Santiago Rodriguez has been called “a
phenomenal pianist” (The New York Times)
and “among the finest pianists in the
world” (The Baltimore Sun). He performs
internationally with leading orchestras, including
the London Symphony, the Dresden Staatskapelle,
the Weimar Philharmonic, the Yomiuri-Nippon
Symphony Orchestra of Japan, the Seoul Symphony
Orchestra, the Tampere Philharmonic of Finland,
the Berliner Symphoniker, the Philadelphia,
Chicago, St. Louis, Baltimore, Seattle, Indianapolis,
American Composers’, and Houston Symphony
Orchestras, the National Symphony Orchestra
of Washington, D.C., and the American Symphony
Orchestra at Avery Fisher Hall in New York.
Mr. Rodriguez has appeared in recital at the
Schauspielhaus in Berlin, Leipzig’s Gewandhaus,
Queen Elizabeth Hall in London, Montreal’s
Theatre Maisonneuve, the Santander Festival
in Spain, Alice Tully Hall in New York, The
Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., the Herbst
Theater in San Francisco, the Ambassador Auditorium
in Pasadena, and at the prestigious Ravenna
Festival in Italy where the critics proclaimed
that “he conquered the audience”.
In the Spring of 1999, Mr. Rodriguez performed
in Carnegie Hall under the baton of Dennis Russell
Davis, and returned to the Herbst Theater in
San Francisco for a recital. He also traveled
to Finland for a series of concerts with Eri
Klas, conducting, and he has recently returned
to Europe and the Far East.
As a chamber musician Mr. Rodriguez has enjoyed
collaboration with the
Guarneri String Quartet, the Colorado String
Quartet, Cuarteto Latinoamericano and the Chamber
Music Society of Lincoln Center; he toured extensively
as a member of a piano trio with Ruggiero Ricci
and Nathaniel Rosen; and performed with such
distinguished musicians as Walter Trampler,
Ransom Wilson, Gervaise de Peyer, and Aurora
Nátola-Ginastera.
Santiago Rodriguez’ vast repertoire of
concertos and recital programs reflect his great
versatility with over sixty-five (65) concertos.
He is equally brilliant playing the concertos
of Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin, Mozart,
Tchaikovsky, Grieg, Liszt, Schumann, Franck,
Mendelssohn, Prokofiev,
Khachaturian and Gershwin. His all encompassing
list continues with the more unusual works of
Strauss, Saint-Saëns, MacDowell, Bartók,
Falla, Ponce, Surinach, Albéniz, Castelnuovo-Tedesco,
and Lecuona. His recital list, displaying a
stunning variety of solo works, ranges from
the standards of Brahms, Beethoven, Chopin,
Liszt and Mozart to Albéniz, Granados,
Ginastera and Lecuona.
One of today’s foremost interpreters
of the music of Sergei Rachmaninov,
Santiago Rodriguez has performed all of the
composer’s major piano works in concert.
He is currently recording The Rachmaninov Edition,
which, when completed, will encompass the entire
catalog of Rachmaninov’s solo piano compositions,
and the three volumes which have been released
to date have received international acclaim.
In reviewing Volumes 1 and 2, Bryce Morrison
of Gramophone stated that “Santiago Rodriguez,
the Cuban American virtuoso, is born for Rachmaninov,
and I doubt whether any of the works on these
two discs have often been played with such a
spellbinding mix of high-born virtuosity and
poetic glamour” (March 1996). Volume 2
was awarded the 1995 Washington Area Music Award
for best classical recording of 1995, and Volume
3 was selected by Classical Pulse as one of
the best recordings of 1995.
Santiago Rodriguez’ other recordings
of repertoire from Bach to
Ginastera, all on ÉLAN, have been acclaimed
for their “blazing conviction, tremendous
technical strength, unswerving concentration
and galvanic excitement...” (American
Record Guide). National Public Radio’s
Guide to Building a Classical CD Collection
recommends three of Mr. Rodriguez’ recordings
as “the best available” performances,
and his recording of the Rachmaninov and Prokofiev
Third Concertos has been internationally acclaimed
as one of the best in recorded history; the
Chicago Tribune spoke of “the enormous
sweep and impeccable control,” and American
Record Guide concluded that “this Rachmaninov
Third goes immediately to the top of the list.”
Mr. Rodriguez has recorded numerous world premieres,
including Piano Concerto No. 1 by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco;
the Concertino for piano, strings, and cymbals
of Carlos Surinach; Leonard Bernstein’s
Touches; piano concertos from the movies Nightsong
and Phantom of the Opera, both of which are
featured on his release, Piano in Hollywood,
and the Piano Sonata No. 2 of Alberto Ginastera,
which was premiered by Mr. Rodriguez in New
York in 1982.
Santiago Rodriguez’ latest project took
him to Berlin where he recorded
Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No. 2 and
Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2 with the
Berliner Symphoniker and Stephen Gunzenhauser,
conducting. This is his 14th recording for ÉLAN,
and it has just been released.
Santiago Rodriguez was born in Cárdenas,
Cuba and began his piano studies at age four.
After Castro seized power in Cuba, his parents
sent Mr. Rodriguez and his younger brother to
America under the care of the Catholic Charities.
He spent the next six years in an orphanage
in New Orleans. Fortunately, his mother had
concealed money along with a note begging the
nuns to continue his musical education. Two
years after his arrival, he made his concert
debut at age ten performing Mozart’s Piano
Concerto No. 27 with the New Orleans Philharmonic.
His international career was launched in 1981
when he won the Silver Medal at the Van Cliburn
International Piano Competition; he also received
a special prize for the best performance of
Leonard Bernstein’s Touches, a work commissioned
for the competition. Mr. Rodriguez’ unique
life and artistry were profiled on CBS Sunday
Morning with Charles Kurault in 1993. He has
also been featured numerous times on the ABC,
NBC, PBS, CNN, and CBC television networks.
Santiago Rodriguez holds a masters degree from
the Juilliard School, where he studied on full
scholarship as a pupil of Adele Marcus, and
he completed his undergraduate studies magna
cum laude with William Race at the University
of Texas. Mr. Rodriguez is Professor of Music
and Artist-in-residence at the University of
Maryland-College Park.