Morning Sun

Acclaimed pianist Pollini dies at 82

- By Giada Zampano

Maurizio Pollini, a Grammy-winning Italian pianist who performed at La Scala opera house in Milan, has died. He was 82.

Pollini died on Saturday, La Scala said in a statement. The announceme­nt didn’t specify a cause of death, but Pollini had been forced to cancel a concert at the Salzburg Festival in 2022 because of heart problems.

During a six decades-long internatio­nal career, Pollini’s repertoire expanded beyond the standard classics. He embraced early 20th-century masterpiec­es by Igor Stravinsky, Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern and postwar modernists such as Karlheinz Stockhause­n, Pierre Boulez and Luigi Nono.

La Scala defined the pianist as “one of the great musicians of our time and a fundamenta­l reference in the artistic life of the theater for over 50 years.”

Pollini was considered a pianist with unique intellectu­al power, whose unrivalled technique and interpreti­ve drive compelled listeners to think deeply.

He was born in Milan on Jan. 5, 1942, into a family of artists. His father, Gino Pollini, was a violinist and a leading rationalis­t architect. His mother, Renata Melotti, sang and played the piano, as did her brother, Fausto Melotti, who was also a pioneer of abstract sculpture.

“I grew up in a house with art and artists,” Pollini said in an interview. “Old works and modern works coexisted together as part of life.”

Pollini began giving concerts before his 10th birthday, performing Chopin’s Etudes at age 14 and then winning the Internatio­nal Chopin Piano Competitio­n at 18, as the youngest foreign pianist among a group of 89 contestant­s.

Arthur Rubinstein, president of the jury, reportedly said that the young pianist “already plays better than any of us.”

After his first internatio­nal recognitio­n, however, Pollini put his career on hold to study, explaining that performing right away would have been for him “a little premature.”

“I wanted to study, get to know the repertoire better, play the music of Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms,” he said.

Pollini performed his first American tour in 1968. From the 1970s to the ‘90s, he made a series of recordings with the Deutsche Grammophon label, becoming a celebrated interprete­r of classics like Beethoven.

His albums won several awards, including a Grammy in 2007 for Best Instrument­al Soloist Performanc­e (without orchestra) for Chopin: Nocturnes.

He is survived by his wife Marilisa, and his son Daniele, also an acclaimed pianist and conductor.

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