Aptly described as a rare combination of silk and sinew, Korean-American pianist
SEUNG-UN HA is equally praised for the uncommon grace, crystalline tone and singing legato she brings to
Mozart, and the power and passion she brings to Rachmaninoff and Tchaikovsky. Her international career includes engagements
with the Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, Quebec, San Diego, Baltimore, Utah, Phoenix, Pasadena and Pacific Symphonies and Tulsa Philharmonic;
Florida Orchestra; Germany's Bremen Philharmonic, France's Orchestre Symphonique Français, Scotland's Royal Scottish National
Orchestra, Mexico's Orquesta Sinfonica de Mineria and Mexico City Philharmonic; Buenos Aires' Orquesta de Camara Mayo and
the National Symphony of Taiwan. Festival invitations include New York's Chautauqua (Rachmaninoff #3 under Paul Nadler), "Mostly
Mozart," San Francisco's "Midsummer Mozart," Ravinia and Aspen. She made her Hollywood Bowl and Los Angeles Philharmonic debuts,
performing Beethoven’s Third Piano Concerto, Lawrence Foster conducting., and her Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra debut,
Music Director Jeffrey Kahane conducting. Other conductors with whom Ms. Ha has collaborated include Zdenek Macal, Leonard
Slatkin, Joseph Silverstein, Maximiano Valdes and George Cleve. She has also offered acclaimed recitals in Washington, D.C.,
San Francisco, Philadelphia and Detroit.
Ms. Ha began her piano studies at age three in her native Korea, giving her
first public recital two years later. At seven she placed First in Seoul’s National Youth Piano Competition; at ten
she and her family came to the United States, settling in Southern California. Her U.S. orchestral debut was at age thirteen
with the Santa Barbara Symphony; her auspicious New York orchestral debut was in Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall,
Leonard Slatkin conducting the Juilliard Orchestra. Following studies with Reginald Stewart at the Music Academy of the West
in Santa Barbara, she graduated from the Peabody Conservatory and The Juilliard School. Her teachers include Leon Fleisher,
Martin Canin and John Perry.