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Press Releases
Naumburg Foundation Celebrates 100 Years
THE WALTER W. NAUMBURG FOUNDATION
MARKS 100 YEARS WITH A STAR-STUDDED CENTENNIAL GALA
The World’s Oldest Music Competition Celebrates a Century of Shaping Great Artists
With a Gala Concert on Sunday, May 17, 2026, 3pm, Rose Theater, Jazz at Lincoln Center
MORE THAN 20 NAUMBURG WINNERS SPANNING GENERATIONS
TAKE THE STAGE
Including LEONIDAS KAVAKOS, AWADAGIN PRATT, CAROL WINCENC, FRANK HUANG,
and a Rare Reunion of the EMERSON QUARTET
Remarks by ITZHAK PERLMAN
Highlights include the WORLD PREMIERE of the FROG PRINCE OR IRON HENRY
by STEVEN MACKEY, performed by the BRENTANO STRING QUARTET
and Narrator LUCY SHELTON
New York, NY (April 10, 2026) The Walter W. Naumburg Foundation – the world’s oldest music competition that has launched generations of leading classical artists – marks its 100th anniversary with a Gala Concert on Sunday, May 17, 2026, 3pm, at the Rose Theater at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Bringing together more than 20 distinguished artists across generations, the program features Leonidas Kavakos, Awadagin Pratt, Carol Wincenc, Colin Carr, Charles Neidich, Anton Nel, Jack Gao, Frank Huang, Erin Wagner, Seth Knopp, Valentin Kovalev, Andreas Mader, Terra String Quartet, and a reunion of the Emerson String Quartet.
A highlight of the afternoon is the world premiere of Steven Mackey’s Frog Prince or Iron Henry performed by the Brentano String Quartet and Lucy Shelton. Commissioned by the Foundation, the work honors longtime Executive Director Lucy Rowan Mann, whose visionary leadership shaped Naumburg for decades. Steven Mackey said, “Naumburg President Robert Mann shared my passion for storytelling, creating fairy-tale settings with his wife, actress Lucy Rowan Mann. It is a touching tribute that their son, Nicholas Mann, asked me to honor their legacy with a new fairy tale for narrator and string quartet.”
Remarks will be given by Itzhak Perlman and Naumburg President Nicholas Mann. Nicholas Mann said “In 1926, Walter Naumburg had a dream to create an organization that supported exceptional young artists. One hundred years later, that vision continues to resonate through the extraordinary musicians whose careers began here. On May 17, we are proud to celebrate this remarkable accomplishment with more than twenty of our distinguished past winners.”
Walter W. Naumburg Foundation Gala Centennial Concert program
W.A. Mozart Sonata in C Major for Four Hands, K. 521, Allegro
Anton Nel and Jack Gao, pianos
Paul Schoenfeld Sonatina for Flute, Clarinet and Piano, Charleston
Carol Wincenc, flute; Charles Neidich, clarinet; Jack Gao, piano
Leonidas Kavakos, Work TBA
Franz Schubert Piano Trio in B-flat Major, D898
Frank Huang, violin; Colin Carr, cello; Anton Nel, piano
Steven Mackey The Frog Prince or Iron Henry, world premiere, Naumburg commission
Lucy Shelton, narrator; Brentano String Quartet
Intermission
Judd Greenstein Ballade
Awadagin Pratt, piano
Pedro Iturralde Pequena Czarda
Valentin Kovalev and Andreas Mader, saxophones; Seth Knopp, piano
Alban Berg Early Songs (selections)
Erin Wagner, mezzo-soprano; Seth Knopp, piano
Felix Mendelssohn Octet in E-flat Major, Op. 20, Allegro moderato ma con fuoco
Emerson String Quartet and Terra String Quartet
The Walter W. Naumburg Foundation celebrates an impressive landmark in American music. No competition has matched our century of discovering the next generation of artists. Our laureates are gracing the world’s great stages as soloists, Grammy winning artists, leaders of major orchestras, premier chamber ensembles, conductors, artistic directors, and teachers at conservatories throughout the world.
Among our Laureates
Pianists: Jorge Bolet (1937); William Kapell (1941); Stephen Hough (1983)
Violinists: Robert Mann (1941); Elmar Oliveira (1976); Leonidas Kavakos (1988)
Cellists: Ronald Leonard (1955); Nathaniel Rosen (1977); Colin Carr (1981); Jonathan Swensen (2024)
Vocalists: Shirley Verrett (1958); Dawn Upshaw (1985); Julia Bullock (2014)
Chamber Ensembles: American String Quartet (1974); Emerson String Quartet (1978)
Speculum Musicae (1972); Eighth Blackbird (2000)
Orchestral Leaders: Joseph Silverstein (Violin 1960); Jules Eskin (Cello 1954) Boston Symphony Orchestra
Frank Huang (Violin 2003); Lorne Munroe (Cello 1949) New York Philharmonic
Paul Olefsky (Cello 1948); Hai-Ye Ni (Cello 1990) Philadelphia Orchestra
Sidney Harth (Violin 1948) Chicago Symphony and Los Angeles Philharmonic
Commissioned Composers including more than 70 leading American composers and two Pulitzer Prize winning works: Milton Babbitt, Mario Davidovsky, John Harbison, Leon Kirchner, Donald Martino, William Schuman, Shulamit Ran, George Lewis, Joan Tower, and Frank Zappa
Board of Directors has included a century of American music luminaries: Elliott Carter, Aaron Copland, Jan DeGaetani, Leon Fleisher, Lukas Foss, Leopold Mannes, Peter Mennin, Itzhak Perlman, William Schuman, Isaac Stern, Shirley Verrett and John Corigliano
“IN ITS QUIET WAY, THE MOST PRESTIGIOUS OF THEM ALL” – The New York Times
Ticket Information
Tickets, available by going to Naumburg.org, are priced at $100, $75 and $25 for students. The Rose Theater at Jazz at Lincoln Center is located at Broadway at West 60th Street, 5th Floor, Columbus Circle.





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