As
one of America’s great classical musicians, Alicia
Zizzo’s pianistic
artistry has brought her international acclaim on four continents, from London
(Barbican Center), Amsterdam (Concertgebouw), Vienna (Musikverein), Budapest (Vigado
with the Budapest Symphony), Warsaw (Ostrovsky Palace for the Chopin Society) to
New York (Avery Fisher and Carnegie Halls) as well as many other venues
throughout Europe and the United States. She is a Steinway Artist and her
portrait hangs in their Hall of Fame in New York City.
Alicia
Zizzo’s work has been hailed in magazines and newspapers throughout the world,
ranging from The New York Times‚ The Washington Post, Chicago Sun-Times and
Boston Globe to the Toronto Star‚Tokyo’s Asahi Shimbun, the China Post,
Gramophone magazine, Classic FM Magazine, Netherlands’ NRC Handelsblad and El
Espectador in Bogota.Her groundbreaking musicological analysis of the original
manuscripts of the Rhapsody in Blue was published internationally in Clavier
magazine. She has also written about Gershwin’s “lost” Preludes for this
magazine and others, including Piano & Keyboard, Piano Today and The New
York Concert Review.
Dr.
Zizzo has appeared on The Today Show, ABC Evening News, BBC World Service, WLIW
TV (PBS New York), BBC Radio Four, CNN, Voice of America, National Public Radio,
KKGO-San Francisco, WGBH-Boston, CBC in Canada and Radio France. She also
performed in a major National Public Radio documentary celebrating Gershwin’s
100th Birthday, and has participated in film documentaries about Gershwin for
the noted French filmmaker Alain Resnais, as well as for the BBC Wales, the
latter of which was filmed at the Library of Congress.
Along
with President George H.W. Bush and Billy Joel, Alicia Zizzo was
awarded an Honorary Doctorate degree by Hofstra University in 1998 in
recognition of her significant contributions to American music. In 2004, she was
honored with an International Prize for her work by the President of the Greek
Parliament through the Euro-American Women’s Council. Zizzo is now also Dame
Alicia Zizzo, having been knighted by the Russian Royal Ancestry dating from the
18th Century. In 2005, her biography and a special citation for her
contributions to American music history were read into the Congressional Record
of the 109th United States Congress.
One
of Dr. Zizzo’s goals has been to enhance the remarkably small classical solo
piano repertoire of George Gershwin. Working with the Library of Congress,
Warner Brothers Publications, the Gershwin estate and late Gershwin scholar
Edward Jablonski, she has researched, transcribed and reconstructed the
composer’s lost or forgotten classical solo piano manuscripts notated in his
own hand. Dr. Zizzo approaches Gershwin’s manuscripts for the purpose of
reconstructing from fragments, sketches and partially completed scores
Gershwin’s own long-neglected material. Warner Brothers Publications, which
administers the copyrights of Gershwin’s material, has made Dr. Zizzo’s
reconstructions of Lullaby, Blue Monday, Seven Preludes, Rhapsody in Blue, I Got
Rhythm Variations, Gershwin Miniatures and other unpublished manuscripts for
solo piano the first new authentic editions of Gershwin’s classical material
to be published in more than half a century. In a four-day Library of Congress
celebration of the Gershwin Centennial in 1998, Zizzo was honored to be
the only concert pianist invited to present a full recital and lecture at this
historic event, where she performed her editions and received the highest
laudatory praise.