Artist's albums
The Gulda Touch, Vol. 2
2023 · album
The Gulda Touch, Vol. 1
2023 · album
A Piano Story Vol. 2 - Friedrich Gulda
2023 · album
A Piano Story - Friedrich Gulda
2023 · compilation
Legendary Pianists - Famous Piano Concertos
2023 · compilation
Remembering Friedrich Gulda
2023 · compilation
It's up to You (Live)
2022 · album
All That Jazz, Vol. 145: From Vienna to Birdland
2022 · album
Beethoven & Haydn: Piano Works (Live)
2022 · album
Gulda plays Mozart
2022 · compilation
Beethoven: The Cello Sonatas and Variations
2021 · album
Tribute to Gulda
2021 · album
Aria
2021 · single
Prelude & Fugue
2021 · single
Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas
2021 · album
Friedrich Gulda - Legacy
2021 · compilation
Friedrich Gulda - Legendary Recordings
2021 · compilation
Chopin & Beethoven: Piano Works
2021 · album
Gulda - Cello Concerto Live
2021 · EP
Gulda: Works (Live)
2021 · album
The Art of Friedrich Gulda
2020 · compilation
Symphonies from Beethoven, Chopin & Debussy
2020 · album
Beethoven 250 Piano Sonatas Nos. 14,26 and 29
2020 · album
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Biography
Classical and jazz pianist and composer, Friedrich Gulda was one of Austria's premiere pianists. Born in Vienna in 1930, Gulda started piano lessons at the age of seven. When he was 12, he enrolled in the Vienna Music Academy, and four years later received first place in the Geneva International Music Festival. In 1949, Gulda toured Europe and South America, earning international acclaim for his treatments of Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven, and the following year he successfully debuted at Carnegie Hall. Gulda became more involved in jazz from 1951 on, when he improvised with Dizzy Gillespie following a performance with the Chicago Symphony. Five years later, Gulda played his first American jazz concert at Birdland (N.Y.C.), followed by a performance at the Newport Jazz Festival. After this, Gulda formed the Eurojazz Orchestra, a jazz combo and big band which drew from both jazz and classical compositions. In 1966, ten years after his Birdland appearance, Gulda organized a modern jazz competition in his native city. He was awarded the Vienna Academy's Beethoven Ring in 1970, but later returned it to protest what he regarded as a constricting educational system. This only reinforced the public's perception of Gulda as an eccentric. This reputation was not helped when he abruptly called off major performances more than once. A 1988 incident occurred in reaction to objections to his program for a Salzburg music festival that included jazz musician Joe Zawinul; he made another last minute cancellation by faking his own death with a phony obituary only days before a scheduled performance of Mozart. On January 27, 2000, Friedrich Gulda died of an apparent heart attack in Vienna, the city of his birth. ~ Joslyn Layne, Rovi