Hideki Nagano
Hideki Nagano (born 1968) is a Japanese classical pianist. He has been a member of the Ensemble intercontemporain since 1995 and lives in France.
Biography
Nagano was born in Nagoya. He studied at the University of Tokyo[1] in particular with Henriette Puig-Roget.
He arrived Paris in 1988[1] without speaking much French, and prepared for the entrance exam to the Conservatoire de Paris. He studied piano with Jean-Claude Pennetier and vocal accompaniment with Anne Grappotte then with Jean Kœrner.
Recordings
- Hideki Nagano plays Boulez — Messiaen — Murail — Dutilleux, Fontec, 1997
- Hideki Nagano plays Prokofiev — Messiaen — Murail, Nippon Columbia, 1998
- George Antheil, La Femme 100 têtes — Sonatina — Jazz sonata , Pianovox, October 1998
- Tōru Takemitsu: Chamber music, BIS Records, November 1998
- Maurice Ravel, Piano works, Nippon Columbia, 2001
- Bechara El-Khoury, Waves, Op. 60, on the New York, Tears and Hope / The Rivers Engulfed records, Naxos Records, September 2006
- Jonathan Harvey: Bird concerto with pianosong, recorded at the Warsaw Autumn Festival on 19 September 2009, NMC Recordings, October 2011
- Pierre Boulez, Une page d'éphéméride, in Complete Works, Deutsche Grammophon, 2013
With the Modulations Trio
- Bruno Mantovani, Da Roma, on the Art d'écho record, Sismal records, 2007
With the Ensemble intercontemporain
- Philippe Manoury, La Partition du ciel et de l'enfer, Adès, 1997
- Pierre Boulez, Sur Incises, Deutsche Grammophon, 2000
- Pierre Boulez, Pli selon pli, Deutsche Grammophon, 2002
- Bruno Mantovani, Éclair de Lune, Kairos, 2008
- Pierre Jodlowski, Drones — Barbarismes, Kairos, 2011
- Yann Robin, Art of metal II, Kairos, 2012
References
- Le parcours de Nagano au fil d'une entrevue avec Bruno Serrou publiée sur le site de l'Ensemble intercontemporain
External links
- Nagano à propos du concerto pour piano de Ligeti on the site of the Ensemble intercontemporain
- review of his interpretation of the first piano sonata and the Une page d'éphéméride by Boulez on Seen and heard international (Salzburg, January 2009).
- review of his interpretation of the Harrison’s Clocks by Birtwistle on the site Seen and heard international (Aldeburgh Festival, June 2009).
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