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“A subtle and elegant pianist” (Répertoire,
France) whose tone is “rich, full and deep” (Le Devoir, Canada),
Stéphane Lemelin regularly performs as a soloist and chamber
musician in Canada, the United States, Europe and Asia. A guest soloist
of the major Canadian orchestras, he has also collaborated with artists
such as Donna Brown, Boris Berman, James Campbell, Jacques
Israeliévitch, Wolfgang Meier, Martin Ostertag, Peter Schreier,
David Shifrin, and the Arthur-Leblanc, St. Lawrence, Vlach and Muir String Quartets.
His repertory is vast, with a
predilection for Romantic and especially French music, as manifested by
his recordings. Among his fifteen recordings are Fauré’s
complete Nocturnes, works by Saint-Saëns, Debussy,
Roussel, but also by lesser-known composers. Moreover, Stéphane
Lemelin is director of the French music series “Découvertes
1890-1939” with Atma Classique, for which he has already recorded works
by Gustave Samazeuilh, Guy Ropartz, Georges Migot and, with the
Hochelaga Trio, the first part of Théodore Dubois’ complete
chamber works with piano, as well as a recording of the trios of
Pierné et Fauré, acclaimed by the French magazine Le
Monde de la Musique.
A prize-winner of the Robert Casadesus
International Competition
in Cleveland, he has received many national and international awards
and grants, notably from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Social
Sciences and Humanities Council of Canada, and the Arts Foundations of
Alberta and Austria.
Stéphane Lemelin studied with
Yvonne Hubert in Montreal, Karl-Ulrich Schnabel in New York, Leon
Fleisher at the Peabody Conservatory , Boris Berman and Claude Frank at
Yale University, where he obtained a doctorate. A
professor at the University of Alberta for
more than ten years, and since 2001 at the University of Ottawa, he is
often invited to give masterclasses. Stéphane Lemelin is a
member of Trio Hochelaga and Artistic Director of an annual chamber
music festival held in Ontario, the Prince Edward County Music Festival.
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