In concerto, she is equally at home in Felix Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann as in Sergei Prokofiev and Ernő Dohnányi.

Kanneh-Mason is in high demand from concert halls and orchestras worldwide. Following her phenomenally successful concerto debut at the BBC Proms in 2023, she was invited to open the festival in July 2024 with the BBC Symphony and conductor Elim Chan, a performance that resulted in stellar reviews in the mainstream press. She appeared as concerto soloist with the European Union Youth Orchestra and Iván Fischer in summer 2024 performing Dohnányi’s Variations on a Nursery Tune at Carnegie Hall, the Grafenegg Festival, and Bolzano Festival Bozen.

Highlights of the 2024-25 season include Ludwig van Beethoven’s Fourth Piano Concerto at the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie’s FREISPIEL festival and at the Ulster Orchestra’s season-opening concert, and Prokofiev’s Third Concerto with the Chineke! Orchestra on tour at Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie, the Berliner Philharmonie, Brussels’s BOZAR, and London’s Queen Elizabeth Hall. Solo recital appearances include the Lucerne Festival, Piano aux Jacobins Toulouse, the Schumann-Haus Düsseldorf, PHIL Haarlem, and on tour across the U.S. In concerto performance, Kanneh-Mason appears with the London, Bergen, Bremen, and Duisburg philharmonics; with the North Carolina Symphony; and on tour with the Staatskapelle Weimar and the Residentie Orkest.

Kanneh-Mason continues her longstanding duo collaboration with her cellist brother, Sheku, with performances in the U.K. and on tour across Europe, the U.S., and Canada. She also gives performances with bass-baritone Gerald Finley in the Czech Republic and Germany.

In 2023-24, Kanneh-Mason gave performances with the Philadelphia Orchestra, National Arts Centre Orchestra Ottawa, NCPA Orchestra Beijing, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra on tour in the U.S. and Germany, Cleveland Orchestra, Toronto Symphony, and Stockholm Philharmonic among others. She appeared in solo recital at the Beethoven Bonn and Rheingau festivals, and venues around the globe such as London’s Wigmore Hall, New York’s Carnegie Hall, Boston’s Jordan Hall, and the Konzerthaus Dortmund.

Kanneh-Mason is a Decca Classics artist and has recorded four solo albums for the label—“Romance” (2019), “Summertime” (2021), “Childhood Tales” (2023), and “Mendelssohn” (2024). Her latest release presents music from the two Mendelssohn siblings, including the glittering First Piano Concerto by Felix and the long-lost Easter Sonata by his exceptionally talented but overlooked elder sister Fanny, alongside transcriptions of some of Felix’s most famous music by Sergei Rachmaninoff and Franz Liszt.

Kanneh-Mason has received many awards, including the coveted Leonard Bernstein Award from the Schleswig-Holstein Festival and an Opus Klassik award for best young artist. She also enjoys composing and arranging, and she released two albums of her favorite works for intermediate and advanced piano students through ABRSM Publishing in 2023.

Isata Kanneh-Mason’s website is isatakannehmason.com

"Kanneh-Mason's performance moved me to tears. What more can I say?" —Gramophone

Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)

Sonata No. 50 in C major, Hob. XVI:50

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Clara Schumann (1819-1896)

Nocturne in F major, Op. 6, No. 2

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Carl Nielsen (1891-1931)

Chaconne, Op. 32

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Sofia Gubaidulina (b. 1931)

Chaconne

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Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)

Sonata No. 3 in B minor, Op. 58

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Program Subject to Change Without Notice