His repertoire comprises such rare works as Busoni's Piano Concerto, Fauré's Fantasy for piano and orchestra and Liszt's Fantasy on themes from Berlioz's "Lélio". Kun-Woo Paik also performs a wide selection of transcriptions by Liszt and Berlioz and is the dedicatee of Suk-Hi Kang's piano concerto.
Paik has recorded the complete Prokofiev piano concertos with Antoni Wit and the Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra for RCA (Diapason d'Or in 1993), the complete Rachmaninoff piano concertos with Vladimir Fedoseyev and the Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra (BMG), as well as several solo CDs of Scriabin, Liszt, Mussorgsky, Rachmaninoff and Mendelssohn piano music. In 2000, he signed an exclusive recording contract with Decca Classics. His first release featured the piano transcriptions of the organ works of J. S. Bach made by Busoni. Between 2005 and 2007, Decca recorded Paik in the complete piano sonatas of Beethoven.
He was the Artistic Director of the Emerald Coast Music Festival in Dinard (France) for 21 years, from 1993 to 2014. He programmed a large range of music, from baroque, through romantic, and contemporary music; performed by top international artists to a large audience, and notably with free outdoor concerts, concerts for children, and concerts with young virtuosi.[1] In November 2014, he was fired from this position by the Mayor of Dinard, Martine Craveia-Schütz, to be replaced by the Egyptian pianist Ramzi Yassa; Kun-Woo Paik expressed in a long letter to the Mayor of Dinard his "stupefaction and deep sorrow".[2]
Kun-Woo Paik[3] was made "Chevalier de l'ordre des arts et des lettres" by the French Government in 2000. In September 2000, he was the first Korean artist to be officially invited to perform in China.
Personal life
Paik has resided in Paris with his wife, actress Yoon Jeong-hee since 1974. Yoon is a star of the late 1960s, commonly referred to as one of "The First Troika" by the South Korean news media, along with two other actresses in rivalry, Moon Hee, and Nam Jeong-im.[4] The couple has a daughter, Paik Jin-hi, who is a violinist.[5][6]