International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians

Logo of the International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians

The International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians is the junior section of the prestigious International Tchaikovsky Competition. The competition is open to musicians under the age 17 in the area of piano, violin, and cello. The first, second, and third prize winners receive special recommendation from the Association of Tchaikovsky Competition Stars to advance to the senior section without the preliminary procedure.

The competition takes place in different countries each time, maximizing the opportunity to participate in the competition for talented young musicians of various geographic areas.

Previous competitions

  1. Moscow, Russia (1992)
  2. Sendai, Japan (1995)
  3. St. Petersburg, Russia (1997)
  4. Xiamen, China (2002)
  5. Kurashiki, Japan (2004)
  6. Suwon, Korea (2009)
  7. Montreux-Vevey, Switzerland (2012)
  8. Moscow, Russia (2014)

The competition proves to be an opportunity for young musicians to be exposed to sophisticated audiences, reputable musicians of the jury panel, and other young fellow musicians from around the world. On top of the monetary awards, the laureates are engaged in concert tours arranged by the organizing committee at the conclusion of the competition.

First prize winners

Piano

Year 1st Prize
1992 Alexander Mogilevsky (Russia)
Emily Hsieh (USA)
1995 Lang Lang (China)
1997 Sergey Bassukinsky (Russia)
2002 Haochen Zhang (China)
2004 Yulia Chaplina (Russia)
2009 Nansung Huang (China)
2012 Alexander Kutuzov (Russia)
2014 Aleksandr Malafeev (Russia)

Violin

Year 1st Prize
1992 Jennifer Koh (USA)
1995 Piotr Kwasny (Poland)
1997 Bui Cong Duy (Vietnam)
2002 Xiao-yu Yang (China)
2004 Aylen Pritchin (Russia)
2009 Sirena Huang (USA)
2012 Veriko Tchumburidze (Turkey-Georgia)
2014 Ruslan Turuntaev (Kazakhstan)

Cello

Year 1st Prize
1992 Daniel Müller-Schott (Germany)
1995 Monika Leskovar (Croatia)
1997 Bong Ihn Koh (South Korea)
2002 Bonian Tian (China)
2004 Fedor Amosov (Russia)
2009 Michiaki Ueno (Japan)
2012 Noah Lee (USA)
2014 La Li (China)
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