Italian-American virtuoso James Tocco enjoys international
renown as a recitalist, orchestral soloist, chamber musician and pedagogue at the absolute
peak of his powers. Beyond his vast repertoire of virtually the entire standard piano
literature, he is widely regarded as the foremost interpreter of American masterworks,
including Bernstein's Age of Anxiety, which he recently recorded with Leonard Slatkin and
the BBC London Symphony, and the Corigliano Piano Concerto, of which he is acknowledged
the definitive interpreter by the Pulitzer-Prize-winning composer. He has performed this
spectacular work to great acclaim with the Atlanta, San Diego, Kansas City and Phoenix
Symphonies and Louisville Orchestra, the latter including an acclaimed recording. The
pianist's recent seasons included his Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra debut, performing the
MacDowell Concerto and Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, both conducted by Leonard Slatkin. An
especially accomplished recitalist, Mr. Tocco has been widely praised for his
interpretations of Beethoven, Chopin and Liszt, as well as 20th-century composers, and he
among the very few pianists to regularly program the keyboard works of Handel. His
2001-2002 season includes performances of Bernstein's Age of Anxiety with Marin Alsop and
the New World Symphony and Leonard Slatkin and the BBC London Symphony.
Born of Italian parents in Detroit, Mr. Tocco's love of
music--especially opera--began in early childhood. At six he started studying piano and at
twelve he made his orchestral debut, performing Beethoven's Second Concerto. Among the
countless awards that followed were a scholarship to the Salzburg Mozarteum and a French
government grant to study with Magda Tagliaferro in Paris. His musical education was
completed with Claudio Arrau in New York. International prominence came with his First
Prize victory in the International ARD Competition in Munich, followed by a major triumph
as a last-minute replacement for Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli as guest soloist for the
Tchaikovsky First Piano Concerto at the Vienna Festival. In the years since then he has
performed literally around the world: throughout North and South America, Europe, the
Soviet Untion, Japan, Australia, South Africa and the Middle East. His orchestral
engagements include the Cleveland and Minnesota Orchestras; Berlin, London, Los Angeles,
Hong Kong and Munich Philharmonics; London, Houston, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Detroit,
Chicago, New World, National, and NHK (Japan) Symphonies. Conductors with whom he has
collaborated include Marin Alsop, David Atherton, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Jesus Lopez-Cobos,
Andrew Litton, Yoav Talmi, Robert Shaw, Yoel Levi, Zdenek Macal, Gerard Schwarz, Raymond
Leppard, David Zinman, Lukas Foss, Georges Prêtre, Neeme Järvi, James DePreist, Hugh
Wolff, Wolfgang Sawallisch, Leonard Slatkin, John Nelson, Christoph Eschenbach and
Christoph von Dohnányi. Festival invitations include Salzburg, Vienna, Lockenhaus,
Holland, Schleswig-Holstein, Dubrovnik, Wolf Trap, the Hollywood Bowl, Blossom, Ravinia,
New York's "Mostly Mozart," Spoleto (USA) and Santa Fe.
Mr. Tocco's voluminous discography reflects his varied
tastes and astonishing versatility: the world-premiere recording of Bernstein's complete
solo piano music, an all-Copland disc including the first recording of the solo piano
version of the Suite from Rodeo; the complete Chopin Préludes, the complete piano music
of Charles Tomlinson Griffes; Erwin Schulhof's Cinq Etudes de Jazz; Bach-Liszt Organ
Transcriptions; and the four piano sonatas of Edward MacDowell. Just issued to unanimous
acclaim is Mr. Tocco's recording of Corigliano's Etude-Fantasy on Sony Classical.
In addition to his rigorous international performing
itinerary, Mr. Tocco is Eminent Scholar/Artist-in-Residence at the University of
Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music, and Professor of Piano at the Musikhochschule in
Lübeck, Germany. Mr. Tocco is also the Artistic Director of the Great Lakes Chamber Music
Festival in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.