Our International Piano in the Elms Trail continues at Exile Group, 32-34 Ponton Road, London, SW11 7BA with pianist Angeliki Giannopoulou.
This event is FREE. No booking required.
Angeliki Giannopoulou
Angeliki Giannopoulou, who recently earned a place on the Forbes 2026 prestigious list ’30 Under 30? for her achievements within the domain of music and culture, is a Greek pianist based at London. 2025 saw Angeliki win the first prize in the Panhellenic Piano Competition and also debut at the Athens Megaron Concert ?all.
Other recent successes include the Jock Holden Mozart Prize, the Louis Carus Duo Prize with Ines Alves, the Turnbull Piano Foundation prize and the Peter Lindsay Miller Prize and winner of The Kaloy Foundation competition. Notable performances include, Beethoven 4th concerto at the Kaunas Philharmonic, a solo recital at the Thessaloniki Soloist Festival, and a solo recital at the Kalamata Music Days. She performed Chamber Music Recital at the ancient Messene theatre and at the Apple Hill festival in the US as a fellow with a full scholarship.
She has given interviews at the Greek national radio 3 with renowned host Christos Papageorgiou, as well as performing for the British Ambassador in Greece and giving a lecture recital for the students of the Athens Conservatoire. She had the chance to have masterclasses with influential classical music figures such as Stephen Hough, Steven Osbourne, Lucas Geniushas, Charles Owens, David Dolan, Roy Howat and others. Angeliki is studying at the Royal Academy of Music (Master of Piano Performance) with Ian Fountain and the support of Munster Trust. In 2024, she graduated from the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, studying with Fali Pavri and Sinae Lee.
Born in Athens, Greece, she attended the Music High School of Pallini, Athens, graduating with mention. She received her piano Artist Diploma from the Athenaeum Conservatory with Excellent and First Prize studying under the directions of the eminent Greek pianist Nelli Semitekolo, whilst also working with pianist Alexia Mouza.She is interested in harpsichord, having worked with Jan Waterfield and Grammy award winner David Watkin, in curation and research on female composers having completed her research internship with the Boulanger Initiative in Washington DC.





