Anna Malikova

Anna Malikova (Russian Анна Михаиловна Маликова; * July 14, 1965 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan ) is a concert pianist.

Life

Her first piano training she received at Tamara Popovich at the Uspensky Music School in Tashkent. 14 years, she came to Moscow at the Central Music School in the class of Lev Naumov. With him she also studied at the Tchaikovsky Conservatory. After her studies she taught there from 1992 to 1996 as assistant to her teacher Naumov.

After that, she began her concert career in the Soviet Union, including in recitals in Moscow, Leningrad, Omsk and Baku, and as a soloist of symphony orchestras in Yekaterinburg, Minsk, Nischhny Novgorod, Kazan, Tashkent. After winning the ARD competition in Munich in 1993 its global artistic career began. She plays as a soloist with orchestras, as a chamber musician and recitalist in; In addition, she teaches master classes since 2001 in Armenia, China, Germany, Japan, Korea, and has worked as a juror in piano competitions.

From 2002 to 2005, she held a temporary professorship at the Folkwang University Essen. Malikova was from 2011 to 2013 at the Szymanowski Academy Katowice, Poland, working as a visiting professor. She lives in Krefeld.

Competitions and Awards

Discography

  • Frederic Chopin mazurkas, ballads, waltzes, Andante Spianato
  • Frederic Chopin, the two piano concertos; Orchestra Filarmonica di Torino, Julian Kovatchev
  • Frederic Chopin, Preludes and Impromptus all
  • Frederic Chopin, all Etudes op 10, op 25, op posth
  • Franz Schubert, Sonata in A major D 664, Sonata in B Flat Major D 960
  • Franz Schubert, song arrangements by Franz Liszt
  • Dmitri Shostakovich, Preludes op.28, Great dances, puppet dances
  • Padre Antonio Soler, selected sonatas
  • Sergei Prokofiev, Sarcasmen op 17 Visions fugitives op 22, Romeo & Juliet, Op 75
  • Camille Saint- Saëns Piano Concertos I - V ( double CD); WDR Radio Orchestra Cologne, Gov. Thomas Sanderling
  • Peter Tchaikovsky ballet suites Sleeping Beauty and Nutcracker, Children's Album
  • Johannes Brahms, Piano Concerto II; Duisburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Dir Jonathan Darlington
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