
Markus Groh
PIANIST
“Groh plays straight, just as God and Brahms instruct him…[he] now ranks at the top of the German tradition, a worthy heir to Backhaus, Edwin Fischer, Wilhelm Kempff [Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 1]."
BERLIN SYMPHONY
BERLINER MORGENPOST
BIOGRAPHY
Markus Groh gained immediate world attention after winning first prize at the Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels in 1995, the first German to do so. Since then, his unique sound and astonishing technique have confirmed his place among the finest pianists in the world. Sharing the same birthday with Alfred Brendel, Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, and Maurizio Pollini, he has proven himself worthy of their company. With a career spanning three decades, Mr. Groh has performed with over 140 orchestras worldwide. In North America those orchestras include the Cleveland Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, and the National Symphony Orchestra; in Europe Mr. Groh has appeared with the London Symphony, St. Petersburg Philharmonic, Budapest Festival Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony, Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, and most of the top German orchestras under such distinguished conductors as Ivan Fischer, Neeme Järvi, Hannu Lintu, Fabio Luisi, Kent Nagano, Jonathan Nott, and David Robertson. In 2019 Sony Classical released its first recording featuring Markus Groh performing Danny Elfman’s piano quartet with members of the Berlin Philharmonic. Mr. Groh’s previous solo recordings all won prestigious awards including “Editor’s Choice” (Gramophone Magazine), “Stern des Monats” (Fonoforum), “Recording of the Month” (Musicweb International), and “Supersonic Award” (Pizzicato Magazine). A captivating recitalist, Mr. Groh elicits shapes, textures, and colors that one seldom hears in live performance. He performs solo recitals worldwide, in some of the most important venues, in cities such as Amsterdam, Athens, Berlin, Brussels, Frankfurt, London, Milan, Munich, New York, Paris, Tokyo, Toronto, Vancouver, Vienna, Washington, D.C., and Zurich. In addition to his successful performing career, Markus Groh is the founder and director of the Bebersee Festival, a chamber music festival near Berlin which in 2019 celebrated its 20th anniversary. The innovative concerts, regularly broadcast on German national radio, take place in an aircraft hangar that was previously used by Soviet troops during the Cold War. The contrast between the space’s former use and the beauty of the great chamber music repertoire inspires meaningful and memorable performances. This dichotomy also fosters unique ideas that include multimedia presentations, collaborations with stage actors, and unusual and thoughtful programmatic ideas, all of which will be expanded upon in coming seasons. Musicians performing at the festival include Kirill Gerstein, Alina Pogostkina, Arabella Steinbacher, Akiko Suwanai, Lars Vogt, and many others. A project from 2010 in which he traveled throughout Germany by horse-drawn carriage performing recitals on a replica of the 1836 Steinway No. 1 “Kitchen Piano” also illustrates Mr. Groh’s visionary thinking. The tour was documented by the renowned German filmmaker Ralf Pleger, broadcast multiple times on German public television. The film highlighted many of the stark differences between the 19th and 21st centuries and also made reference to the environmental impact of modern society, an idea that ten years later is one of the most urgent issues facing the world. Markus Groh was a student of Konrad Richter in Stuttgart and Hans Leygraf in Berlin and Salzburg. He is currently Professor of Piano at the University of the Arts in Berlin. www.markusgroh.org
MEDIA

Markus Groh

PRESS ACCLAIM
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
“Liszt’s first piano concerto and his tone poem Les Préludes may be guilty pleasures of a sort, but both offer sustenance … Mr. Groh, too, was substantial, offering the music’s bravura as well as the sensitivity.”
NEW YORK TIMES
BERLIN SYMPHONY
“Groh plays straight, just as God and Brahms instruct him … [he] now ranks at the top of the German tradition, a worthy heir to Backhaus, Edwin Fischer, Wilhelm Kempff.” [Brahms Piano Concerto No. 1]
BERLINER MORGENPOST
ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY
“Few can play the piano consistently with the kind of power that really fills a hall, and only a small subset of that can play powerfully while maintaining the finesse that makes the sound musical. Groh belongs to that subset. He makes a big sound where called for, but not at the expense of those things that matter most. He pulled back in the quieter moments with beautiful delicacy, and then brought the sound back up, in perfectly judged performance.” [Grieg Piano Concerto]
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
CINCINNATI SYMPHONY
“[Groh] is the kind of artist who draws you in, not only for his personal magnetism – which he possesses – but also for his respect for the composer’s intentions. He played with clarity, singing tone and knew just when to project the right amount of drama. His phrasing in the slow movement was beautifully shaped, and the finale was irresistible." [Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 2]
CINCINNATI ENQUIRER
OMAHA SYMPHONY
“German pianist Markus Groh making his Omaha Symphony debut offered an impressive performance of Liszt's Piano Concerto No. 1 in E-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra. [...] Groh is that rare artist who balances ample power with the lightest of touches. Commanding without ever being muscular, he offered beauty and evenness of tone, silky-smooth arpeggios and flawless trills. The orchestra matched him perfectly in execution and emotional context. At the end of the piece, a fellow to the left of me shot out of his seat exclaiming, ‘Oh, boy!’”
