Antti Aleksi Siirala (born 16 May 1979 in Helsinki) is a Finnish pianist.
Antti Siirala's international career was launched when he won First Prize in the 10th Vienna Beethoven competition as the youngest contestant, receiving the special award for the best performance of a late Beethoven sonata (op.
106 âHammerklavierâ).
Subsequently, he was awarded First Prize in the London International Piano Competition 2000, the Dublin International Piano Competition (with unanimous jury votes and a special prize for the best Mozart performance) and the Leeds International Piano Competition in 2003 (and the audience prize voted by viewers and listeners to the BBC broadcasts and the live audience in Leeds Town Hall).
Siirala's debut in Brussels in December 2004 was a matchless success.
Due to illness the conductor had to cancel on very short notice.
Siirala agreed to lead the orchestra from the piano and saved the whole concert by playing in the second half Beethoven's Diabelli variations in place of the orchestra.
Immediately he was re-invited for concerts with the Orchestre National and for a recital by the Palais des Beaux Arts.
Standing in for sickened Emanuel Ax in February 2005, Siirala gave a sensational debut recital at the Cologne Philharmonie.
According to the newspaper Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger âHis recital will be remembered as one of the most outstanding events of this seasonâ.
Blomstedt even invited him to join him at the Baltic Sea Festival the same season and the Bamberg Symphony re-invited him to come back for four concerts with his compatriot Pietari Inkinen in November 2007.
Highlights of the season 2009/2010, for instance, were concerts with the WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln under Semyon Bychkov and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra.
In October 2009 Antti Siirala gave his celebrated debut with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra under Osmo VÀnskÀ and was re-invited immediately.
In April 2010 he performed as one of four pianists (next to Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Lang Lang and Martin Helmchen) in the piano series of the Berliner Philharmoniker.
In August 2010 Antti Siirala played with the Mostly Mozart Orchestra under Osmo VÀnskÀ at Lincoln Center New York.
Antti Siirala's debut with the Philharmonia Orchestra under Salonen at the sold out 2010/11 opening concert of the Konzerthaus Dortmund was a great success and was celebrated by the audience with standing ovations.
Petersburger Symphoniker, Estonian National Symphony, Detroit Symphony, New Jersey Symphony, Singapore Symphony Orchestra, Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra, Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra, New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra as well as with the orchestras of Melbourne and Queensland.
Major milestones on his steadily rising path of success were his recitals at the Lucerne Festival, Klavier-Festival Ruhr, Heidelberger FrĂŒhling, Schumannfest DĂŒsseldorf, EuropĂ€ische Wochen Passau and at the Festivals of Bolzano, Bath and Kilkenny, Moritzburg as well as at the Cologne Philharmonie, Konzerthaus Dortmund, in Hannover Homburg/Saar, Mainz, Leverkusen, Wuppertal, London's Wigmore Hall, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Tonhalle Zurich, Brussels, Aix-les-Bains, Porto, Milano, Imola, Detroit and at the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
For a period of 3 years Antti Siirala was one of the artists in residence of the Konzerthaus Dortmund as part of the âJunge Wildeâ series.
His debut recording of Schubert transcriptions for NAXOS received excellent press reviews.
For his recording of works by Brahms for ONDINE, he received 6 points out of 6 in the category interpretation from the Piano News magazine.
For both recordings Siirala received the Gramophone Magazine's Editor's Choice award.
Beethoven and Brahms are at the core of Siirala's repertoire, but his interest in contemporary music has resulted in first performances of works by Walter Gieseler, Kuldar Sink, Uljas Pulkkis and the premiere of the new piano concerto by Kalevi Aho.
Kaija Saariaho's first work for piano solo, âBalladenâ, is part of his recital programme.