Mack McCray, born in California in 1943,
studied at The Juilliard School in New York with Irwin
Freundlich from 1963 to 1971. In the single season of
1969-1970, McCray won first prizes in the San Francisco
Symphony’s International Young Artists Competition
and the Charleston Symphony Competition; Silver Medal
at the International Enesco Competition in Bucharest,
plus a special award for best performance of a contemporary
Rumanian work; second prize at the International Liszt
Competition in Boston; an Italian government citation
for his performance at the Giornate Musicale festival
in Todi, Italy; grants from the Martha Baird Rockefeller
Foundation and the Institute for International Education:
and Juilliard’s Edward Steuermann Memorial Prize.
During that same season McCray made his first tour of
Europe, including London, Vienna, Amsterdam, Hamburg,
Brussels and Zurich, among other cities.
Since that year, McCray has performed around the world,
notably at the Paris Festivale d’Automne, at Seville’s
Great Interpreters Series, with the Monte Carlo Orchestra
at the UNESCO Festival of International Artists in Monaco,
at Hong Kong’s City Hall Concert Series, at the
Bucharest Philharmonic Bach-Beethoven-Brahms Festival;
and Boston’s Fromm Foundation Concerts at Harvard.
In 1972 McCray founded an international chamber music
festival in Trogen, Switzerland and for many years was concert
accompanist for the Metropolitan Opera soprano Teresa
Stratas. His recording of John Adams’ piano work
Phrygian Gates (New Albion Records) was placed on the
Best Recordings of the Year (1981) lists of both
the New York Times and High-Fidelity-Musical America.
McCray has performed with such conductors as Michael
Tilson Thomas, Edo de Waart, Josef Krips, Leon Fleisher,
Arthur Fiedler and John Adams. He has been an invited
soloist at the American Liszt Society Conference in Eugene,
Oregon, the New Orleans International Piano Festival,
Atlanta Festival of the Arts and the Honolulu Academy
of Art’s “Sounds of Our Time” Festival.
In 1991 he gave the American premiere of John Adams’ new
work for piano and orchestra, Eros Piano at the Cabrillo
Music Festival. Recently McCray performed with the Japan
Philharmonic in Tokyo, on the all-Schubert series at
famed Trinity Church in Manhattan, at the Carmel Bach
Festival, and at the Los Angeles County Art Museum, as
well as in Alaska and across the United States. He currently
is artistic director of the Zephyr International Chamber
Music Festival in Courmayeur, Italy. Since 1971 he has
been on the faculty of the San Francisco Conservatory
of Music.