| |
Lisa Emenheiser is widely recognized
as a leading keyboard artist. A graduate of the
Juilliard School, where she earned both Bachelor’s
and Master’s of Music degrees, she was a scholarship
student of Ania Dorfman. Ms. Emenheiser is a winner
of The Young Artist in Recital and The National
Arts Club competitions. Additionally, she was a
Helena Rubinstein Foundation grant winner, a Lilly
Folles Fund winner, and was recognized with the
William Petshek Award.
Ms. Emenheiser has performed in recital at Alice
Tully Hall, Avery Fischer Hall, Carnegie Recital
Hall and appears frequently in concerts at the National
Gallery, Phillips Collection, Smithsonian Institute,
Kennedy Center and at the embassies of France, Austria,
Germany, Britain and Spain. Ms. Emenheiser has appeared
as soloist with the National Symphony Orchestra,
the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, the Richmond Symphony,
the Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra, the Virginia
Chamber Orchestra, and was one of the featured soloists
at the Kennedy Center’s Piano 2000 Festival.
Ms. Emenheiser was also a soloist for the Kennedy
Center’s “Journey to America”
Festival held in 2002. She has been a featured harpsichordist
and fortepianist at the Kennedy Center’s Mozart
Festival.
An established chamber musician, Ms. Emenheiser
has performed across the globe with Julius Baker,
Eugenia Zukerman, Ransom Wilson, Jean-Pierre Rampal
and Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, as well as with principal
members of the New York Philharmonic, The Cleveland
Symphony and the National Symphony Orchestra. She
has appeared in solo and chamber performances in
virtually every major U.S. city as well as internationally,
including performances in London, Manchester, Berne,
Haifa, Nice, and Mexico City. Ms. Emenheiser has
performed in numerous summer music festival, including
Aspen, Strings in the Mountains, Snake River Chamber
Players, and Masterworks. Her vast orchestral performances
are equally as extensive, including tours of Europe,
and American residencies in Alaska, Maine, Wyoming,
Montana, Nebraska, Texas, Alabama, Vermont, Oklahoma,
and North Dakota.
Ms. Emenheiser has served as artist in residence
at The Washington Conservatory of Music as a member
of the Opus 3 Trio with cellist David Hardy and
violinist Charles Wetherbee. Currently, she is adjunct
pianist for the National Symphony Orchestra under
the direction of Leonard Slatkin, as well as pianist
for the 20th Century Consort in Washington, D.C.
Ms. Emenheiser was recently featured on national
television as an expert artist commentator and performer
in the PBS documentary entitled “Exploring
Your Brain”, in which she performed Ginastera’s
Piano Sonata No. 1 and discussed the topic of memory.
Ms. Emenheiser has recorded for the Pro Arte, VAI
Audio, Centaur, Delos, and Cascades labels.
|