Larry Weng
A laureate of the 2016 Queen Elisabeth International Piano Competition, Larry Weng has been described in The New York Times as playing with “steely power and incisive rhythm.” Of his 2014 New York debut at Weill Hall, the New York Concert Review described him as “an extremely sensitive musician and mature interpreter,” and “mature beyond his years.” Of his Alborado del Gracioso, Harry Rolnick of ConcertoNet exclaimed, “Radiant and transparent, picturesque and picaresque, wild but with the artistic perfection of wildness.” Mr. Weng is also a laureate of the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s Concerto Competition, the Tchaikovsky International Piano Competition for Young Musicians, The New York International Piano Competition, the Kosciuzsko Foundation Chopin Competition, and the Wideman International Piano Competition.
Mr. Weng has been featured in concert in France, Switzerland, Belgium, the Netherlands, China, Japan, Brazil, and Venezuela, and has performed in many of the world’s renowned concert halls, including Boston’s Symphony Hall, New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Merkin Hall, SubCulture, the Salle Cortot, and the Sala Sao Paolo. He has appeared as soloist with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra, the New England Philharmonic, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and the Orchestra Nationale de Belgique under the baton of Marin Alsop. In 2015, he made his Stern Auditorium debut playing Beethoven’s Choral Fantasy with Mark Shapiro leading the Cecilia Choir and Orchestra. His performances have also been broadcast on WQXR’s “McGraw Hill Financial Young Artists Showcase” in New York City. His recent engagements include a performance of Mozart concerto K. 453 with members of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra in White Plains, and solo recitals in Shreveport, Washington DC, and New York City.
An avid chamber musician and collaborator, Mr. Weng has participated in the Ravinia Steans Institute and the Verbier Academy, and has worked with renowned musicians such as Claude and Pamela Frank, Gabor Takacs, David Shifrin, David Soyer, amongst others. He is a frequent collaborator at the Lisker Music Foundation concert series in Chicago, as well as the Downtown Music at Grace in White Plains. As of the 2017 season, Mr. Weng is a full-time member of the Icarus Quartet.
In 2009, Mr. Weng graduated from the highly selective joint degree program between Columbia University and The Juilliard School with a BA in Economics and an MM in Piano Performance under the tutelage of Professors Jerome Lowenthal and Matti Raekallio. He continued his studies with Professor Boris Berman at the Yale School of Music, where he has completed the doctoral degree program. Mr. Weng explored the topics of timelessness and memory in Schubert’s late works, which hold a special place in his repertoire and musical interests.
During his time at Yale, Mr. Weng served as an instructor in undergraduate piano and secondary piano. He is currently on faculty at the Turtle Bay School of Music, and maintains a private studio in Manhattan, where he resides.