Stéphane Blet


Stéphane Blet is a French classical pianist and composer.

Biography

Born in Paris, Blet is a disciple of the great American pianist Byron Janis who discovered an exceptional talent in him and invited him to New York. He was also a young assistant of Vladimir Horowitz. In 1986, he began an international concert career.
His recitals at the salle Gaveau and at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées earned him the success of the public, as during his "Franz Liszt marathon" in February 1987 where he was applauded more than thirty minutes, which made the music critic Pierre Petit say: "Stéphane Blet is more than just piano, it's the music itself."
At the age of fifteen, he recorded his first album, exclusively devoted to Franz Liszt. He has also been a concert performer since the age of fifteen.
One year later he signed with Philips Classics, for whom he recorded two new CDs, still dedicated to the Hungarian composer, including the Piano Sonata in B minor, selection of the meilleurs CD Diapason 1989, who led André Boucourechliev to write: "From his body to body with the work is born a superb architecture, chanted in turn by majesty and the most intense lyricism. And what a sound! We appreciate the true musician and his wonderful understanding of the work... we forget everything to devote ourselves to emotion... it is the state of grace!". As for Carlo Maria Giulini, he emphasized "an amazing technique and the most beautiful piano sound".
It was then the beginning of a large discography of about forty CDs for different labels.
At the same time, Stéphane Blet has composed more than 300 works for piano, violin, orchestra, human voice, published by the Alphonse Leduc publishing house, Lemoine, Combre, Zurfluh, Durand-Eschig, Lafitan, Fertile plaine, Soldano, performed and recorded by pianists such as Cyprien Katsaris, Alexandre Paley, İdil Biret, Evelina Borbei, Natalia Sitolenko, Jean Muller.
In 1993, he created the event by transcribing the monumental Liszt's
Faust Symphony, which earned him several awards, including one from the Franz Liszt Association. He also composed a large cycle of Turkish and Ottoman Rhapsodies and was decorated in 1996 by the Turkish government for this work.
Blet participated to the jury of the École normale de musique de Paris, before being appointed a professor in 2001. He also chaired a large number of international competitions, including the Istanbul International Piano Competition, which he created in 2013.
He is also the author of about fifteen musicological works about the works of Frédéric Chopin, Erik Satie, Franz Liszt, and Robert Schumann, ainsi que d'une méthode de piano, Le Voyage Magique published at éditions Leduc.
For twenty-five years Blet was vice-president of the and created the "Grand Orphée d'Or Leyla Gencer" prize in 2010, in homage to the great Turkish singer.
In 2017, relève qu'il est proche d'Alain Soral et "l’un des conférenciers engagés dans la Masonic conspiracy theories denonciation". In one month, his lecture was viewed 77,000 times on YouTube in August alone. Stéphane Blet did another "repentant" interview viewed over 260,000 times. He makes an appearance in La France maçonnique, a film directed by and Julien Teil, with Dieudonné, Jean-Yves Le Gallou, and Pierre Hillard.

Selected discography

As pianist

Transcriptions:
Cadences:
Éditions de travail et Révisions de Stéphane Blet :
;Essays on occultism:
;Essays on music: