Miraka presents Nobuyuki Sakurai x Ayana Sakai Ultimate Concerto Concert is Dance and Performance art Classic music event held in Japan.
Appearance:
Violin: Ayana Tsuji
Piano: Nobuyuki Sakurai
Neil Thomson conducts Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra
Program / Program
Tchaikovsky: "Eugene Onegin" from "Polonaise" (Neil Thomson led the Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra)
Nobuyuki Tsujii (born September 13, 1988) is a Japanese pianist and composer. In October 2005, he reached the semifinal and received the Critics’ Award at the 15th International Frédéric Chopin Piano Competition held in Warsaw, Poland. He was born blind due to microphthalmia and with a great talent for music.
Born in Gifu prefecture in 1997. In 2016, at the age of 18, she won first place in the Montreal International Music Competition, and also received five special awards (Bach Prize, Paganini Award, Canadian Work Award, Sonata Prize, Semi Final Best Recital Award). Currently she is studying as a special special scholarship at Tokyo College of Music.
Neil William Thomson (born 23 May 1966) is a British conductor and conducting professor. He is also the head of the Department of Conducting at the Royal College of Music, the youngest and most selected in history. Currently the principal conductor and music director of the newly established Goias Philharmonic (Brazil).
The Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra (読売日本交響楽団 , Yomiuri Nippon Kōkyō Gakudan) is a Japanese symphony orchestra administratively based in Tokyo. Hiroshi Wakasugi became the orchestra's first Japanese principal conductor in 1965. Its first principal conductor was the American conductor Willis Page, who served while on leave from the Nashville Symphony Orchestra.
More about Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra
Tokyo (Japanese: [toːkjoː] , English /ˈ t oʊ k i . oʊ / ), officially Tokyo Metropolis, is the capital of Japan and one of its 47 prefectures. The Greater Tokyo Area is the most populous metropolitan area in the world. It is the seat of the Emperor of Japan and the Japanese government. Tokyo is in the Kantō region on the southeastern side of the main island Honshu and includes the Izu Islands and Ogasawara Islands. Formerly known as Edo, it has been the de facto seat of government since 1603 when Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu made the city his headquarters. It officially became the capital after Emperor Meiji moved his seat to the city from the old capital of Kyoto in 1868; at that time Edo was renamed Tokyo. Tokyo Metropolis was formed in 1943 from the merger of the former Tokyo Prefecture (東京府 , Tōkyō-fu) and the city of Tokyo (東京市 , Tōkyō-shi) .
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日本、〒150-8507 東京都渋谷区道玄坂2丁目24−1 Map
日本、〒320-8530 栃木県宇都宮市本町1−8 Map
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