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Pianist Rossitza Banova: I believe in the wonderful future of Bulgaria

Photo: rossitzabanova.online

A talented pianist and renowned piano teacher, Rossitza Banova has been teaching in the USA and Asia for almost three decades. She has performed in Austria, Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Spain, France, Greece, Russia, China, Vietnam and Thailand, and New York's Carnegie Hall is just one of the dozens of American halls where she has been applauded. 

Born in Sofia into the family of the distinguished poet, writer, playwright and translator Bancho Banov and the prima ballerina Rossitza Banova, at the age of 9 she won her first prizes in competitions. At the National Academy of Music "Prof. Pancho Vladigerov", Rossitza was in the class of the great Bulgarian pianist and teacher Anton Dikov for two years. In 1997, she left for San Francisco, where she was accepted to the Conservatory with a full scholarship and was a student of Professor Paul Hersh, and also worked with the distinguished pianist Mack McCray. 

Rossitza Banova received her master's and doctorate degrees at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music under the guidance of professors Evelyne Brancart and Emil Naumov. 

Rossitza Banova in Las Vegas (2009)
"Indiana is still one of perhaps the top ten music schools in America," says Rossitza, and continues: "Professor Evelyne Brancart is a Belgian, with a Queen Elizabeth Award (Concours musical international Reine Élisabeth). A very talented pianist and teacher who completely redesigned my technique. After her, I worked with the incredible professor Emil Naumov, to whom I owe a lot. He is such a great professional, but most importantly, he is very supportive of his students...".


Rossitza Banova remained in Indiana as a piano teacher at the Jacobs School of Music. In 2012, she went to China to teach at Ludong University in Yantai. She then worked at Universitat Pelita Harapan in Lippo Karawaci in Indonesia, where she headed the piano accompaniment department. From 2014 to 2023, Banova was the head of the piano department at Sultan Qaboos University in Muscat, Oman, and from the summer of 2023 to the present, she has been teaching piano, music theory, and chamber music at Wycombe Abbey International School in the Chinese city of Nanjing. Banova told Radio Bulgaria about her extremely successful pedagogical work:


"I have taught all ages - from 4-year-olds to students completing their bachelor's degree. I am currently working in a British school in China, where students range from first to 12th grade, and I mainly teach from seventh to 12th grade. I try to teach my students to be individuals, to think positively, and to develop the best of themselves. Those who are now in 12th grade, I try to prepare them for admission to universities or colleges around the world. This year I have four students who were accepted in Europe and America. But most importantly, I try to be diverse as a teacher - t improve their technique and musicality, to teach them a large repertoire. For me, teaching is a passion. I love teaching!"


How does she cope with the system in China: the way of life, the strict requirements, the observance of rules?

"This is the only thing that is difficult for me and makes me want to go back either to the Arab world or to America. The requirements in China are very strict. The school I work at now is British, yet it has a Chinese principal. You have to be at work from eight in the morning until six in the evening. If you arrive at, say, eight-thirty for several days in a row, you get fired without any warning at all. Many of my colleagues were fired from one day to the next. Or if you don't do your job properly, because every room has a camera and the principals (without you knowing when they are watching you) look at that camera and see if you are teaching a lesson, or if you are reading something on your phone, for example. As soon as they see this, maybe they give you a warning, I'm not sure... The situation is very strict".


Rossitza says that life in China is extremely peaceful because there are serious sanctions against crime. Theft, for example, is a completely unknown phenomenon there. However, she would not want to stay in Asia, she would prefer to return to America, where her home is. She returns to Bulgaria every summer. She sees it very changed - "in a very good and not so good way". But this is the homeland where she would like to live, and her little daughter loves Bulgaria very much. 


Two tragic events marked her life. At the age of 16, she lost her father, at 35 – her husband. When asked how she overcomes losses, Rossitza calmly answers: "I can't say that I have overcome them, I haven't overcome them. My father is always with me, I still dream of him at least once a week... There was simply nothing to do about my husband. He was diagnosed with incurable cancer and was gone in two months. My reaction to this was to leave America. That's why I started teaching around the world, because I couldn't stay in the house where we had lived – with all the memories. And I didn't want to sell it, it was our home. Then I got my first job in China – in 2012, and since then I still haven't found the strength to go back home. But ... life must go on."

Rossitza Banova's next concert will be in January 2026 in Thailand. She hopes to soon play on her native Bulgarian stage. She dreams only of health and believes - true love exists: "Love is not always for a person. Love is for art, love for life, love for what happens to you. I believe in love and I believe that good things can happen". 

And what does she think of Bulgaria?

"Only the best. And I wish everyone to be alive and healthy, for people to be kinder. Because sometimes I meet people who are very nervous, rude on the streets. This is something that repels me from Bulgaria. Otherwise, the talent of all Bulgarians... most people are good, but I just want people to be calmer, which I know is difficult with the situation in Bulgaria right now. But I believe in a wonderful future for Bulgaria, the more time passes. And I hope to return here one day..."




Photos: rossitzabanova.online, YouTube /Rossitza Banova 


English publication: R. Petkova


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