Geoffrey Douglas Madge
Template:Short description Geoffrey Douglas Madge (born 3 October 1941) is an Australian classical pianist and composer.[1]
Biography
Madge was born in Adelaide and took his first piano lessons at the age of eight. He later won the 1963 ABC Concerto and Vocal Competition. After winning this competition he left for Europe in 1963 and settled in the Netherlands. He was appointed professor of piano at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague.
Madge is known for performing long and arduous works. He was the first to record Leopold Godowsky's Studies on Chopin's Études, once described as "the most impossibly difficult things ever written for the piano". He has given six complete performances of Sorabji's Opus clavicembalisticum,[2] one of the longest and most difficult works ever written for the piano. In 1982, 52 years after Sorabji premiered the work, Madge gave the work its second public performance. Two of Madge's performances of the work have been released commercially.[3]
In 1979, he gave the first complete performance of Nikos Skalkottas's 32 Piano Pieces.[4]
References
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External links
- Pages with script errors
- Australian male classical pianists
- Australian composers
- 1941 births
- Living people
- Australian expatriates in the Netherlands
- Academic staff of the Royal Conservatory of The Hague
- 21st-century Australian classical pianists
- 21st-century Australian male musicians
- 21st-century Australian musicians
- 20th-century Australian classical pianists
- 20th-century Australian male musicians
- 20th-century Australian musicians
- Australian male composers
- 21st-century Australian composers
- 20th-century Australian composers