Steven Roach, born in Lincoln, Nebraska, United States, in 1947. He began formal study at the age of 5 and at the age of 10 he performed the Haydn concert in D major with the Symphony Orchestra of his hometown. At 16, he won the national “MEA” competition for young pianists, which was followed by his debut at New York's Cami-Hall in 1964.
After his high school studies he moved to Italy to continue his musical studies at the Santa Cecilia Conservatory in Rome. After graduating with full marks, he attended master classes with great masters such as Guido Agosti in Rome and North Carolina, Renzo Silvestri in Salzburg, Vincenzo Vitale in Naples and Wilhelm Kempff in Positano. In 1973, he won the bronze medal at the Geneva International Competition (one of the most prestigious in the world) followed by concerts in Switzerland, France and Italy.
In 1976, experimenting with a pedagogical system that has always interested him, he develops a teaching method for children, combining his own ideas with those of Suzuki and Orff which ended with an interesting essay of children aged four to seven.
In 1978 he returned to New York to pursue his first and second degrees at the Manhattan School of Music, indispensable studies for teaching in US universities. At the same time he perfected himself in organ by becoming the official organist of a large Catholic Church in Brooklyn. During the same period he also dabbled in improvisations and jazz music in various Broadway venues.
His interest in various musical areas also leads him to the field of classical dance. In fact, with the arrival of Mikhail Baryshnikov at the American Ballet Theater, he takes part in a competition for "first pianist" (a position that requires not only great experience as a solo pianist but also a spontaneous predisposition to improvisation for rehearsals) and comes second in the ranking. The employment proposal comes after two months, but in the meantime he had decided to return to Europe.
His inclusion in opera began in 1981 at the Teatro Sperimentale in Spoleto.
In 1983 he was pianist and second director of the choir of the RAI in Rome and pianist in orchestra, also practicing in orchestral direction. From 1986 to 2010 he was part of the artistic staff of the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. In addition to working as a "coach" and pianist for rehearsals, he also plays in the orchestra and participates in concerts both as a soloist and in various chamber music ensembles. At the Teatro dell'Opera in Rome he has conducted the orchestra several times and accompanied in concert great names of opera, such as Alfredo Kraus, Leo Nucci, Elisabeth Connell, Giusy Devinu, Caterina Antonacci, Rockwell Blake, and many others.
During his employment at the Rome Opera House in 2003, he took a year off to teach, as a "Guest Professor" at the "Gedai University" of Tokyo, following which he was regularly invited to Japan. , and in particular in Nagasaki, to give Masterclasses to singers and pianists
