BIOGRAPHY

International
audiences and critics alike have consistently recognized the fiery intensity
that Eduardo Delgado projects from the stage. "Virtuosity, clean
sound, and passion. The best" (La Capital – Argentina). This is the
latest international acclaim for Delgado from a November performance both as a
soloist and with Martha Argerich at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires. Together
they played what critics hailed as an "unforgettable" version for two
pianos of "Tres Romances," by Carlos Guastavino.
His
repertoire from Bach to modern composers shows that music affects Delgado
deeply, emotion that he shares freely with every audience. "Music
has been my life and my passion since my first recital when I was 7,"
Delgado says.
Delgado's
appearances have spread across four continents—Europe, South America, Asia and
North America. Following an appearance in Tokyo in the Pablo Casals Hall,
critics hailed a "marvelous performance, deeply emotional as well as lyrical”
(Musica Nova – Tokyo). Norwegian
critics described Delgado as "a pianist of a thousand nuances, a fantastic
experience.” In Russia,
“Delgado’s Bach had brilliance, a profound meditation and a musical tone rarely
heard” (Sovietskaya Kultura – Moscow).
Born in
Rosario, Argentina, Eduardo Delgado began his early training with his mother, Amelia, followed
by studies with Arminda Canteros in Rosario, and then continued with Sergio
Lorenzi in Venice, Vicente Scaramuzza in Buenos Aires, Dora Zaslavsky of the
Manhattan School of Music and Rosina Lhevinne of the Juilliard School. His many
awards and prizes include the Vladimir Horowitz Award, and grants from the
Mozarteum Argentino, Martha Baird Rockefeller, and the Concert Artists Guild.
Delgado
has participated on such international competition juries as the William
Kapell, the Gina Bachauer, and the Vega in Japan. In 2003, he served as a
juror in the 2nd Martha Argerich International Piano Competition in
Buenos Aires. He has been on artist faculties of several universities in Japan
as well as in California, and is in demand for piano master classes and
workshops, such as his master class series in Osaka in June 2004. He is on the
faculty at California State University, in Fullerton, where he
has established a scholarship fund for talented pianists as a tribute to the
renowned pianist Alicia de Larrocha. To help endow the scholarship, in
1998 he performed an inaugural recital with Madame de Larrocha at the Richard
Nixon Library in Yorba Linda, CA. Delgado is also the pianist of the Premiere
Trio of Cal State Fullerton.
Delgado
has recorded with tenor Jose Cura for ERATO Records and also the complete solo
piano music of Alberto Ginastera in two volumes for MA Records in
Tokyo. He recently recorded
a CD in Buenos Aires of romantic works of Schumann, Chopin and
Mendelssohn. In July, 1997,
Martha Argerich presented Delgado at the Verbier Festival in Switzerland, at
her festival in Lugano in 2002, and at the Argerich Festival in Buenos Aires in
2001 and 2003. Delgado will spend
summer 2004 giving concerts and recitals across Argentina.
In 1999
Delgado was awarded a medal by UNESCO of Buenos Aires, and also by the Mayor of
Rosario, Delgado's hometown, for his contribution as an ambassador of
music. In 2003, he received
the Magazine Award in Rosario.
Delgado founded the Castle
Green Historic & Cultural Society in Pasadena, California, where he
resides.