The Portuguese pianist, Maria-João Pires, started playing at the age of three, giving her first public performance two years later. Pires performed W.A. Mozart concertos when she was seven and received Portugal's major prize for musicians at nine. She studied with Campos Coelho and Francine Benoit at the Lisbon Conservatory, graduating at 16. Post-graduate studies took her to Germany, where she studied with Rösl Schmidt, in Munich, and with Karl Engel, in Hannover. In 1970, she won the Beethoven Bicentennial Competition in Brussels.
Maria-João Pires made her London debut in 1986, and she first played in New York three years later. She has performed with the major European and American orchestras, including the Berliner Philharmoniker, Boston Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestre de Paris, Concertgebouw Orchestra Amsterdam, and Gulbenkian Orchestra. Often praised for her extraordinary renditions of W.A. Mozart's works, Pires has shown a remarkable affinity with several of the greatest composers, including J.S. Bach, Frédéric Chopin, and Schubert. An enormously successful recording artist, Pires, who since 1989 records exclusively for Deutsche Grammophon, released several critically acclaimed discs, including a J.S. Bach disc, recordings of F. Chopin's Nocturnes and Schubert's Impromptus, and a recording of two W.A. Mozart concertos with Claudio Abbado. Her recording of W.A. Mozart's complete sonatas received the 1990 Grand Prix du Disque. Since 1989, Pires has been an enthusiastic performer of chamber music, touring Europe and the Far East with violinist Augustin Dumay. Forming a trio with Dumay and cellist Jian Wang, Pires toured the Far East in 1998, playing L.v. Beethoven's Concerto for piano, violin, cello, and orchestra in several European centers in 1999. In 2000, Pires decided to take several months off in order to concentrate on a variety of educational projects in Portugal. Several collections of her performances, including Artist Portrait: Maria-João Pires, appeared in the early 2000's.
Acclaimed as one of the greatest interpreters of W.A. Mozart, Maria-João Pires is an artist who combines exquisite stylistic refinement with a serious effort the plumb the intellectual complexities and spiritual depths of music. Refusing to conform to the traditional image of a concert virtuoso, Pires emphasizes the spiritual dimensions of music, always searching for hidden meanings which may elude the analytical performer. This remarkable reverence towards works of music, clearly manifested in her performances of W.A. Mozart, was made explicit by her remark that, as a performer, she acts as a channel for the composer's ideas. Interestingly, Pires views both the composer and the performer as conduits for a transcendent force. However, while approaching the work of music with immense awe, Pires is acutely aware of its formal structure, finding a certain transparency in the most intricate formal constructions. In her performances of Romantic masters, particularly F. Chopin and Robert Schumann, Pires masterfully reconciles her passionate experience of the music with an admirable appreciation for the inner logic of the work she is interpreting. Reflecting her vast emotional range, her tone, as critics have observed, encompasses a dizzying variety of intensities, from an almost imperceptible lightness to an imposing monumentality, with a rich scale of intervening nuances. Another hallmark of her style is her uncanny ability to capture, and convey, the precise variety of inner movement which constitutes the being of a particular musical creation. |