NQ Concerto & Vocal Competition


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2010 Competition:   Members  Adjudicator  Prizes   Program   Results

 

2010 Adjudicator - Professor Larry Sitsky AM
 

Professor Larry Sitsky

Larry Sitsky, born in China of Russian-Jewish parents, travelled to Australia in 1951 and settled in Sydney.  He studied piano from an early age and was granted a scholarship to the New South Wales Conservatorium of Music, where he studied piano and composition, graduating in 1955. In 1959 he won a scholarship to the San Francisco Conservatory, where he studied with Egon Petri for two years.  Returning to Australia, he joined the staff of the Queensland Conservatorium of Music.  A grant from the Myer Foundation 1n 1965 enabled him to conduct research into the music of Ferruccio Busoni, on whom he has written extensively.  In 1966 he was appointed Head of Keyboard Studies at the Canberra School of Music, was later Head of Musicology, and is now Head of Composition Studies.

Larry was the first Australian to be invited to the USSR on a cultural exchange visit, organised by the Department of Foreign Affairs in 1997. He has received many awards for his compositions, including the AH Maggs Award twice; for his Violin Concerto No. 1 in 1971 and the Clarinet Concerto in 1981; the Alfred Hill Memorial Prize for his String Quartet in 1968 and a China Fellowship in 1983.  His work Maherq, for bassoon, won the inaugural prize awarded by the Fellowship of Composers in 1989, and his Secret Gates of the House of Osiris won the inaugural National Critics’ Award in 1989.  In 1984 Larry received the inaugural Australian Composer’s Fellowship presented by the Music Board of the Australia Council.  This gave him the opportunity to write a large number of compositions ranging from solo instrumental pieces to large orchestral works, including a second Violin Concerto, Concerto for Guitar and Orchestra, and Concerto for Orchestra, as well as work towards his current list of seven operas.  It also enabled him to revise his book Busoni and the Piano and to commence work as pianist on the Anthology of Australia Piano Music.  He has also had published his two volume The Classical Reproducing Piano Roll, and Unknown Russian Avant-Garde 1900-1929 and Music of the Repressed Russian Avant Garde, 1900-1929. He has recorded a CD of the complete sonatas of the Australian composer Roby Agnew.  Larry Sitsky was the recipient of a Fulbright Award in 1988-89 and won an Advance Australia Award for achievement in music in 1989.  He also has a CD of Australian Piano Music. He was awarded a personal chair at the ANU.

Larry has had works commissioned by many leading Australian and International bodies, such as the ABC, Musica Viva, The International Clarinet Society, the Sydney International Piano Competition, Flederman and the International Flute Convention.  Workds from the last few years include a Piano Concerto, for voice and piano.  In Pace Requiescat for voice and strings, a Trio for flute, clarinet and piano and a Book of Songs.

1993 marked a huge national success with his opera The Golem, whilst 1994 was marked by concerts and performances all round Australia to mark his 60th birthday. His big collection of teaching pieces, Century, has been released with Currency Press in Sydney. He has an open contract to publish anything he wishes with his New York publisher, Seesaw Music Corporation.

In recognition of his various achievements he was made Professor (personal Chair); the Australian National University also awarded him its first Higher Doctorate in Fine Arts in 1997. A biography was published in the USA in 1997.

Other works include a book on the piano music of Anton Rubinstein, a book of transcriptions for oboe/piano (22 Russian romantic miniatures) and Violin Concerti Nos. 4 and 5. In 1998, Larry Sitsky was elected Fellow of the Academy of the Humanities of Australia.

In January 2000, he was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the Australia Day Honours List for "services to music as composer, pianist, musicologist and educator."

 

 
2010 Competition Results

 

Section 1 – Open

Townsville City Council Prize   1st Prize  $4,000

James Cook University Prize  2nd - $2000 

Loloma Prize
 3rd - $1000

4th, 5th  - $500

1st  Blair Harris (Cello – Melbourne)

2nd Rebecca Cassidy (Vocal – Townsville)

3rd Philip Eames (Piano -- Brisbane)

Remaining Finalists: 

  Oscar Garrido de la Rosa (Bassoon – Brisbane);  Kana Ohashi (Violin – Melbourne)

 

Section 2 – Vocal

Parry Nissan Prize  1st - $800    2nd - $500    3rd - $300

1st Siobhan Patrick (Fremantle, WA)

2nd Blake Parnham (Adelaide, SA)

3rd Morgan Jones (Mackay, Qld)

 

Section 3 – Piano & Instrumental

Loloma Prize  1st - $500    2nd - $300    3rd - $200

1st        Halina Leung (Piano – Sydney)

2nd       Sandy Chou (Flute – Brisbane)

    3rd        Sungpil Lee (Clarinet – Melbourne)

Highly Commended:    John Coulton (London); Judith Carpenter (Melbourne); Christian Gante (Brisbane)
 

Section 4 – Young Performers Soloists

Townsville & District Music Teachers' Association Prize  1st - $100   2nd - $75   3rd - $50

1st        Daniel Le (Piano – Melbourne)

2nd      Sophia Hooton (Piano – Cairns)

3rd        Andrew Fong (Clarinet – Townsville)

Highly Commended:  Meg Lucas (Violin - Brisbane); 
Alisha Fong (Clarinet – Townsville); Carla Mulligan (Cello - Townsville)

 
Section 5 - Open Ensembles

Australian Concerto & Vocal Competition Prize  1st - $1,000    2nd - $600    3rd - $400

1st    Syzygy Ensemble (Melbourne)

tied   2nd    Swan Quartet (Sydney)    

tied  2nd     Robertson Trio (Brisbane)

Section 6 - School Ensembles

Townsville City Council Prize   1st - $400   2nd - $300   3rd - $200  4th - $100

 1st        Pimlico Clarinet Quartet (PSHS Townsville)

2nd       Pimlico Clarinet Quintet (PSHS Townsville)

3rd        Tropical North Trio (Townsville)

4th    Townsville Grammar School Recorders (Townsville)   

Highly Commended:  Musica da legno (PSHS Townsville)

 

Special Awards

Joy Rutledge Prize for the Most Outstanding Musician from North Queensland - $500 -

John Coulton (Trumpet - Townsville/London)

Norton Challenor Award and Perpetual Trophy for the Most Promising Vocalist  $200 –

Peter Jacob Fisher (Townsville)

Frank Carroll Memorial Award for the Most Promising Pianist $200 –

Daniel Le (Melbourne)

Australian Strings Association (NQ Branch) Prize for the Most Promising String Player $200 –

Sonia Baldock (Violin - Melbourne)

Most Promising Brass or Woodwind Player  $200 -

Ashley Carter (Trombone - Brisbane)

Triple T Classic Music Team Audience Choice Award $200

Kana Ohashi (Violin - Melbourne)

Print Music Encouragement Awards (Under 20 years)  4 @ $50 -

Meg Lucas (Violin - Brisbane)
Michelle Liu (Violin - Townsville)
Rebecca Chong (Violin - Townsville)
Inez Graham (Violin - Townsville)


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