Eve-Melody Salom
France, Dijon Bourgogne-Franche-Comté Piano
Biography
Eve-Melody began her musical and dance studies at the Conservatoire de Dijon before entering the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris in 2015 in the piano class of Denis Pascal. She obtained her Master's degree in 2020. Passionate about chamber music, she joined Claire Désert's class at the CNSMDP in 2019 as well as Pierre- Henri Xuereb's viola class the same year. She multiplies her pianistic experiences while pursuing in parallel her Concert Pianist training at the CRR of Paris in the class of David Saudubray.
Winner of several international competitions, in 2020 she won the Yamaha Music Foundation of Europe piano competition. In 2019, she received the Chantal Jacquet Prize awarded to a deserving student in the Master of Piano course.
Eve-Melody was selected in 2018 to perform, at the French Ministry of Culture, works by Claude Debussy during the centenary of his death. The Calista duet she forms with violinist Nathan Mierdl, performed on the radio programme "Jeunes Interprètes" live on France Musique that same year.
Invited to participate in the Paris contemporary music weekends in 2016 and 2017, she met composers Betsy Jolas and Régis Campo.
She regularly shares her passion for music at festivals such as Les Raveliades, Bélaye, Fontaine-Lès-Dijon, Sceaux. Although a confirmed soloist, Eve-Melody is also a passionate chamber musician on piano and viola, and is particularly attentive to shared musical experiences within a group.
She appreciates the teaching and advice of the greatest musicians by participating in various masterclasses.
Selected in 2017 and 2018 to participate in the Ravel Academy, she received the Rotary-Lions Service Club Award of Saint-Jean-de Luz giving her the opportunity to perform at the Ravel Festival as well as the Young Talent Award of the Orangerie de Sceaux Festival.
Since 2016, Eve-Melody has been supported by the Tarrazi Funds, the Meyer Foundation, the Société Générale Musical Patronage as well as the Williamson Foundation.