Pianist Jura Margulis
has been recognized for his compellingly communicative performances, as
well as for the range of his tonal palette and his consummate
virtuosity. Reviewers have praised the “absolute authority”
of his interpretations and the sense of “controlled
obsession” he transmits at the keyboard (Fono Forum). The
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung noted that his aesthetic is both
“impulsive and contemplative.” The Los Angeles Times
praised his “excellent pianism” and called him
“highly musical”. The Washington Post applauded his
“titanic reserves of sheer power” and his “effortless
spontaneity.” The Fort Worth Star-Telegram called his performance
“ … the perfect Beethoven for the audience of our time
… sweeping lyricism … imagination, originality, and good
taste pervaded every phrase.”
His orchestral appearances include performances with the Russian
National Orchestra at the Hollywood Bowl, the Montreal Symphony
Orchestra under Charles Dutoit, the Südwestrundfunk Orchestra, the
National Orchestra of Venezuela, the Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra,
and the Prague Symphony Orchestra. He has played in numerous festivals,
including the Schleswig Holstein Musik Festival, the Berliner
Festwochen at Berlin Philharmonic Hall, the Internationale
Sommerakademie Mozarteum in Austria, the Verbier Festival in
Switzerland, and the Argerich-Beppu Music Festival in Japan. He has won
prizes in more than a dozen international competitions, including
Busoni in Italy and Guardian in Ireland. He is also a recipient of the
esteemed Pro Europa prize awarded by the European Foundation for
Culture.
The past two seasons have brought him to New York, Chicago, St. Louis,
Dallas, Cincinnati, Salt Lake City, Little Rock, Tulsa, and New Orleans
in the US, as well as abroad to Frankfurt, Düsseldorf, Hamburg,
Berlin, Tübingen, Freiburg, Bologna, Salzburg, Barcelona,
Ljubljana and Bangkok. Active as a chamber musician, Margulis has
performed recitals with, among others, Dmitry Sitkovetsky, the soloists
of the Moscow Virtuosi, members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and
the Moscow String Quartet. He has also concertized with Martha Argerich
on two pianos in Germany, Japan, and the USA.
Margulis has recorded six CDs for Sony, Ars Musici, and Oehms Classics,
covering a wide spectrum of repertoire. These recordings have attracted
substantial attention, including selection as a “reference
recording” by Fono Forum, and inclusion on the
“Bestenliste” of the Deutschen Schallplattenkritik (the
German Recording Review). His most recent CD, featuring piano
transcriptions of music from Bach to Caplet, received a 10 out of 10
for “artistic quality” from KlassikHeute. The accompanying
review applauded his “ability to structure the Bach Chaconne, to
build momentum and at the right moment to gently abate … not
since Horowitz’s old RCA recording have I encountered a
performance of Saint-Saens’ Danse Macabre that so grippingly
leaps from the stage, as here in Jura Margulis’ own
transcription.” The review also noted that Margulis’ own
transcription of a little-known piece by André Caplet
“should, like Ravel’s own transcription of his La Valse,
claim a place in the repertoire of young pianists.” Klassik.com,
also giving the CD its highest rating, raved that Margulis
“cannot be praised enough.”
Margulis is a third generation pianist and teacher and piano pedagogy
is an integral part of his artistic vision. His yearly master classes
in the US and abroad, including courses in Germany, Italy, Spain,
Portugal, Slovenia, Austria, Russia, and Japan, center around his
pedagogical concept: The Unified Piano School, A synthesis of piano
pedagogy and performance traditions, which bridges the Russian School's
concentration on sound, imagination, and physical technique, and the
German School's focus on structure, rhythmic coherence, and style. He
has lectured on this concept at numerous forums including the World
Piano Pedagogy Conference and the International Summer Academy at the
Mozarteum in Salzburg. Margulis is the executive director of the International Piano Academy, a summer master class and music festival in Freiburg, Germany, and artistic director of the Fulbright Concerto Competition, an international piano contest in Fayetteville, AR.
Born in St. Petersburg, Russia, Jura Margulis was raised in Germany,
where he studied with his father, Dr. Vitaly Margulis, at the
Musikhochschule in Freiburg. He was also a student at the prestigious
Fondazione per il Pianoforte in Cadenabbia at Lake Como in Italy. He
moved to the United States to study with Leon Fleisher at the Peabody
Conservatory in Baltimore, and made the US his home. Margulis is
the innaugural holder of the McAllister Endowed Professorship in
Piano at the Fulbright College of the University of Arkansas at
Fayetteville, where he lives
with his wife Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis, who does research in the
cognitive science of music, and their sons Alexander and Nikolai.