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Musician | Artist | Clarinetist

"...a very talented musician with a brilliant technique..."                                

Guy Deplus (international soloist and former professor at the Conservatoire de Paris)

"...wonderful musical personality…”

Gervase de Peyer (international soloist and conductor)

(During the 2004 International Clarinet Competition Madeira-Music in Portugal)

"...he proved to be an extremely gifted musician, showing natural interpretative abilities..."

Thomas Zehetmair (Conductor of the Paris Chamber Orchestra and Austrian violinist) 

"...I was struck by the qualities of this young instrumentalist.

From beginning to end he made an attractive, vivid and colorful interpretation. He knows how to direct a musical phrase, make nuances and keep the audience interested.

I have rarely met a musician of his age with this musical ability, the balance and the flexibility in his playing. I predict a beautiful future for him..."

Jean-Sébastien Béreau (Conductor, former professor at the Conservatoire de Paris) 

NEWS

Mr. Pavtchinskii was appointed Principal Clarinet with the newly founded private Sun Symphony Orchestra, functioning under the umbrella of the prestigious Sun Group, Vietnam.

 

In 2024, Mr. Pavtchinskii premiered a new double concerto composed by the Portuguese composer Francisco Loreto together with the Madeira Classical Orchestra.

Mr. Pavtchinskii was awarded the Madeira (Portugal) Government’s Grant of Artistic Merit in 2025.

 

Hanoi’s Westlake Opera House, a new cultural landmark designed by architect Renzo Piano and named Isola della Musica (Island of Music), breaks ground on the Quang An Peninsula by Đầm Trị Lake, Hanoi - Vietnam. Scheduled for completion in 2027, the complex features a 2,000-seat opera house and a themed cultural and art park.

 

The architectural and structural design of the Hanoi Westlake Opera House is rooted in the principle of expressing the building’s interior program through its external form, much like natural double-layered structures. After exploring several geometric models, from soap bubble shells to two-dimensional catenary envelopes, the team developed a three-dimensional catenary surface as the defining geometry of the project.

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