An internationally respected, actively touring pianist serves as the Honens Mentor-in-Residence. Each Semifinalist who does not advance to the Finals will meet with the Mentor-in-Residence for a one-hour meeting on the days following the Semifinals. The Mentor-in-Residence also attends the Finals after which they meets with the Gold, Silver, and Bronze Laureates.
Sir Stephen Hough
Mentor
Named by The Economist as one of Twenty Living Polymaths, Sir Stephen Hough combines a distinguished career as a pianist and a longstanding international career with those of composer and writer. He was the first classical performer to be given a MacArthur Fellowship. In 2022, as part of the Queen’s Birthday Honours, Hough became the first British-born pianist since 1977 to be awarded a Knighthood for Services to Music.
In a career spanning 40 years, Hough has played solo recitals and concertos with leading orchestras at major concert halls and festivals across five continents. Celebrating Rachmaninov’s 150th anniversary in 2023, he performed the composer’s five works for piano and orchestra, including his 30th appearance at the BBC Proms performing the first piano concerto with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra and a complete cycle in Brazil as the Artist-in-Residence of Orquestra Sinfônica do Estado de São Paulo. Additional recent and upcoming engagements include return appearances with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Amsterdam), Orchestre National de France, London Philharmonic, Vienna Symphony, Finnish Radio, and the Seoul Philharmonic, as well as the National Symphony at the Kennedy Center, the New York Philharmonic and the Minnesota Orchestra, and the St. Louis, Cincinnati, Detroit, Dallas and Houston symphonies.
2024 sees the premiere of Hough’s own piano concerto, entitled The World of Yesterday, inspired by Stefan Zweig’s titular novel Die Welt von Gestern. Jointly commissioned by four orchestras, the concerto received its world premiere in Salt Lake City in January 2024 with Mr. Hough as the soloist performing with the Utah Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Donald Runnicles. The European premiere takes place at Bridgewater Hall in Manchester in May 2024 with The Hallé under Sir Mark Elder.
As a solo recitalist, Hough opens Wigmore Hall’s 2023 / 2024 season in London, as well as in cities including Beijing, Mexico City, San Francisco, New York, Seoul, and Shanghai. In March 2024, Hough and the Castalian String Quartet embark on a six-city US tour, including New York and Washington, D.C., performing the Brahms Piano Quintet and Hough’s own String Quartet No. 1, “Les Six Rencontres”.
Hough’s extensive discography of around 70 CDs has garnered international awards including the Diapason d’Or de l’Année, several Grammy nominations, and eight Gramophone Awards including Record of the Year and the Gold Disc. Recent releases for Hyperion, now available to stream, include Beethoven’s complete piano concertos (Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra / Hannu Lintu), Brahms: The Final Piano Pieces, Chopin’s complete Nocturnes, a Schumann recital, Schubert Piano Sonatas, and Mompou’s Música callada. For Warner Classics, Hough recorded Elgar’s Violin Sonata with Renaud Capuçon and an album of his choral music was released in 2023 on Orchid Records.
As a composer, Hough has written extensively for the voice and the piano. His most recent song cycle, Songs of Love and Loss, co-commissioned by Wigmore Hall, the 92nd Street Y (New York), and Tippet Rise (Montana), received its world premiere in January 2023. He wrote the commissioned work for the 2022 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, which was performed by all 30 competitors and Hough’s String Quartet No. 1, “Les Six Rencontres”, commissioned and premiered by the Takács Quartet, was released by Hyperion Records in January 2023. Hough has also been commissioned by Musée du Louvre, London’s National Gallery, Westminster Abbey, Westminster Cathedral, the Genesis Foundation, Gilmore International Keyboard Festival, the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation, Orquesta Sinfónica de Euskadi, and the Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet. His music is published by Josef Weinberger Ltd.
A noted writer, he has contributed articles for The New York Times, the Guardian, The Times, Gramophone, and BBC Music Magazine, and he wrote a blog for The Telegraph for seven years which became one of the most popular and influential forums for cultural discussion, and for which he wrote over six hundred articles. He has published four books: The Bible as Prayer (Bloomsbury and Paulist Press, 2007); a novel: The Final Retreat (Sylph Editions, 2018); a book of essays: Rough Ideas: Reflections on Music and More (Faber & Faber and Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2019); and a memoir: Enough: Scenes from Childhood (Faber & Faber, 2023).
Hough resides in London where he is an Honorary Fellow of Cambridge University’s Girton College and holds the International Chair of Piano Studies at his alma mater, the Royal Northern College in Manchester. He is also a member of the faculty at The Juilliard School.