Jean Fassina (born 9 November 1936) is a French classical pianist born in Algiers.
A concert artist and direct heir to the great Paderewski piano tradition, Fassina is a renowned teacher who counts among his students a host of French and international artists.[livre 1]
Coming from a line of pianists, (his grandmother was a pianist and composer, his mother performed in concert and was his first teacher), he trained at a very young age at the Conservatoire de Paris. After winning his prizes there, Fassina felt the desire to go and study in Eastern European countries, where the results of the teaching given there worked wonders in international competitions: "When not one but twenty pianists dazzle you, there is something obvious about it".
He obtained a scholarship that allowed him to study in Poland. He completed his training as a pianist in Kraków, the high place of the Polish piano school, under the benevolent guidance of Henryk Sztompka, himself a former student of Paderewski and worthy heir of an instrumental and stylistic tradition going back to Chopin and Liszt.
In the first lesson, Sztompka told him "You are a musician, but you have to do everything over again...". Thus began four years of intensive work which Fassina himself describes as "the most extraordinary of his life".
After a short and intense concert career from 1961 to 1975, he devoted himself to what he considered his true vocation: teaching the piano. In about ten years, he trained a good number of artists and teachers of all nationalities, to whom he passed on the knowledge he received in Poland.
After forty years of teaching, Jean Fassina published a book (Lettre ÃÂ un jeune pianiste Fayard) in which he shares his pianistic knowledge and his pedagogical experience.
Fassina teaches in many countries in Europe and Asia:
More than a hundred internationally known musicians have been students of Fassina such as:
Fassina is the permanent guest of prestigious master classes:
He also sits on the jury of numerous international competitions: