Yekaterina Chemberdzhi (Russian: Екатерина Владимировна Чемберджи́), also Katia Tchemberdji (nickname) or Jekaterina Wladimirowna Tschemberdschi (German form) (born 6 May 1960), is a Russian pianist and composer.
Life and career
The daughter of Vladimir Posner and Valentina Chemberdzhi and granddaughter of the composers Zara Levina and Nikolai Chemberdzhi, Katia Chemberdzhi was born in Moscow and began her study of music at age 7. In 1978 she studied composition and piano at the Moscow Conservatory with Nikolai Korndorf and Yuri Kholopov.[1]
After ending her studies, Chemberdzhi took a position from 1984 to 1990 teaching at the Moscow Gnessin State Musical College. In 1990 she moved to West Berlin. She has been active in international festivals as a pianist and as a composer. Her compositions were commissioned by such festivals as Berliner Festspiele, Kuhmo Chamber Music Festival, Tage Neuer Musik Zürich, and performed and commissioned by such soloists and ensembles as The Hilliard Ensamble, Charoun Ensemble, Sibelius Quartet, Staats- und Domchor Berlin, Singakademie zu Berlin, Münchner Kammerorchester, Boris Pergamenschikow, Natalia Gutman, Eduard Brunner, Charles Neidich etc.
She has composed film music for several Russian and German films.
Works
Selected works include:
1990: Sonate for clarinet and piano
1991: Heidelberg Trio, for clarinet, violin and piano
1991: In memoriam, for storyteller, piano, horn, violin and cello after poems by Anna Akhmatova
1991: In Namen Amadeus, for viola, clarinet, piano and tape
1995: Day and night: Hommage à M. C. Escher, for solo piano
1996: Labyrinth in memoriam Oleg Kagan, for string orchestra (3 quartets) and solo cello
1998: Max and Moritz, chamber opera after William Busch