Herberger Institute

piano competition

Wells Fargo


Alink-Argerich Foundation

Piano Competition
January 2013

USASU International Piano Competition
ASU Herberger Institute
School of Music

Honorary Advisory Board
Sulamita Aronovsky, UK
Jaime Ingram, Panama
Jerome Lowenthal, USA
Garrick Ohlsson, USA
Menahem Pressler, USA
Pnina Salzman, Israel (in memoriam)


Young Artist Committee

Ot Jewelers

Four Points Sheraton

The 5th Bösendorfer and Schimmel USASU International Piano Competitions

Rules & Regulations

Repertoire Requirements

The 5th Bösendorfer USUSASU International Piano Competition

Preliminary Round
Performance duration: 20–25 minutes

Semi-final Round
Performance duration: 20–25 minutes

Final Round
Performance duration: 35–40 minutes

The 5th Schimmel USASU Young Artists International Senior Piano Competition (ages 16-18)

Preliminary Round
Performance duration: 15–20 minutes

Semi-final Round
Performance duration: 15–20 minutes

Final Round
Performance duration: 25–30 minutes

The 5th Schimmel USASU Young Artists International Junior Piano Competition (ages 13-15)

Preliminary Round
Performance duration: 10–15 minutes

Semi-final Round
Performance duration: 10–15 minutes

Final Round
Performance duration: 15–20 minutes

General Information

Competition Performances

*held at the School of Music at Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, Jan. 9-15, 2011.

Entrance Procedures

Jury

Winner’s Concert and Award Ceremony

Travel and Accommodations

Selection of Pianos

Practice Facilities

Miscellaneous

Jury Policies and Procedures

A COMPETITION OF UTMOST INTEGRITY

The voting procedure being utilized in the 4th Bösendorfer & Schimmel USASU International Piano Competitions was designed by John MacBain, PhD, who is both a mathematician and musician (violinist). Involving a sophisticated computer software program that calculates results based on numerical scores, this system had been previously designed for and used successfully by the International Violin Competition of Indianapolis and later, the Cleveland International Piano Competition and the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. There are two underlying premises of the system. The first is that the opinion of a juror is contained not so much in the actual scores given, but in the distribution and spacing of the scores. This is coupled with an assumption that each juror has only a certain amount of "opinion" to contribute to the final decision, much like sending someone on a purchasing trip with a fixed budget. In order to maintain the integrity of the voting process, jury members will abstain from voting for any competitor they have taught in the past three years or will teach in the immediate future or competitors with whom they have a family relationship. Jury members may also waive their vote for personal or professional reasons. All declarations of abstentions will be made the night before the competition begins and will be maintained throughout the competition. Jury members will score each candidate on a range of 1 to 25 (except for declared abstentions). All voting will be by written ballot, without discussion. Jury members will sign their ballots with a number, picked at random and known only to the executive director, statistician and president. To balance the scores of a consistently high-scoring juror with a consistently low-scoring juror, the scores of all jurors are processed by computer software to the same statistical distribution. This scoring procedure overcomes a potential difficulty, because it eliminates the impact of any one juror's abstention. The decision of the jury is final and is not subject to challenge or review.