Sunny Li

Li Yun (Chinese: 李昀; pinyin: Li Yun), popularly known as Sunny Li, is a Chinese concert pianist. Based in London, Li studied at the Royal Academy of Music and Royal Northern College of Music prior to performing at venues around Europe.[2]


Sunny Li
李昀 (Li Yun)
Background information
Born1991 (age 2829)[1]
China
Occupation(s)Concert pianist
Websitesunnylipiano.com

Biography

In 2011, Sunny Li released a piano solo album 昀韵 (yún yùn), which included works from composers such as Frédéric Chopin, Franz Liszt and Moritz Moszkowski.[3] She performed at the Steinway-Haus in Munich, Germany with fellow pianist Assel Abilseitova the same year.[4]

In September 2014, Li founded the Migjorn Quartet, which placed third in the Hirsh Prize Chamber Music Competition.[5] In January 2017, Li played "Flight of the Bumblebee" on two pianos at the same time.[6][7] The video, posted on Facebook by Classic FM, garnered over a million views with mixed reactions from viewers.[8][9]

Awards

  • 2007 – The Third Rising Star International Piano Competition, "Gold Award"[10]
  • 2013 – Schoenfeld International Piano Competition, "Elite Award"[11]
  • 2015 – British Royal Northern College of Music Concerto Competition, Winner[12]
  • 2016 – Grand Prize Virtuoso International Music Competition, Second place[13]
  • 56th Grotrain-Steinweg Schumann International Competition, Winner[14]
  • 59th French International Music Festival, France, French Nice Festival Solo Awards[15]
gollark: It's actually ported from someone's Haskell implementation but several times faster, so you could just have NFTized output from that anyway.
gollark: I'm sure people will definitely use my fractal art program, random esolangs, deliberately inefficient matrix multiplier program, slow full text search thing, and length terminated strings for evil.
gollark: Perhaps if I had something actually useful (and userfacing) I'd not do that, but meh.
gollark: My projects are all under MIT because I want people to be able to use and adapt them easily.
gollark: Since if you care about obeying copyright law, and are using it for anything other than personal projects you're not likely to share, you can't safely use it or you might randomly be denied access (again, if this is actually enforceable).

References

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