Konstantin Scherbakov is among the most ubiquitous and often-recorded pianists before the public today. The range of his repertory is vast and demanding, both technically and interpretively: he has recorded the complete solo piano outputs of
Godowsky,
Shostakovich, and
Respighi; the complete piano/orchestral works of
Medtner,
Respighi, and
Scriabin; and he is involved in other large projects including the complete
Liszt piano transcriptions of the
Beethoven symphonies. His repertory also includes such disparate composers as
Domenico Scarlatti, Liapunov, and
Franck.
Scherbakov has made numerous recordings since 1992, mostly for the Naxos label.
Scherbakov was born in the Siberian city of Barnaul in 1963. He was a child prodigy, first playing the piano at five and then making his debut with an orchestra at 11 in a performance of the
Beethoven First Piano Concerto. He later moved to Moscow for studies at the
Tchaikovsky Conservatory where he was mentored by his chief teacher there, Lev Naumov.
Scherbakov won the 1983 (first)
Rachmaninov Competition and followed that victory with a string of others in Europe. He steadily built his career in the former Soviet Union, then made his first important appearance abroad at the 1990 Asolo (Italy) Chamber Music Festival, where he gave four recitals covering the complete solo piano output of
Rachmaninov.
In 1992 he and his family relocated to Switzerland and thereafter his career had a rather meteoric rise. EMI introduced
Scherbakov via its Debut Series in a disc of
Johann Strauss II waltz paraphrases by
Reger, Tausig, Rosenthal,
Cziffra, and others. Naxos signed him and his first recording, the Transcendental Etudes by Liapunov, was released in 1994 on that label's sister enterprise Marco Polo.
Amid a heavy concert and recording schedule,
Scherbakov joined the faculty at the Hochschule für Musik Winterthur-Zurich in 1998. He also began regularly conducting master classes in pianism and appearing as a jury member for various prestigious piano competitions. In 2003
Scherbakov marked the 20th anniversary of his victory in the
Rachmaninov Competition by giving four recitals that once more covered the composer's complete solo output. He also appeared with several orchestras (the Russian State Philharmonic, the
Singapore Symphony, the Haifa Symphony Orchestra, and others), performing the composer's four concertos. Among
Scherbakov's later recordings is his 2006 Naxos CD of the
Shostakovich Piano Sonata No. 2 and other
Shostakovich works.