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Christopher CZAJA SAGER
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Christopher CZAJA SAGER was born in New York City into a family distinguished
by dancers, writers, painters and musicians of English, Irish and
Polish ancestry. His first piano teacher, Frances Moyer Kuhns, herself
a student of Cortot and Matthay, noted early, that Czaja Sager had
a special affinity for the music of J.S. Bach, Chopin, Mozart and
Schumann, Debussy, Scriabin and Schoenberg, composers who
have remained central to his repertoire. Emil Danenberg, an assistant
of Arnold Schoenberg and student of Eduard Steuermann and Rosina Lhévinne,
at the Juilliard School of Music in New York, were his major professors
at conservatoire level (Mme Lhévinne was a fellow student together
with Scriabin of Safonov).
In the U.S.A. Czaja Sager won several important First Prizes, including
the ”National Auditions for Pianists” in Washington D.C.,
First Prize of the Harpsichord Society of New York, the “Van
Cliburn Alumni Scholarship of the Juilliard School of Music”,
the “Biennial Recording Competition” and the first “Artist
Support Fund Award”.
After participation in the 1969 Vienna International Piano Master
Class with Badura-Skoda, Brendel and Demus, Christopher Czaja Sager
was unanimously awarded the “Förderungs Stipendium”
to further his career.
In the early 1970’s Czaja Sager made his first two tours in
Europe, introducing several new compositions by American composers,
but also performing seldom-heard compositions by J.S. Bach (4 Duette)
and Scriabin (Poème Nocturne, 3rd Sonata, for example).
After his successful Lincoln Centre debut in New York City, Olga Koussevitsky,
who had attended this recital and was most impressed with Czaja Sager’s
performance of Scriabin, immediately invited him as the only
pianist to perform in her benefit concert in 1973 celebrating the
hundredth anniversary of the birthday of Sergei Rachmaninoff. In 1975
Czaja Sager moved permanently to the Netherlands.
Christopher Czaja Sager is highly regarded by music critics on both
sides of the Atlantic. Upon hearing Christopher`s first Berlin recital,
the distinguished music critic Gottfried Eberle wrote in ”Der
Tagesspiegel” the following: “The phenomenally talented
pianist, Christopher Czaja Sager, who comes from the United States,
was trained there in the best musical tradition, and in him one finds
combined all the qualities that have become so rare in his generation:
a complete technique as a natural asset, but above all, a sense of
fantasy, for the poetic, for the most characteristic of the great
piano music of the 19th century. More concretely, this means his playing
is multidimensional, that fore- and background are carefully separated,
and that it has a wonderful flexibility in tempo which lets the music
breathe in wide arcs”.
One can perhaps understand Eberle`s review, because Czaja Sager studied
with several of the greatest exponents of various European late 19th
and early 20th century musical traditions: Rosina Lhévinne
and Wolfgang Rosé, son of the cellist of the Rosé Quartet
and family and student of Schnabel and Gieseking. Other important
pedagogues were Fenner Douglass and Sylvia Marlowe, harpsichord, and
the composer Stefan Wolpe, analysis.
Further studies, notably with the clavichordist Hans Philips and the
pianists György Sebök and Earl Wild, broadened Czaja Sager`s
musical horizons. He has made a deep study of J.S. Bach`s ”Clavier-Übung”,
the cycle which he has recorded and performed throughout Europe since
the Bach year 1985 with great success and again recently in 2000 in
the “Bach-250” Festival in Bucharest (Romania), during
the “Bach-Days” at the Middle East Technical University
in Ankara and Istanbul’s First Baroque Festival and in London
with a series of three recitals named “Invitation to the Dance”,
in which, together with other masterpieces of the last three centuries,
the six Partitas of J.S. Bach were central. He performed several all-Bach
recitals in Germany, in 2000, in Bochum and Meissen.
Czaja Sager has given recitals throughout Europe and Master Classes
in Germany, Belgium, Austria, Turkey, the Netherlands, Iceland and
the U.S.A.
As a soloist he has performed a.o. with the conductors Horia Andreescu,
Gürer Aykal, Leon Barzin, Ernest Bour, Sir Edward Downes, James
Levine, Antonio Ros Marba, Kenneth Montgomery, Leif Segerstam, Ed
Spanjaard and Dirk Vermeulen.
The artist has made many productions for radio, a.o. the BBC, the
Bavarian Broadcasting Co., the NRK, the ORF, the WDR and the Dutch broadcasting
companies.
In 2001 the Turkish Television made a live recording of his performance
with the State Symphony Orchestra of Izmir of Mozart’s Piano
Concerto Nr. 24, KV 491.
His CD recording of J.S. Bach’s 6 Partitas inspired Michael
Stenger, the music critic of the WAZ, to write: “This is one
of the most important piano-productions of recent years”. Especially
in the U.K. his CD recordings of Clementi and Schumann have received
exceptional critical praise.
The composer Stefan Wolpe wrote: “Christopher
Czaja Sager is truly perceptive, sensitive and imaginative and a deeply-gifted
musician of rare qualities and values. He is worthy of the highest
expectations and highest values”.
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