Richard
Goode, Piano
"A performance of staggering virtuosity and musical insight." - The Times (London)
Richard Goode has been hailed for
music-making of tremendous emotional power, depth and expressiveness, and has been acknowledged worldwide as one of today’s leading interpreters of the
music of Beethoven. In regular performances with major orchestras, recitals in the world’s music
capitals, and acclaimed recordings, he has won a large and devoted following. His performances of
Bach, Mozart, Brahms, Schubert, Schumann, Chopin, Debussy, Janacek, and others have received
equal accolades.
A native of New York, Goode studied with Nadia Reisenberg at the Mannes College of Music and with
Rudolf Serkin at the Curtis Institute. His numerous prizes over the years include the Young Concert
Artists Award, First Prize in the Clara Haskil Competition, the Avery Fisher Prize, and a Grammy
Award with clarinetist Richard Stoltzman. His first public traversal of the complete cycle of Beethoven
sonatas at New York’s 92nd Street Y in 1987-88 was hailed by the New York Times as “among the
season’s most important and memorable events.” and more recently he performed the cycle in
London’s Queen Elizabeth Hall in 1994 and 1995.
In recent seasons, Goode has appeared with all of the major American orchestras – New York,
Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Cleveland. In Europe, he has
likewise appeared with orchestras such as the Orchestre de Paris, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester
Berlin, Tonhalle Zurich, Budapest Festival Orchestra, Vienna Symphony, Finnish Radio Symphony
and Rotterdam Philharmonic. Goode appears regularly at the BBC Proms and at the Edinburgh
International Festival where he was Artist in Residence in 2004 and 2006; he also undertook a major
residency at New York’s Carnegie Hall throughout the 2005/6 season, entitled Perspectives. He has
performed recitals in all the major concert halls and festivals around the world.
In the 2007/8 season Goode became the Associate Artist at the Southbank Centre in London with a series
of six events: a solo recital Homage to Chopin, a concert with Dawn Upshaw to include Schoenberg’s
Book of the Hanging Gardens and Berg’s Piano Sonata Op. 1, with pianist Jonathan Biss in a two pianos
recital, a lecture recital Chopin’s Voices, a masterclass and performing Beethoven’s 3rd Piano
Concerto with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. He also appears with the New York Philharmonic
Orchestra, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and the San
Francisco Symphony. In recital Goode performed recently in the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra’s
reictal series, at the Theatre de Champs Elysees Paris, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Bath Mozartfest,
Klavierfest am Ruhr and in Milan and Rome.
Following the completion of his Beethoven concerto cycle at London’s Barbican with Budapest Festival
Orchstra and Ivan Fischer in 2005, Goode recorded the Beethoven concerti for release on the
Nonesuch label in 2008. An exclusive Nonesuch recording artist, Goode has made more than two
dozen recordings over the years ranging from solo and chamber works to lieder and concerti. In 1993,
Nonesuch released a 10-CD set of his complete Beethoven Sonata cycle, the first-ever by an
American pianist, which met with widespread critical acclaim and was nominated for a Grammy and
the Gramophone Good CD Guide. Other recording highlights include a duo recording with Dawn
Upshaw, and a series of Mozart piano concertos with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra. His second
disc of Bach Partitas was Gramophone Magazine’s Record of the Month in July 2003: “Richard
Goode, whose generosity and naturalness as a man are reflected in his comparable qualities as a
performer, now brings us his second volume of Bach’s six partitas. It really is a sublime disc.” His most
recent recording of Mozart sonatas has once again received much critical acclaim.
Richard Goode is co-Artistic Director with Mitsuko Uchida of the Marlboro Music School and Festival in
Vermont (USA).