The Maltese pianist and harpsichordist, Joanne Camilleri, received her early music education through private tuition in her homeland Malta, where she followed exams of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music. She was tutored by Vincent Borg and then by Ingrid Calleja in her higher grades, while complementary studies in theory and aural awareness were pursued with Prof Dr Dion Buhagiar, Davinia Galea, Yvette Galea and Anthony Spiteri. From a young age, she showed a natural and gifted aptitude towards her piano studies, which enabled her to successfully absorb and perform a lot of repertoire as she was guided through the stages by her tutors. As a result of an outstanding performance in the last grade exam (grade 8 ABRSM), she was recommended for an Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music International Scholarship by the examiner. However, due to her young age, she was not able to take up the offer to audition for one of the prestigious music conservatoires in the UK. At the age of 15 she was successful sat for her first performance diploma (ATCL) from the Trinity College of Music, obtaining the highest mark in the session. Just over a year later she sat for her second performance diploma, this time following the ABRSM programme, obtaining another high Distinction in her performance and as a result she was once again recommended for an international ABRSM scholarship by the examiner. This time, at age 17, she was just one year short of being able to take up the offer of an audition. Therefore, the offer was postponed for a year, when she was successful in auditioning and obtaining a place at the conservatoire of her choice, the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester, UK, on a four-year full international scholarship, to follow the undergraduate course. To date, she has been the only pianist, and just one of two musicians to have been awarded such a prestigious scholarship.
As a young pianist, Joanne Camilleri placed first in all the then-available Maltese competitions, one of which was the prestigious Bice Mizzi Vassallo Music Competition, which gave her the opportunity to attend the Lake District Summer Music Academy in the UK. At 17, she was the youngest pianist on the advanced solo course, where she enjoyed her first taste of international music-making. Her seasonal participation at the Lake District Summer Music Academy, made possible through the aid of scholarships, was truly inspirational, giving Camilleri opportunities to work with international pianists including Arnaldo Cohen, Ben Frith, Klaus Hellwig, Renna Kellaway, Leon McCawley, Thomas Sauer and Barry Snyder and members of internationally renowned chamber ensembles, namely the Chilingirian String Quartet, the Sorrel String Quartet, the Skampa Quartet, Trio Ondine and Gould Piano Trio. Over the years while participating in the Academy, she performed in several Young Artists Concerts in Ambleside, Windermere, Grasmere and Hawkshead, and was also invited to give a solo recital to the LDSM Patrons. Between her first and second year of undergraduate studies at the RNCM, she also sat and obtained a Licentiate of the Royal Schools of Music (LRSM) in Performance, with Distinction.
In 2004, Joanne Camilleri obtained a First Class honours Bachelor of Music degree, with first class in her final recital, also obtaining the highest mark awarded in her year. This was followed by a master's degree in performance, with distinction, a year later (2005), and following that, a Postgraduate Performance Diploma with distinction (2006). She topped her final year at the conservatoire with an outstanding mark in her final recital exam. Both postgraduate years were sponsored by the Janatha Stubbs Foundation. While at the RNCM, she was tutored by one of Britain's foremost pianists and tutors Carole Presland and by Russian virtuoso Alexander Melnikov. In her last year at the college, she was one of twelve students selected to take part in the prestigious Gold Medal Weekend - a showcase for the college's most outstanding students - where she performed a solo recital to high acclaim.
During her student years, several international musicians were influential to Joanne Camilleri's musical development. She participated in master-classes with acclaimed musicians such as Marcel Baudet, Sergei Dorensky, Franco Fodera, Nelson Goerner, Ruth Harte, Daniel Höxter, Stephen Hough (on one occasion working with him on one of his own compositions), Jin Ju, Nina Kazimrova, Steven Osborne, Stephen Savage, Cynthia Turner and Akico Wakabayashi; while chamber music master-classes included those with Ian Brown, Yair Kless, the late Christopher Rowland, Jeremy Young, Marco Von Pagee, Jesper Svedberg of the Kungsbaka Piano Trio and the Piano Duo Jennifer Micallef and Glen Inanga.
In 2007, when she returned to Malta, Joanne Camilleri read for a Doctorate in Performance at the University of Malta, where she was mentored by Mro Michael Laus. She was the first pianist to be awarded a Doctorate of Music in Performance by the University of Malta.
