X International Chopin Piano Competition
![]() | show This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Polish. (July 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions. |
The Tenth International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition | |
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Date | October 1–20, 1980 |
Venue | National Philharmonic, Warsaw |
Hosted by | |
Winner | ![]() |
The X International Chopin Piano Competition (Polish: X Międzynarodowy Konkurs Pianistyczny im. Fryderyka Chopina) was held from 1 to 20 October 1980 in Warsaw. Đặng Thái Sơn, who in the final played with an orchestra for the first time in his life, won first prize, becoming the first pianist from Asia to do so. The elimination of Ivo Pogorelić after the third stage was a great source of controversy.
Awards[]
The competition consisted of three elimination stages and a final with seven pianists.
The following prizes were awarded:[1]
Prize | Winner | |
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Đặng Thái Sơn | ![]() |
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Tatiana Shebanova | ![]() |
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Arutyun Papazyan | ![]() |
4th | not awarded | |
5th | Akiko Ebi | ![]() |
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6th | Erik Berchot | ![]() |
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HM | Dan Atanasiu | ![]() |
Bernard d'Ascoli | ![]() | |
Angela Hewitt | ![]() | |
Hung-Kuan Chen | ![]() | |
Kevin Kenner | ![]() | |
Alexander Lonquich | ![]() | |
Ivo Pogorelić | ![]() | |
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Three special prizes were awarded:
Special prize | Winner | |
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Best Performance of a Concerto | Đặng Thái Sơn | ![]() |
Tatiana Shebanova | ![]() | |
Best Performance of Mazurkas | Đặng Thái Sơn | ![]() |
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Best Performance of a Polonaise | Đặng Thái Sơn | ![]() |
Tatiana Shebanova | ![]() |
Jury[]
The jury consisted of:[1]
Martha Argerich
Paul Badura-Skoda
Josep Colom
Halina Czerny-Stefańska
Sergei Dorensky
Jan Ekier
Rudolf Fischer
Lidia Grychtołówna
Rex Hobcroft
Andrzej Jasiński
Geneviève Joy
Louis Kentner
Kazimierz Kord (chairman)
Eugene List
Nikita Magaloff (vice-chairman)
Frantisek Rauch (vice-chairman)
Regina Smendzianka
Tadeusz Żmudziński
Pogorelić scandal[]
The 1980 competition was marked by controversy. Ivo Pogorelić was the public's favorite from the earliest stages, and was described by some critics as "the most distinctive among the 180 entrants" because of his unique and great talent. Others were less fond of his less traditional style of play. Jury member Eugene List explained: "I'm the first to say that the boy is very talented [...] but I voted very low for him. This is a special kind of competition. It's only Chopin. He doesn't respect the music. He uses extremes to the point of distortion. And he puts on too much of an act." Louis Kentner resigned after the first stage after all of his students had been eliminated from the competition,[1] saying that "if people like Pogorelić make it to the second stage, I cannot participate in the work of the jury. We have different aesthetic criteria."[2]
In the third stage, Pogorelić once again caused controversy, performing his program in the wrong order, leaving the stage part way through, and wearing an extravagant concert attire that made him look like "a prince dropped in the middle of the desert". In the end, Pogorelić was not admitted into the final. Martha Argerich resigned in protest, proclaiming him a "genius" who "her colleagues could not appreciate because of an entrenched conservatism", which is "why she was ashamed to be associated with them". Nikita Magaloff and Paul Badura-Skoda announced their solidarity with Argerich, though coming short of resigning themselves, declaring that it was "unthinkable that such an artist should not make it to the finals".[2]
Pogorelić himself later accused the competition of having been fixed, declaring in an interview in 1993: "The Soviet Bloc authorities had decided months before the competition that it was politically necessary to have a North Vietnamese winner. My decision to participate was not at all welcome. I was told I should wait a year, for the Tchaikovsky competition, when I would have the first prize guaranteed."[3] In 2008, he demanded an official inquiry into the jury decisions of the 1980 competition, but the Chopin Institute refused to reopen the case.[2]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "The 10th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition". Fryderyk Chopin Institute. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c McCormick, Lisa (2018). "Pogorelich at the Chopin: Towards a sociology of competition scandals". The Chopin Review. Fryderyk Chopin Institute (1). ISSN 2544-9249.
- ^ Henken, John (13 January 1993). "Pogorelich Founds Piano Competition". Los Angeles Times.
Further reading[]
- Ekiert, Janusz (2010). The Endless Search for Chopin: The History of the International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw (1st ed.). Warsaw: Muza. ISBN 978-83-7495-812-7.
- Arendt, Ada; Bogucki, Marcin; Majewski, Paweł; Sobczak, Kornelia (2020). Chopinowskie igrzysko. Historia Międzynarodowego Konkursu Pianistycznego im. Fryderyka Chopina 1927–2015 [The Chopin Games. The History of the International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition 1927–2015] (in Polish) (1st ed.). Warsaw: Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego. ISBN 978-83-235-4127-1.
- Ossowski, Jerzy; Brodska, Halina (2010). The International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition in photographs. Warsaw: Fryderyk Chopin Institute. ISBN 978-83-61142-36-2.
External links[]
- International Chopin Piano Competition
- 1980 in music
- 1980 in Poland
- 1980s in Warsaw
- October 1980 events in Europe