The
International Jean Sibelius Violin
Competition, named after Finnish composer
Jean Sibelius, is a competition for violinists
up to age 30.
It is held every five years (-00 and -05) in
Helsinki
and is
considered to be one of the top 3 most appreciated violin
competitions in the world. The first competition took place
in year 1965, eight years after the death of the composer. The
competition is arranged by
The Sibelius Society of
Finland.
The competition has always had high-level competitors, and winners
such as
Oleg Kagan,
Viktoria Mullova, and
Leonidas Kavakos have become
internationally performing soloists.
The popularity amongst
the players might be explained by the location of the competition:
Finland
connecting western Europe and USSR
was probably
considered safe enough by the Soviet authority to allow players to
attend the competition.
The competition has three rounds: the first round, the second
round, and the final round. After each round, a number of
competitors are chosen to proceed to the next round, and after the
final round the finalists are ranked. In the final ranking, the
performance in each round is considered as a whole. To be accepted
in the competition, candidates need to send a performance sample
for a competition committee for pre-selection.
The first round program consists typically works of
Bach, a sonata by
Mozart, and
Paganini's capriccios. It is said that
Bach measures readiness, Mozart measures understanding of style,
and Paganini measures technical ability. The second round, often
referred as the semi-finals, consists typically of a sonata for
violin and piano, few pieces by Sibelius, a modern Finnish piece,
and a virtuoso piece. In the final round, the finalists perform two
concertos accompanied by a full symphony orchestra. One of the
concertos is mandated as the
Violin Concerto in D minor by
Sibelius.
In 2005, 175 applications were received, 58 competitors were
accepted of which 50 took part in the competition, 20 proceeded to
the second round, and 8 were chosen to the final round.
Laureates
1965
- Oleg Kagan,
USSR

- Joshua Epstein,
Israel

- Valeri Gradov, USSR
1970
- (ex
aequo) Liana Isakadze, USSR
&
Pavel Kogan, USSR
- -
- Otto Armin,
Canada

1975
- Yuval Yaron,
Israel

- Ilja Grubert,
USSR

- Eugen Sârbu,
Romania

1980
- Viktoria
Mullova, USSR

- Sergei Stadler, USSR
- Andres
Cardenes, USA

1985
- (ex
aequo) Ilya Kaler, USSR
&
Leonidas Kavakos, Greece
- -
- Vilmos
Szabadi, Hungary

1990
- -
- Cristina
Anghelescu, Romania

- (ex
aequo) Sigrún
Edvaldsdóttir, Iceland
& Akiko Tanaka,
Japan
1995
- Pekka
Kuusisto, Finland

- Elisabeth
Batiashvili, Georgia

- (ex
aequo) Madoka Sato, Japan
&
Nikolaj Znaider, Denmark
2000
- Sergei
Khachatryan, Armenia

- Natsumi Tamai,
Japan

- (ex
aequo) Zhi-Jiong Wang, China
&
Sayako Kusaka, Japan
2005
- Alina
Pogostkina, Germany

- Jiafeng Chen,
China

- (ex
aequo) Hyun-Su Shin, South Korea
& Wei Wen,
China
See also
External links
- The competition pages of Finnish Broadcasting Company —
http://www.yle.fi/teema/sibelius/
- The official competition pages —
http://www2.siba.fi/sibeliuscompetition/
- The Sibelius Society of Finland —
http://www.sibeliusseura.fi/