Marianna Prjevalskaya
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Born to a musical family, Prjevalskaya benefited from early lessons with her mother, Tatianna, her principal mentor for more than eleven years, from age six.[3] She continued her studies at the Royal College of Music in London with Irina Zaritskaya and Kevin Kenner. In 2003, Prjevalskaya moved to the United States where she joined the Toradze Piano Studio at Indiana University. She holds an Artist Diploma and Master of Music from the Yale School of Music, where she studied with Boris Berman, as well as a doctorate in Musical Arts from the Peabody Conservatory of Music at Johns Hopkins University, where she studied under Boris Slutsky.[4]
Venues
As a recitalist, Prjevalskaya performed in the US, Europe, and Japan at venues such as the Mozarteum in Salzburg, the Accademia Santa Cecilia in Rome, the Teatro Goldoni of Florence, the Minato Mirai Hall in Yokohama, the Auditorio Manuel de Falla in Granada, the Palau de la Música in Valencia, the Orpheum Theatre in New Orleans, and Weill Hall and Steinway Hall in New York City. Her debut at Carnegie's Weill Hall with Rachmaninoff's Variations on a Theme by Chopin and the entire Book II of Préludes by Debussy
Prjevalskaya has also appeared at festivals in Europe and the US, such as the Norfolk and Norwich Festival in the UK, the Salzburg Festival, the Festival Russo in Rome, the Bologna Festival, and the Bearcat Piano Festival in Cincinnati. Her performances were broadcast by the Lithuanian, Polish Television, Spanish Television and Radio2 Clásica.
Since her solo debut with orchestra at age nine, Prjevalskaya has appeared with orchestras such as the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra, the National Lithuanian Symphony Orchestra, the Rzeszow Philharmonic Orchestra, the Korean Symphony Orchestra, the Granada Symphony Orchestra, the Galicia Symphony Orchestra, and the Sendai Philharmonic Orchestra. She has collaborated with conductors such as Ion Marin, Roberto Trevino, Carlos Prieto, David Danzmayr, Stamatia Karampini, Tadeusz Wojciechowski.