Eve Egoyan

[2] She studied piano in Banff with György Sebők, in Berlin with Georg Sava, in London with Hamish Milne, and at the University of Toronto with Patricia Parr, where she completed a master's degree in 1992.

Canadian composer Ann Southam dedicated several works to Egoyan throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s including: Qualities of Consonance (1998), Figures: Music for Piano and String Orchestra (2001), In Retrospect (2004), and Simple Lines of Enquiry (2008).

[3] Her 12 solo CDs explore music by composers ranging from Erik Satie to Alvin Curran, Michael Finnissy, James Tenney, Martin Arnold, Linda Catlin Smith, and Southam.

Variations in dynamics, pitch, tone, and duration serve as triggers for visuals inspired by natural phenomena, such as the movements of planets, the swarming of insects, and the ripple effects caused by a falling pebble.

[5] In 2018, Egoyan created Solo for Duet, an integrated mix of sound, image, and unspoken narrative challenging traditional conceptions of piano and pianist.