
Yury Revich is an Austrian Stradivari violinist and composer, internationally celebrated for his unique artistic voice, innovation, and musical depth. A winner of the ECHO Klassik Award and the International Classical Music Award, his recording of Saint-Georges’ concertos entered the US Billboard Top 100 Classical Chart in 2021
He has performed at major venues including Carnegie Hall, the Golden Hall of Vienna Musikverein, Teatro alla Scala in Milan, Salle Pleyel in Paris, Berlin Philharmonie, BOZAR Brussels, Alte Oper Frankfurt, and Tonhalle Zurich.
He is UNICEF Austria Honorary Representative.
Violinist with a Global Stage Presence
Born into a family of violinists dating back to the 19th century, Yury began violin studies at age five and made his Carnegie Hall debut at 18 alongside Daniil Trifonov. He later performed Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto at La Scala and has appeared as a soloist with orchestras such
as La Verdi Milano, Tonkünstler-Orchester Niederösterreich, Deutsche Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and Zagreb Soloists. Yury has worked with renowned conductors including: Mikhail Pletnev, Liana Isakadze, Lionel Cottet, Duncan Ward, Johannes Schlaefli, Sebastian Weigle, Stanislav Kochanovsky, and Zhang Xian.
Composer of Classical, Cinematic, and Experimental Works
Equally distinguished as a composer, Yury creates music that spans classical, neo-classical, cinematic, and electronic genres. His compositional debut began with cadenzas as a child and evolved into large-scale works such as:
His work frequently appears in international films, art festivals, and streaming platforms. In 2021, he co-wrote music (Top 20 German charts) for Michael Schulte and YouNotUs. Yury’s recordings were featured in Netflix’s “Bridgerton”, projects by the United Nations Environment Program, UNICEF, and various film soundtracks. He scored projects for Oscar- nominee Oren Moverman, Colin Vaines, and Quentin Delcourt.
Collaborations Across Disciplines
Yury’s artistic curiosity leads him to collaborations across genres and media. His collaborators include:
Classical and neo-classical:
Martha Argerich, Daniil Trifonov, Andrea Bocelli, Paul Badura-Skoda, Sumi Jo, Steven Isserlis, Ramon Vargas and others.
Contemporary:
William Orbit, Toby Gad, Pixie Lott, Azekel, YouNotUs, Michael Schulte, Gabriel Prokofiev and others.
Theatre, dance, art and film:
Ute Lemper, Rupert Everett, Amos Gitai, Christiane Hörbiger, Cornelius Obonya, Gérard Depardieu, Sunnyi Melles, Thiago Soares, Arthur Cadre, Liudmila Konovalova, Constantin Luser, Dr. Formalyst, Arotin&Serghei and others.
Festival Nights and Multidisciplinary Vision:
In 2015, Yury founded Festival Nights, a groundbreaking, multidisciplinary cultural platform merging music with visual art, dance, theater, technology, and immersive experience. Originally launched in Vienna, Festival Nights has evolved into an international format celebrated for its
bold artistic experimentation and social commitment.
Recent highlights include:
Festival Nights supports humanitarian causes, notably raising awareness for environmental issues, children in need and Autism, including through the Dreamland series in collaboration with UNICEF Austria.
He participated as composer in the innovative project RESISTRUMENTS—a collaboration with ArtHelps, which earned a prestigious WEBBY Award.
Yury joined initiatives celebrating peace and European values such as Oslo Freedom Forum and EuropaNova.
Media & Recognition
Yury Revich’s work has been featured by Vogue, Forbes, The Times, ORF, ZDF, Puls4, Die Zeit
Magazin etc. From 2016–2022, he performed on a 1709 Stradivarius; he currently plays an Alain Carbonare custom-made instrument.
Yury studied with his father, Alexander Revich, Galina Turchaninova, Viktor Pikayzen and in Vienna Conservatory (MUK) with Pavel Vernikov.