As a student at the Royal Northern College of Music, Joanne Camilleri was already making a name for herself as a sough-after soloist and chamber musician, performing in numerous venues around Manchester, St Martin-in-the-Fields in London and also further afield at the Isle of Man and Tunisia. Following her third and final graduation at the RNCM, throughout her Doctoral studies at the University of Malta, as well as during the subsequent years, to date, she has performed extensively as a recitalist, concerto soloist, chamber musician and orchestral pianist both locally in Malta and Gozo, and around Europe, America and Asia. Her performances have taken her to Sweden, Switzerland, Wales, Ireland, around the UK, as well as to Moscow and St Petersburg in Russia, New York, Philadelphia and Maryland in America, and also in various venues in China.
Loved by her audiences for her passion and sensitivity, Joanne Camilleri is nowadays regarded as one of the most outstanding and sought-after pianists to emerge from Malta, described by international pianist William Fong as "a musician of high intelligence and artistic vision". She currently combines her busy performing schedule with a love for teaching. She has been invited to perform at prestigious functions including those at the Palais de Nations in Geneva, President's Palace in Malta, at the German Ambassador's Residency and the American Ambassador's Residency, as well as other concerts organised under the auspices of the Ambassadors for Ireland, UK, Tunisia and China. Commemorative events have seen her perform alongside other prominent international musicians such as British pianist Ann Rachlin at the age of 13 at the National Manoel Theatre in a Mozart Night, alongside Russian pianist Vladimir Ovchinnikov in a millennium year concert of Twentieth Century Music and alongside London Symphony Orchestra
leader Carmine Lauri in a concert to celebrate Malta's Independence Day in London.
As concerto soloist and orchestral pianist, Joanne Camilleri has performed with the Malta Philharmonic Orchestra, the Armenian State Symphony Orchestra and British Orchestras, collaborating with distinguished conductors such as Wayne Marshall, Lancelot Fuhry, Clark Rundell, Eric Hull, Philip Walsh, Karl Jenkins, Sergey Smbatyan, Brian Schembri and Michael Laus amongst others.
An avid chamber musician, Joanne Camilleri has worked with many professional partners in various ensembles, performing in the acclaimed Chamber Music International Festival (RNCM), the Malta International Arts Festival, the Three Palaces Festival and the Victoria International Arts Festival on several occasions. She also performed in various festivals while touring Sweden and the UK on several occasions, as former member of the Camilleri Trio, with whom she also premiered a number of works, including a score for a silent film bYasujirô Ozu which was recently recorded and released on DVD by the British Film Institute.
Having a keen interest in 17th- and 18th- century repertoire, Joanne Camilleri also plays the harpsichord and organ continuo with the Valletta International Baroque Ensemble (VIBE), with whom she regularly performs. In 2017 they were invited to tour Madrid, Paris and Berlin as ambassadors to mark Malta's EU Presidency. She has collaborated with Baroque music specialists such as harpsichordists James Johnstone and Nicholas Parle and Baroque violinist Catherine Martin, while playing with the Ensemble as well as during performances as part of the Valletta International Baroque Festival. Her doctoral thesis, which focused on Johann Sebastian Bach: Aria with 30 Variations - An Insight into its Style, Structure and Interpretation, was complemented by an acclaimed performance of the work on the piano, that was described as a "monumental feat" performed with "superb confidence", bringing "to each variation an insight that never failed to be intriguing" The Sunday Times of Malta. She i has given a number of solo recitals dedicated to the repertoire of the Baroque era and specifically of works by J.S. Bach. She has also released two solo CDs dedicated to J.S. Bach's works.
Apart from her busy performing schedule, Joanne Camilleri also has a steady teaching calendar. She has taught a number of students who have successfully achieved advanced performance credentials and also others who have continued to progress to professional music careers. While still in the UK, in 2006 she was visiting piano tutor at Uppingham School in Rutland. When she later set base in Malta, Camilleri joined the teaching staff at the Malta School of Music as a full time member, teaching both solo piano performance and also chamber music. For several years, she was also invited to give master-classes as part of the annual Victoria International Arts Festival in Gozo. |