Juan Carlos Fernández-Nieto (born January 26, 1987) is a Spanish-American pianist. He was described by Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung as "A musical sculptor who chisels out melodic lines with sharp contours".[1] and "He set off a firework on the 88 piano keys which excited the audience in the Kulturzentrum right from the start"[1]
Early life and education
Fernández-Nieto was born in Salamanca, Spain,[2] the eldest of three children. Due to his father's job, the family moved often. Days after his birth, they relocated to Figueras. There here spent his first years of life and his first language was Catalan. After his family moved to Valladolid, he started to show interest in music.[3] He began studying piano and violin at the age of four,[2] and gave his first concert at seven.
In the period of 2003-2010 he appeared as a soloist of RTVE Symphony Orchestra,[10] Orchestra Sinfonica di Bari, Orquesta de Extremadura, Orquesta Sinfonica de Castilla y León, he performed in Auditorio Manuel de Falla,[9] Auditorio Monumental,[10]Steinway Hall in New York City. and also collaborated with Tokyo String Quartet and the Grammy-nominated "Yale Cellos" under the direction of Aldo Parisot. He was featured on the Messiaen Centennial Celebration at Yale performing Vingt Regards sur l’enfant-Jésus and appeared in Norfolk Music at Yale in 2010 and in The Holland Music Sessions in 2007.
Fernández-Nieto won First Prize in the National Piano Competition in Leon in 2005, Third Prize in CSMTA Young Artists Competition in 2008, and First Prize in Chamber Music Society at Yale in 2010. He also received the George Miles Fellowship, Linda & Alan Englander Fellowship, and the Yale Alumni Prize.
In 2018 Fernández-Nieto won the Audience Prize and the Canon Prize in XIX Paloma O’Shea Santander International Piano Competition,[3] and performed in Klavier-Festival Ruhr,[18][1] Classical Bridge Music Festival in New York,[19]Festival Internacional de Santander, Semana Internacional de la Música in Medina del Campo,[20] and as a soloist with Orquesta Nacional de Colombia in Teatro Colón in Bogotá[21]
Discography
Fernández-Nieto's debut album, Carnaval, a monographic of music of Schumann, features both his carnavals.[22] It was recorded in 2016 on the Odradek Records label.
The recording of Fernández-Nieto's debut in the Klavier-Festival Ruhr was published as "Vive la France! Debussy & Saint-Saint-Saëns (Edition Ruhr Piano Festival, Vol. 37)" in 2019 on the CAvi-music, on which he plays the Six Bagatelles, op. 3 by Camille Saint-Saëns as well as three valses from the same composer.[23]
Media appearances
Fernández-Nieto has been a featured guest in the TV shows as "Programa de Mano" and "Los Conciertos" on La 2, "Musical Cities" 2017 Mediaset, on Televisión Castilla y León; and on the radio shows as "Estudio 206"[24] and "Cafe Zimmerman"[25] "La dársena"[26] on Radio Clásica (Radio Nacional de España), on Deutschlandfunk, Cadena Cope, Cadena Ser, Radio Nacional de El Salvador, Price-Rubin Radio.
He has been featured as well in specialized magazines as Gramophone UK, Ritmo,[27] Scherzo, Melómano and Platea Magazine.[28]