Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Pianist and pedagogue Velichka Savova: 115 years since her birth

Photo: archive



Velichka Savova was born in Sofia in 1899 to an old family from Vratsa that can be traced back to the times of the National Revival. Vela – as her family called her – got her first piano lessons from her mother at the age of six. Gripped by an overwhelming desire to play, she dedicated herself to music and got down to mastering all subtleties of the instrument.

Her enthusiasm continued throughout her teenage years when she made an important decision – at 16 Velichka Savova left for Berlin, where she continued her studies with Leopold Godowsky. In an interview, kept at the BNR Golden Fund, Velichka Savova remembers:

“My father took me to Munich to apply at the Conservatory. Many talented children applied there. I don’t know why but when I was small I felt a strange contradiction – I felt I had extraordinary talent but at times I felt I knew nothing and was capable of nothing, So, on the day I applied I sat and waited for my turn in a real fluster. I entered – the panel was chaired by Berthold Kellerman, Ferenc Liszt’s last student – he assigned to him all important tasks when he was away. After I stopped playing Kellerman came up to me, asked me my name and where I was from. Then he said: “You love playing the scales with the foot pedal, don’t you?” I blushed and thought I had failed, but then he said in German that I was the next Clara Wieck. I didn’t know what to think, so I went out and waited for the results. In time, the headmaster came out and read out a list of names – mine was first.”

Velichka Savova ventured into many areas of music. Her careers as a soloist and as a pedagogue were the spheres she dedicated her life to. After World War I she again went to Berlin, where she specialized with Ferruccio Busoni and his assistant Gottfried Galston. In 1932 Velichka Savova returned to Bulgaria where she settled down until her death in 1991.

Velichka Savova has made a major contribution to music culture. Throughout her long career as a pedagogue she passed her experience onto many of her students who have made a name for themselves in the country and abroad. The renowned pianist remained true to one of her most famous tutors - Leopold Godowsky. His unique piano method is one of the basic piano techniques that she passed onto her own students. Here is what Velichka Savova says about him:

“This is a piano school that is difficult to explain. It is a way to extract high-quality sound from a piano. It is one thing to hit a key and get a sound and quite another to extract the sound from the keyboard itself. This is a special kind of theory and technique connected with a high degree of subtlety – both physical and mental. The two are connected and cannot be separated from each other.”

One of Velichka Savova’s most famous students is Prof. Tsvetan Konstantinov. He continued in his tutor’s footsteps and in 2011 founded the International Master Institute of Music "Leopold Godowsky" in USA where young performers are able to master the technique and the style of the legendary pianist. Nowadays, recordings by Velichka Savova are rare - some of them have been preserved by the BNR Golden Fund.

English version: Milena Daynova 


The audio to this file contains the following recordings:

-  Piano Improvisations by Pancho Vladigerov;

-  Musette and Rigaudon by Jean-Philippe Rameau;

-  Humoresque by Max Reger;

-  Berceuse, Op. 57 by Frederic Chopin.






Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Portrait of Vasil Levski, artist Dionisiy Donchev

Vasil Levski bid farewell to life with a song

"It's bitter cold, wood and stone are cracking, we've been with no food for two or three days, yet he sings and is always cheerful! In the evening - before we go to bed - he sings; in the morning, as soon as he opens his eyes, he sings again" - this is..

published on 2/19/25 10:35 AM

Carmina Burana brings together orchestras from Bulgaria, Greece and North Macedonia in Sofia

A concert performance of the stage cantata Carmina Burana by Carl Orff in Sofia has turned into a celebration for music lovers and a testament to the power of music to melt ice in diplomacy. For the first time, three orchestras from three..

published on 2/18/25 5:05 PM
Bulgapeya Choir

Bulgapeya choir - Bulgarian voices in Brussels

Six years ago, on the day of the first day of spring, several Bulgarian women living in Brussels, driven by their love for their native folklore and the strength of their roots, decided to create their own creative corner , where this love would find..

published on 2/18/25 11:31 AM