Date/Time
Date(s) - 12/Dec/2014
Genre - Guitar
Mazda Hall at 7 pm
(Free Admittance)
In a programme of Tárrega: Capricho Arabe and Recuerdos de la Alhambra; Hill: There and Gone; Möller: from 24 Preludes, Op 12: Prelude No. 3 – Moderato, Prelude No. 4 – Agitato, Prelude No. 5 – Giocoso, Prelude No. 6 – Largo Espressivo, Prelude No. 7 – Allegretto, Prelude No. 8 – Andante Moderato, Prelude No. 9 – Larghetto, Prelude No. 10 – Solemne, From Her Source to the Sea, Nocturne Op. 16 No. 2 and The Night Flame and Albéniz: Asturias (Leyenda); Regondi: Reverie “Nocturne”
The European guitarist and composer Johannes Möller has captivated audiences throughout the world with charismatic and soulful performances. In 2010 he was awarded first prize in the GFA Concert Artist Competition, considered by many to be the most prestigious guitar competition in the world.
At the age of 12, Johannes self-taught started writing music and have done so ever since. Today he is recognized for his contribution to the guitar repertoire and his music is being played by guitarist around the world.
Johannes has earned a Bachelor of Music with Honors from the Royal College of Music in London where he studied guitar with Gary Ryan and Carlos Bonell and composition with William Mival. He has received a Masters degree from the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague where he studied with Zoran Dukic. He also received a scholarship for excellent students from the Royal Conservatoire that allowed him to study privately with Pavel Steidl in Czech Republic as well as composition lessons with Dusan Bogdanovic in the USA. He completed a second Masters degree at the Conservatoire in Amsterdam where he studied guitar with Lex Eisenhardt and composition with Richard Ayres.
As a performer, Johannes’s artistry has reached well beyond the usual guitar circles. This was confirmed in March 2008 when he won the Dutch Vriendenkrans Concours while competing against performers in all instrumental categories. As a part of this award his name has been engraved on a metal plate that can be seen in the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. He also became the first guitarist ever to win the Ljunggrenska Competition (Sweden) in 2007, and the conclusion issued by the jury was: “With the help of a breathtaking technique and all the colors of the rainbow he opens a door to a world of subtle expressions which strikes us with great power and intensity.” In 2005, he became the first guitarist to win The Bromsgrove Festival International Young Musicians Platform (England). Critics have also noted his special qualities, writing of his playing “Guitarist Johannes Moller achieved miracles with his lucid, spacious playing.” (Stephen Pettitt, London Evening Standard).