Anna Tsybuleva


Anna Tsybuleva is a Russian classical pianist. She won the Leeds International Piano Competition in 2015.

Early life and education

Tsybuleva was born in 1990. Her mother, Svetlana Tsybuleva, was a musician and art historian, and her father, a radio physicist. Tsybuleva was raised in Nizhny Arkhyz in Karachay-Cherkessia, Russia. She played the piano from the age of six, at first taught by her mother, and also briefly played the violin. She attended the Shostakovich Music School in Volgodonsk and the Moscow Central Music School. In 2009, she went to the Moscow Conservatory, graduating in 2014 and starting post-graduate study there, as well as at the City of Basel Music Academy in Switzerland. Her teachers include Elena Vorobyova, Ludmila Roschina and the Spanish pianist, Claudio Martínez Mehner.

Career and awards

Tsybuleva has won several Russian piano competitions including the Russian National Piano Competition at Rostov, the International Piano Competition at Murmansk and the Nasedkin International Piano Competition at Yaroslavl. She won the International Piano Competition SEILER at Kitzingen, Germany and the International Piano Competition at Ibla, Italy. In 2012, she won the Emil Gilels International Piano Competition at Odessa, Ukraine, and also came fourth in the Hamamatsu International Piano Competition in Japan. In 2015, she won the Leeds International Piano Competition in the UK, the second woman to do so.
She has performed internationally with orchestras including the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and The Hallé, as well as with Russian orchestras including the Saint Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra.

Critical reception

The British conductor, Mark Elder, called Tsybuleva "a truly exciting winner" of the Leeds competition. The Guardians music critic, Andrew Clements, considered that her "success certainly raised a few eyebrows" and criticised her performance of Brahms's Piano Concerto no. 2, writing that "for all the fluency of her playing, she often seemed incapable of seeing the overall shape of the work, and her role in projecting it, rather than the detail of each passing moment." Erica Worth, editor of the magazine Pianist, considered her performance failed to deliver the "warmth, gravitas, a certain humility, a feeling that one has lived, not to mention a velvety rich tone and utter command over the keyboard" that the concerto requires. The BBC Radio 3 commentator, Lucy Parham, praised her "mature, elegant and communicative reading of this hugely demanding work".
Murray Mclachlan, writing in the International Piano magazine, described her as a "born performer" with "unquestionable qualities as an artist"; he considered that her performance of the Brahms concerto "perhaps lacked gravitas" but added: "there was no doubt that she was thoroughly enjoying every minute. The work was taken by the scruff of the neck and executed with energetic elan, bravura and heart-on-sleeve communication." Mclachlan also praised "her spellbinding, exquisite sounds" in performing Debussy's Préludes.
Commenting on a 2016 recital, the British pianist, Peter Donohoe, called Tsybuleva "one of the very finest young musicians of her generation". He commented on her "unerring sense of breathing and space and an instinct for tempo-appropriatenes in relation to her approach to sound and phrase", and praised the "imagination and integrity" of her interpretations of Schumann's Etudes Symphoniques and Prokofiev's 10 pieces Op 12.

Discography

YearTitleComposerRecord CompanyReferenceOther artistes
2017Fantasie in F sharp minor, H.300
Phantasie, Op.77
Fantasy in C major Wanderer-Fantasie, D.760
Fantasien, Op.116
C. P. E Bach
Beethoven
Schubert
Brahms
Champs Hill RecordsCHRCD131