OMAHA WORLD-HERALD
SANTA BARBARA SYMPHONY
"The final piece, Tchaikovsky's deeply sensuous Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat Minor, was Groh's turn to enchant, his style of playing stern and physical. Tchaikovsky's high-intensity composition paired with Groh's incredible precision commanded a powerful final applause."
SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT
GRAND RAPIDS SYMPHONY
“Groh appeared to hardly break a sweat even while pounding the instrument into submission [Liszt Totentanz], attacking phrases with relish, ending phrases and daring them to come back for more. His dark phrases, with little bits of light glimpsing through, smooth legatos and percussive staccatos in careful measure, all made for a performance that was as luminous as it was virtuosic. Friday's audience gave him a big, enthusiastic standing ovation.”
GRAND RAPIDS PRESS
WASHINGTON PERFORMING ARTS SOCIETY RECITAL
“The program culminated, in every sense, with four Liszt pieces that showed Groh on his home turf. Liszt … is a good fit for a smart virtuoso such as Groh, who can do full justice to his probing, unorthodox mind and his finger-busting pianistic fireworks.”
WASHINGTON POST
BRUSSELS PHILHARMONIC
“Markus Groh made an impressive soloist, his massive hands and fluent playing making light of Bartók’s demands and there was a notably close rapport with the orchestra." [Bartók Piano Concerto No. 3]
CLASSICAL SOURCE (London)
TUCSON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
“Groh is an artist with a capital "a": technically proficient, passionately in tune with the score and not one to get caught up in showy displays. His fingers danced lightly over the keyboard like a ballet dancer, but the sound he produced was powerful and pronounced. He balanced out Bartók's bursts of dissonance with sublime reminders of the composer's intent to write a love song for his pianist wife in the months before he died." [Bartók Piano Concerto No. 3]
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
REPERTOIRE LIST
BARTÓK
Piano Concerti Nos. 1, 2 and 3
BEETHOVEN
All Piano Concerti
Choral Fantasy in C Minor, Op. 80
Concerto for Piano, Violin and Violoncello in C, Op. 56
Rondo in B-flat Major
Transcription of the Violin Concerto
BRAHMS
Piano Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
Transcription of Double Concerto in A Minor, Op. 102
CHOPIN
Piano Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
GERSHWIN
Concerto in FRhapsody in Blue
GRIEG
Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op. 16
HAYDN
Piano Concerti Nos. 3, 4 and 11
HINDEMITH
Concerto for Piano, Brass and Harps, Op. 49
Piano Concerto (1945)
LISZT
Piano Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
Totentanz
Malédiction
MENDELSSOHN
Piano Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
Rondo brilliant in E-flat Major, Op. 29
MESSIAEN
Réveil des oiseaux
MOZART
Piano Concerti Nos. 5, 8, 9, 11-17, 19-25 and 27
Concerto No. 7 in F Major for 3 Pianos, K.242
Concerto No. 10 in E-flat Major for 2 Pianos, K.365
PFITZNER
Piano Concerto in E-flat Major, Op. 31
PROKOFIEV
Piano Concerti Nos. 1 and 3
RACHMANINOFF
Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini in A Minor, Op. 43
RAVEL
Piano Concerto in G Major
SAINT-SAËNS
Piano Concerti Nos. 2 and 4
SCHUMANN
Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op. 54
Konzertstück in G Major, Op. 92
Konzert-Allegro in D Minor, Op. 134
SHOSTAKOVICH
Piano Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
STRAUSS
Burleske in D Minor
TCHAIKOVSKY
Piano Concerti Nos. 1 and 2
WEBER
Konzertstück in F Minor, Op. 79
WEEKS
Requiescat
DISCOGRAPHY
BRAHMS
THE LATE PIANO PIECES
7 Fantasias, Op. 116
3 Intermezzi, Op. 117
6 Pieces for piano, Op. 118
4 Pieces for piano, Op. 119
AVIE
LISZT
Sonata in B minor
Fantasy and Fugue on B-A-C-H
Totentanz
2006 EDITOR'S CHOICE, GRAMOPHONE MAGAZINE
AVIE
DEBUSSY
Sonata for Cello and Piano
PROKOFIEV
Sonata for Cello and Piano in C Major, Op. 119
BRITTEN
Sonata for Cello and Piano in C Major, Op. 65
with Claudio Bohórquez, cello
Berlin Classics
BRAHMS
Sonatas for Cello and Piano
with Alban Gerhardt, cello
Harmonia Mundi
LISZT
Totentanz
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande
Fabio Luisi, conductor
Espace2
LISZT
Piano Concerto No. 2
(Queen Elisabeth Competition 1995)
Liège Philharmonic
Pierre Bartholomée, conductor
René Gailly Intl. Productions
Live from The Frick Collection, March 24, 2002
Works of Beethoven, Brahms, Schoenberg, Adès and Liszt
[Not for commercial distribution]








