Mari Kawamura


Biography Mari Kawamura



Mari Kawamura
is a concert pianist whose curiosity has taken her in a variety of directions ranging from improvisation and dance to biology and physics. Kawamura is drawn to music which utilizes the entirety of the piano as an expressive device. She is as equally fascinated by works which showcase the tremendous agility of the instrument, as by compositions that explore its ability to produce cavernous resonances, complex spectral sounds and unpitched noise.

Her repertoire includes music by William Byrd, Scriabin, Xenakis, and Japanese composers such as Toru Takemitsu and Michio Mamiya. Kawamura has also collaborated with a number of living composers, premiering new works by Joseph Bourdeau, Annie Hui-Hsin Hsieh, Lil Lacy, and Anthony Vine among many others.

Kawamura has presented solo recitals on concert series hosted by Carnegie Mellon University, University of Northern Colorado, MONK Space in Los Angeles, and Center for New Music in San Francisco. She has appeared in major festivals, such as Tanglewood Music Center, Spoleto Festival USA, Darmstadt International Summer Course, and SICPP in Boston, at which her 2013 performance of Xenakis’ Dikthas was described as "an unrelenting volcanic eruption'' by NEWMUSICBOX.

In 2019, Kawamura was featured on Jeffrey Holmes’ album, “May the Bridges I Burn Light My Way”, and in Fall 2020, she toured Denmark with Anna Jalving and Morten Lohmann Soenders, to premiere Lil Lacy’s piano trio, “Plant Native”.

Kawamura received her Bachelor’s degree from Aichi Prefectural University of Fine Arts and Music, where she studied with Emiko Kumagai and Vadim Sakharov. She went on to win the Winfred Christie Award scholarship to study at London’s Royal Academy of Music, where she earned her Master’s Degree under Tatiana Sarkissova, and was awarded a prestigious DipRAM prize for her outstanding final recital.

After studying with Stephen Drury at the New England Conservatory, Kawamura is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of California, San Diego where she studies with Aleck Karis. Her research deals with ma, an ancient Japanese concept concerning space and time, and is focused on identifying ma-like structures in music outside of Japan's sphere of influence with the goal of demonstrating that the concept of “charged stillness” is a widespread global phenomenon.

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