Highlights

Founded in 1982, the Munich Piano Trio is one of the most active and sought-after German chamber music ensembles. The musicians have undertaken lengthy concert tours throughout Europe, North America, Russia, Japan, China and a few African countries. The Trio has given concerts in the world’s most famous venues, including Berlin’s Philharmonic Chamber Music Hall, New York’s Carnegie Recital Hall, Munich’s Cuvilliés Theater, Hercules Hall and Prince Regent’s Theater, Tokyo's Suntory and Casals Hall and London’s Wigmore Hall. Festival engagements have included the Munich Opera Festival, the Orlando Festival and the European Chamber Music Festival in Strasbourg. 
During the children's Festival, the pianist Diana Brekalo from Germany will give a big gift with piano to chinese children. 

Diana Brekalo
The pianist was born and brought up in Stuttgart (Germany), and is of Croatian descent. Formative studies in Germany with Ana Hartauer, Monika Giurgiuman and Prof.S.Rudiakov revealed her talents not only as in imaginative and thoughtful solo pianist, but also as notable accompanist and  fine chamber musician.
By the age of twelve, Brekalo had already won four first prizes as soloist and two first prizes as a chamber musician in the German "Jugendmusiziert" , and her precocious musical development was continued through generous grants from the "Oskar und Vera Ritter" foundation, the Baden-Württemberg Associations Patronage Price, and the ZEIT grant in the "Deutsche SitftungMusikleben".

2001-2004 she was a Junior Student at the Musikhochschule Stuttgart, where she started her studies in 2004 in the class of Prof.S.Rudiakov. In 2006 she came to London to undertake further studies at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama under the guidance of Joan Havill, having gained a distinction in the Bachelor of music (Hons) as well as in her Master of Music (performance). She was grateful for the financial support of the Leverhulme Trust and the Worshipful Companies of Innholders and Insurers as well as the Simon Phillis Award and the Sergei Rachmaninoff award.
The Kammerchor Stuttgart ranks as one of the leading ensembles of its kind. During the forty years of its existence, Frieder Bernius has developed the choir into an extraordinary phenomenon which is valued by audiences and critics alike. The well known "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung" reported that it was “a vocally wonderfully constituted ensemble with every imaginable virtue from lyrical brilliance and utterly perfect purity of intonation to a malleability in text declamation which could hardly be surpassed.” The ZEIT an other international german newspaper, wrote recently “No superlative is wasted, to praise this choir.”

Valentin Radutiu, born in Munich in 1986, received his first cello lessons from his father at the age of six. While still attending school, he studied at the Mozarteum University of Salzburg under Clemens Hagen from 2001 to 2005. After high school he became a student of Heinrich Schiff in Vienna. Since 2007 he has been a member of David Geringas’cello studio at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music in Berlin.

Valentin Radutiu is the current winner of the competition "Sound and Explanation -Conveying Works in Music and Word" of the Cultural Committee of German Business. The Music Prize of German Business is one of the most important awards for young musicians in Germany and brings with it a number of concert performances, the production of a debut CD, and the possibility to premiere a commissioned work by Peter Ruzicka.
Kay Johannsen's varied musical activities are centered at the Collegiate Church Stuttgart, the main church of Stuttgart and the region. It is here that the Collegiate Cantor and and Director of liturgical music at the Collegiate church directs the Stuttgarter Kantorei, the solistenensemble stimmkunst and the Collegiate Philhamonic Stuttgart. Being the artistic director of the Collegiate Music Association Stuttgart, he is responsible for the weekly concert series An hour of church music that attracts over 20.000 concertgoers a year. The organ of the church, built in 2004 by the Mühleisen Company, which has 81 registers and four manuals, is a continuing source of inspiration for him. 

The duo Bob & Bill from Montreal/Quebec (Canada) has extensive experience in the realm of show business and media arts as composers, arrangers, recording procuders and of course performing musicians. During the EXPO 2010 in Shanghai they are one of the few groups invited by the Canadian EXPO Pavilion.
Florian Uhlig is an experienced and passionate pianist from Germany, while his young but extremely talented partner Hyeyoon Park, comes from South Korea. Both of them started their stage performance and career as a professional musician at an amazingly early age. Florian Uhlig gave his first piano recital at 12, and young as Hyeyoon Park was at the age of 9, she had already made her stage debut with the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra. Both internationally acclaimed at the very early stage of their music career, their potential to amaze the world is simply beyond conception. However, it has always been a huge shame that they never got the opportunity to work with each other. And here comes the fateful turn. For the first time, the two prodigies will soon join their hands to present brilliant duo performance at the prestigious venue of Kettle Yard, Cambridge University. Also, they’ve already have further plan to work together in the coming year of 2014. It’s a great news for their audience, for classical music lovers, and for the entire music scene. 
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