Rubinstein Sonatas; Nokuthula Ngwenyama, viola; Jennifer Lim, piano; EDI Records EDI0241 (2008)
The
renowned violist Nokuthula Ngwenyama, www.ngwenyama.com, was born June 16, 1976. She is President of the American Viola Society and has long been featured
at AfriClassical.com. Her latest recording is Rubinstein Sonatas, which has been very well received. A new recording with pianist Eckart Sellheim is in the works.
Featured as a “Face to Watch” in the Los Angeles Times,
Nokuthula Ngwenyama’s performances as orchestral soloist, recitalist,
and chamber musician continue to garner great attention. Gramophone proclaimed Ms. Ngwenyama’s playing as providing “solidly shaped music of bold, mesmerising character,” and the Washington Post
described her as playing “with dazzling technique in the virtuoso fast
movements and deep expressiveness in the slow movements.”
Nokuthula Ngwenyama came to international attention when she won the
Primrose International Viola Competition and the Young Concert Artists
International Auditions at age 17. Plaudits followed her debut recitals
in Washington, D.C. at the Kennedy Center and in New York at the 92nd
Street ‘Y', and in 1998 she received the prestigious Avery Fisher Career
Grant.
In 2010-11 Ms. Ngwenyama was chosen for the coveted Duncanson
Artist-In-Residence at the Taft Museum. She subsequently appeared in
Washington D.C. at the Cosmos Club, at Symphony Space in New York, and
at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia, among others. Past seasons include
appearances with the Cincinnati Symphony, the Nurnberg Philharmonie and
world premiere performances of Andrew Norman's Sabina in
Washington DC's Kennedy Center and Merkin Hall in New York. She has also
performed with the Charlotte, Austin, Jackson and Memphis symphonies,
and with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Additionally, she
"fascinated on viola and violin during recital" (Washington Post) at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, DC and with the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society.
Ms. Ngwenyama has performed throughout the United States and abroad.
Domestic appearances include performances with the Atlanta, Baltimore,
and Indianapolis symphonies, the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the
National Symphony Orchestra. She has been heard in recital at Tokyo's
Suntory Hall, the Louvre, the Ford Center in Toronto, and the Maison de
Radio France. Summer festival appearances include Green Music, Vail, San
Diego's Mainly Mozart, Chamber Music Northwest, Marlboro Music
Festival, and Spoleto USA.
No stranger to television and radio appearances, her performance at
the White House, commemorating the 10th anniversary of NPR's Performance Today,
also featured artists Wynton Marsalis, James Galway, and Murray
Perahia. A vivid portrait of Ms. Ngwenyama was televised nationally on CBS Sunday Morning with cultural correspondent Eugenia Zukerman. She was featured on the Emmy Award-nominated PBS program Sound of Strings
in the "Musical Encounter" series, hosted by cellist Lynn Harrell. A
dedicated advocate for the arts, she has testified before Congress on
behalf of the National Endowment for the Arts. As an artist recording on
the EDI label, she has collaborated with pianist Mihae Lee on Grieg and
Debussy, and with guitarist Michael Long on Bach Partitas as well as
Corella's Che! A Musical Biography. Her recent collaboration
with pianist Jennifer Lim on the Rubinstein viola and violin sonatas was
released in 2009 to excellent reviews.
In addition to her performance activities Ms. Ngwenyama served as
visiting professor at the University of Notre Dame in 2007, where she
lectured on the subjects of African Music, and Music and World
Religions. From 2008-2010 she was a visiting professor at Indiana
University. She has been director of the Primrose International Viola
Competition since 2005 and assumed presidency of the American Viola
Society in 2011.
Born in California of Zimbabwean-Japanese parentage, Ms. Ngwenyama
graduated from the Curtis Institute of Music. As a Fulbright scholar she
attended the Conservatoire National Superieur de Musique de Paris, and
received a Master of Theological Studies degree from Harvard University.
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