DAVID KOREVAAR
David Korevaar, whose playing has been called a "musical epiphany" by Gramophone Magazine,
performs an extensive repertoire as a soloist and chamber musician, and has been a guest
artist with internationally-acclaimed orchestras and ensembles. His recently released
recording of Bach's Partitas captures his exquisite musical sensitivity and his finely
tuned technique; it marks his 26th recording and his fourth dedicated to the music of
Bach. His other recordings have explored a wide range of solo and chamber music, from
Beethoven and Brahms to Dohnányi and Lowell Liebermann.
Korevaar is the Peter and Helen Weil Professor of Piano at the University of Colorado
Boulder. He is also a member of the Clavier Trio, currently the ensemble-in-residence
at the University of Texas, Dallas. He is a regular participant as performer and teacher
at Colorado's Music in the Mountains summer festival and the Music Center Japan.
By age 20, Korevaar had earned his Bachelor's and Master's degrees from the Juilliard
School, where he studied piano with the American virtuoso Earl Wild and composition
with David Diamond. Later, working with Abbey Simon, Korevaar received his Doctor of
Musical Arts degree from the Juilliard School and was honored with the Richard French
award for his doctoral document on Ravel's Miroirs. Other honors include top prizes
from the University of Maryland William Kapell International Piano Competition (1988)
and the Peabody-Mason Music Foundation (1985), as well as a special prize for his
performance of French music from the Robert Casadesus Competition (1989). He has
continued exploring French music, both as a performer and as a scholar, with recording
projects and publications devoted to the music of Ravel and Fauré (in progress) and
important work on the music collection of Ricardo Viñes, the first performer of many
important works by Debussy and Ravel.
Korevaar and Tim Smith's web-based exploration of the fugues of the Well-Tempered Clavier,
by J.S. Bach received top honors from MERLOT (Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning
and Online Teaching) both in music and overall, including the Editors' Choice Award. More
recently, Korevaar and Smith collaborated on an exploration of Bach's Goldberg Variations.
David Korevaar lives in Boulder, Colorado, and Dallas, Texas, with his family. He is a Kawai
artist. For a complete biography, upcoming performances, and recordings, visit www.DavidKorevaar.com.