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Monica Jakuc Leverett (Piano)

Born: Nov 18, 1943 - Newark, New Jersey, USA

The American pianist, Monica Jakuc (pronounced Ya-kutch) Leverett, received Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees from the Juilliard School of Music in New York, where she studied with James Friskin and Beveridge Webster. She has also worked with Leon Fleisher, Russell Sherman, and Konrad Wolff, a pupil of Artur Schnabel.

New York audiences first heard Monica Jakuc Leverett at Alice Tully Hall in 1980 in "A Program of Twentieth-Century Music for Two Pianos" with colleague Kenneth Fearn. Her performance of J.S. Bach's Goldberg Variations (BWV 988) at Merkin Hall was hailed by The New York Times as "an auspicious debut...one will observe Ms. Jakuc's career with more than usual interest." Her 1988 London debut included the premiere of a piece written for her by Ronald Perera. She has toured Japan and Alaska and appears often on both U.S. coasts. She also delivers lecture-recitals on women composers and has been a featured artist at International Association of Women in Music concerts in London and Washington, D.C.

Inspired by Malcolm Bilson, Monica Jakuc Leverett has performed on early pianos since 1986. She has been a frequent guest artist at the E.M. Frederick Collection in Ashburnham, Massachusetts, and was an organizer and performer at the international HaydnFest 1990, co-sponsored by Smith and the Westfield Center for Early Keyboard Studies. She has given a fortepiano recital in the Klementinum, Prague, Czech Repulbic. A former board member of Arcadia Players, she frequently performed with them on her two fortepianos by Paul McNulty: a 5 ½ octave Walter design, and a 6 ½ octave copy of Graf’s Op. 318 (c1819). Her “insistent and amazing artistry” was hailed by the Worcester Telegram and Gazette in a Tuckerman Hall performance of L.v. Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4 with Arcadia Players. She was a performer/participant in the Westfield Center’s Forte/Piano Festival at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York in August 2015. Her career has included concerts on three continents, and she is a frequent solo and chamber music performer in Western Massachusetts, playing on both early and modern pianos. She has been a toy piano artist since 2015, and has commissioned many works by living composers.

Monica Jakuc Leverett is the Elsie Irwin Sweeney Professor Emerita of Music at Smith College, where she taught from 1969 to 2008.

Monica Jakuc Leverett's discography includes fortepiano sonatas by Marianne von Martinez, Marianna von Auenbrugger, and Joseph Haydn on Titanic Records, and Francesca LeBrun's complete Opus 1 Sonatas for fortepiano and violin, with Dana Maiben, on Dorian Discovery. Her newest CD, "Fantasies for Fortepiano", features works by W.A. Mozart, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Haydn, and L.v. Beethoven’s “Moonlight” Sonata. It is available on cdbaby.com.

In 2006, Monica Jakuc Leverett married Bob Leverett, and together they explore forests and give presentations on nature and music. They have recently established the Monica and Bob Leverett Forever-Wild Conservation Fund at Kestrel Land Trust.



Sources:
Monica Jakuc Leverett Website (2020)
Photos 01: William Albritton (2010); 02: Bob Leverett (2017); 03: Daily Hampshire Gazette (2008); 04: Gigi Kaeser; 05: Richard Lalli (1997); 06: Stephen Petegorsky (1993); 07: Gabriel Cooney (1986)
Contributed by
Aryeh Oron (October 2020)

Monica Jakuc Leverett: Short Biography | Bach Discography: Recordings of Instrumental Works

Links to other Sites

Monica Jakuc Leverett (Official Website)
Monica Jakuc Leverett (Desert Baroque)


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Explanation | Acronyms | Missing Biographies | The Sad Corner




 

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Last update: Tuesday, November 24, 2020 15:25