Home » Member Competitions » BBC Young Musician of the Year

BBC Young Musician of the Year

Next competition:
16.05.2010 (finals)
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Next deadline: 31.07.2009
Categories for the next competition: violin, viola, cello, double bass, piano, harpsichord, organ, recorder, flute, oboe, clarinet, saxophone, bassoon, harmonica, french horn, E-flat horn, trumpet, cornet, euphonium, trombone, tuba, piano accordion, button accordion, guitar, mandolin, harp, percussion

City: Cardiff (United Kingdom)
Age range: 1-18
Structure: Five stages, from regional rounds to televised, concerto final
Cycle: every two years
Categories: violin, viola, cello, double bass, piano, harpsichord, organ, recorder, flute, oboe, clarinet, saxophone, bassoon, harmonica, french horn, E-flat horn, trumpet, cornet, euphonium, trombone, tuba, piano accordion, button accordion, guitar, mandolin, harp, percussion
Organiser: BBC
Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Website: http://www.bbc.co.uk/youngmusician

Rules: Full information is available on the BBC’s website at www.bbc.co.uk/youngmusician

Prizes: For winning their respective Category Final, each of the five Grand Finalists receive £2,000. In addition, each Grand Finalist wins the opportunity to give a lunchtime recital at Wigmore Hall as a result of support from the Tabor Foundation.

The overall winner carries away the title of BBC Young Musician of the Year plus a Travel Award to promote his/her studies.

The Walter Todds Bursary
In memory of the late Walter Todds, founder of BBC Young Musician of the Year, a total bursary of £1,000 will be allocated at the discretion of the BBC to the performer or performers who do not reach the Grand Final but who show great promise.

The Tabor Award for Promising Talent
An award of £2,000 to one competitor will be made at the discretion of the BBC in order to help with the costs of special tuition. It is the hope of the Tabor Foundation that this award will enable the competitor to achieve his/her potential.

Eurovision Young Musician
BBC Young Musician of the Year has, in previous years, sent a representative to the Eurovision Young Musician competition, another member of EMCY.

Application:
The application form is available on the BBC’s website at www.bbc.co.uk/youngmusician

Background: The concept was simple: Young, British and outrageously talented. BBC producers Humphrey Burton and Walter Todds conceived the Young Musician of the Year competition as a response to the lack of home-grown finalists in the Leeds Piano Competition of 1975. Thirty years later, the competition has become a national institution.

The first programme was broadcast in 1978 and since then thousands of young people from all over Great Britain have entered the competition. There is no lower age limit for entering, but competitors must have achieved a Grade 8 in their instrument and be under 18 when they apply.

Each competitor must impress a panel of judges in regional heats, before going head to head with other players in the same category. The winners in each of the instrument categories perform in the grand final with a full symphony orchestra - for many musicians the first opportunity they have had to do so. In 1994 the percussion section was introduced to the competition for the first time, meaning that all parts of the orchestra were now represented. Although the decision to bring in a percussion category was seen at the time to be controversial, it has become an established part of the competition, with Adrian Spillett winning the overall title in 1998.

Through the years the competition has featured some of Britain's best-loved classical performers, introducing young musicians to the world stage and creating massive media attention. Emma Johnson, Natalie Clein and Nicola Benedetti are all previous winners who have gone on to have extremely successful performing and recording careers, and the list of top names that entered but didn't take the top prize is testament to the outstanding quality of this competition: Paul Watkins, Tasmin Little, Thomas Ades, Michael Collins, Stephen Hough... the list goes on. Eleven year old Benjamin Grosvenor's astonishing performance in the 2004 grand final earned him a four-year development deal with EMI records.

Last updated: 16.11.2009

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Junior group – under 17 years of age

1st prize – the Golden Violin – 7000 PLN

2nd prize – the Silver Violin – 5000 PLN

3rd prize – the Bronze Violin – 4000 PLN

4th prize – the Bronze Violin – 2000 PLN

5th prize – the Bronze Violin – 1000 PLN

 

Senior group – from 17 to 25 years of age

1st prize – the Golden Violin – 10000 PLN

2nd prize – the Silver Violin – 7000 PLN

3rd prize – the Bronze Violin – 4000 PLN

4th prize – the Bronze Violin – 3000 PLN

5th prize – the Bronze Violin – 2000 PLN

 

Apart from the prizes stipulated in the regulations, private persons and institutions may award other prizes.