Yury Revich is an Austrian Stradivari violinist and composer, internationally celebrated for his unique artistic voice, innovation, and musical depth. A winner of the ECHO Klassik Award and the International Classical Music Award, his recording of Saint-Georges’ concertos entered the US Billboard Top 100 Classical Chart in 2021
He has performed at major venues including Carnegie Hall, the Golden Hall of Vienna Musikverein, Teatro alla Scala in Milan, Salle Pleyel in Paris, Berlin Philharmonie, BOZAR Brussels, Alte Oper Frankfurt, and Tonhalle Zurich.
He is UNICEF Austria Honorary Representative.
Violinist with a Global Stage Presence
Born into a family of violinists dating back to the 19th century, Yury began violin studies at age five and made his Carnegie Hall debut at 18 alongside Daniil Trifonov. He later performed Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto at La Scala and has appeared as a soloist with orchestras such
as La Verdi Milano, Tonkünstler-Orchester Niederösterreich, Deutsche Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and Zagreb Soloists. Yury has worked with renowned conductors including: Mikhail Pletnev, Liana Isakadze, Lionel Cottet, Duncan Ward, Johannes Schlaefli, Sebastian Weigle, Stanislav Kochanovsky, and Zhang Xian.
Composer of Classical, Cinematic, and Experimental Works
Equally distinguished as a composer, Yury creates music that spans classical, neo-classical, cinematic, and electronic genres. His compositional debut began with cadenzas as a child and evolved into large-scale works such as:
His work frequently appears in international films, art festivals, and streaming platforms. In 2021, he co-wrote music (Top 20 German charts) for Michael Schulte and YouNotUs. Yury’s recordings were featured in Netflix’s “Bridgerton”, projects by the United Nations Environment Program, UNICEF, and various film soundtracks. He scored projects for Oscar- nominee Oren Moverman, Colin Vaines, and Quentin Delcourt.
Collaborations Across Disciplines
Yury’s artistic curiosity leads him to collaborations across genres and media. His collaborators include:
Classical and neo-classical:
Martha Argerich, Daniil Trifonov, Andrea Bocelli, Paul Badura-Skoda, Sumi Jo, Steven Isserlis, Ramon Vargas and others.
Contemporary:
William Orbit, Toby Gad, Pixie Lott, Azekel, YouNotUs, Michael Schulte, Gabriel Prokofiev and others.
Theatre, dance, art and film:
Ute Lemper, Rupert Everett, Amos Gitai, Christiane Hörbiger, Cornelius Obonya, Gérard Depardieu, Sunnyi Melles, Thiago Soares, Arthur Cadre, Liudmila Konovalova, Constantin Luser, Dr. Formalyst, Arotin&Serghei and others.
Festival Nights and Multidisciplinary Vision:
In 2015, Yury founded Festival Nights, a groundbreaking, multidisciplinary cultural platform merging music with visual art, dance, theater, technology, and immersive experience. Originally launched in Vienna, Festival Nights has evolved into an international format celebrated for its
bold artistic experimentation and social commitment.
Recent highlights include:
Festival Nights supports humanitarian causes, notably raising awareness for environmental issues, children in need and Autism, including through the Dreamland series in collaboration with UNICEF Austria.
He participated as composer in the innovative project RESISTRUMENTS—a collaboration with ArtHelps, which earned a prestigious WEBBY Award.
Yury joined initiatives celebrating peace and European values such as Oslo Freedom Forum and EuropaNova.
Media & Recognition
Yury Revich’s work has been featured by Vogue, Forbes, The Times, ORF, ZDF, Puls4, Die Zeit
Magazin etc. From 2016–2022, he performed on a 1709 Stradivarius; he currently plays an Alain Carbonare custom-made instrument.
Yury studied with his father, Alexander Revich, Galina Turchaninova, Viktor Pikayzen and in Vienna Conservatory (MUK) with Pavel Vernikov.