| Pianist MICHEL BLOCK was born of French parents in Antwerp, 
                Belgium. As a child, he moved with his parents to Mexico, where 
                his grandfather had settled in 1870. Mr. Block's father, although 
                born in Europe like his son Michel, moved to Mexico when he was 
                19, and lived until his death in that country. In one of the most famous of all piano competition incidents, 
                  Michel Block won The Arthur Rubinstein Prize in Warsaw at The 
                  1960 Frederic Chopin International Competition. Mr. Rubinstein, 
                  having been displeased with the jury's verdicts, invented the 
                  prize on the spot, and personally made the award to Mr. Block. Like most pianists, Mr. Block has appeared with the world's 
                  great orchestras and conductors in the United States and in 
                  Europe, and has made numerous recordings, many of which are 
                  now out of print. In 1978 he joined the music faculty of Indiana University in 
                  Bloomington, and ceased pursuing the pianistic career he had 
                  embarked upon as a young man. In 1996, The Pro Piano New York 
                  Recital Series was extremely honored to present Michel Block 
                  in New York for the first time in nearly fifteen years. |