Jean-Baptiste Doulcet


Biography Jean-Baptiste Doulcet

Jean-Baptiste Doulcet

Jean-Baptiste Doulcet
Born in 1992 in Paris, Jean-Baptiste Doulcet is a pianist, improviser and composer.

He won in 2019 the 4th prize and the audience prize of the Long-Thibaud competition (presided by Martha Argerich), and the Modern Times' prize in Clara Haskil 2019 (pres. Christian Zacharias). He is also laureate of the 2nd prize of the 8th Piano Nordic Competition and laureate of the Charles Oulmont's foundation.

Considered as one of the rising stars of french piano alongside Alexandre Kantorow and Rémi Geniet (Classica Magazine), he released his first CD (from a live concert) on Beethoven, Schumann and his own improvisations on audience's themes (Les Spiriades, 2017). His second album (Schumann and Liszt), has been released in 2022 with the label Mirare.

We heard him these last years in France (Paris Philharmony, Pleyel, Gaveau, Cortot, La Folle Journée, La Roque d'Anthéron, Nohant, Lisztomania...), in Denmark, United States, China, Italy, Germany... Known for his musical personality as much as a soloist than a chamber music partner (he played alongside the Oistrakh String Quartet, Augustin Dumay, Marc Coppey, Quatuor Hermès, Quatuor Arod...), but also for his improvisation concerts, Jean-Baptiste is a complete artist.

After studying in Paris Conservatory (CNSMdp) with Claire Désert (piano and chamber music), Thierry Escaich and Jean-François Zygel (improvisation), he has worked with great names of piano pedagogy : Julia Mustonen-Dahlkvist who follows and works with him since two years, Dmitri Bashkirov, Hortense Cartier-Bresson, Epifanio Comis, Alexey Lebedev...

As a composer, he wrote more than twenty works for soloist instruments, chamber music or larger ensemble. The Gewandhaus commissioned him a second string quartet, premiered in 2018 in Leipzig ; his Piano Trio has been played in Paris' Le Petit Palais, and artists as Raphaël Pidoux from the Trio Wanderer, or Mona Quartet, are playing his works.

His Trilogy of passion for 12 cellos - from Goethe's poems - is edited and printed at Alfonce Productions.

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