Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Quartet for Flute, Violin, Viola, and Cello in D Major, K. 285 (1777)
Jacques Zoon, Flute
Raphael Christ, Violin
Wolfram Christ, Viola
Iseut Chuat, Cello
Leos Janacek (1854-1928)
Mladi (1924)
Jacques Zoon, Flute
Diethelm Jonas, Oboe
Sabine Meyer, Clarinet
Reiner Wehle, Clarinet and Bass Clarinet
Guilhaume Santana, Bassoon
Bruno Schneider, Horn
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
String Sextet No. 2 in G Major, Op. 36 (1864-65)
Kolja Blacher, Violin
Latica Honda-Rosenberg, Violin
Wolfram Christ, Viola
Simone Jandl, Viola
Valentin Erben, Cello
Jens Peter Maintz, Cello
Zankel Hall Sun Oct 07 2007 7:30 PM
Section PB15 Box 15 Seat 11
Web Student 10.00
看到Sabine Meyer 好興奮喔
也很喜歡Guilhaume Santana
After studying flute with Koos Verheul and Harrie Starreveld at the Sweelinck Concervatory in Amsterdam, Jacques Zoon won prizes at the Jean-Pierre Rampal Flute Competition and the Scheveningen International Competition. He has appeared as principal flutist with such orchestras as the Amsterdam Philharmonic, the Royal Concertgebouw, the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He presently plays in the Orchestra Mozart and the Lucerne Festival Orchestra, both headed by Claudio Abbado. Besides his career as a soloist and chamber musician, he teaches in Rotterdam, Boston, Berlin, and Geneva and has made many CD recordings. Mr. Zoon has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2004.
Diethelm Jonas studied with Heinz Holliger (Freiburg) and Lady Rothwell Barbirolli (London), and won prizes at competitions in Prague, Toulon, and Colmar, after which he became solo oboist of the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra. He is a member of the Aulos Quintet and professor at the Lübeck Musikhochschule (since 2003). Mr. Jonas has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2003.
Born in Crailsheim, Germany, Sabine Meyer studied in Stuttgart under Otto Hermann and in Hannover under Hans Deinzer. She began her career as solo clarinettist of the Baravian Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Berliner Philharmoniker, a position she left as she became increasingly in demand as one of the most outstanding soloists of our time, performing with all major orchestras around the world. Sabine Meyer is also in demand as a teacher and is a committed performer of chamber music, especially with her own two ensembles, the Trio di Clarone and the Bläserensemble Sabine Meyer. Since its foundation in 2003, Sabine Meyer has been principal clarinettist of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra.
Reiner Wehle studied the clarinet with Hans Deinzer and Guy Deplus in Paris. He has been awarded numerous international prizes, was a member of several orchestras including the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, and performed as a soloist with many different ensembles worldwide. He is an active chamber musician and has performed internationally with the Trio di Clarone, the Bläserensemble Sabine Meyer, the Ensemble Kontraste, and the Trio Integral. He teaches at the Musikhochschule Lübeck and holds a large number of master classes around the world. He has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since its inception.
Guilhaume Santana was born in 1982 in Toulouse, where he took violin and bassoon lessons at the local conservatory. After studying bassoon with Dag Jensen and at the orchestra academy of the Berliner Philharmoniker, he became solo bassoonist with the Mahler Chamber Orchestra and the Orchestra Mozart. He has played chamber music with Emanuel Ax, Albrecht Mayer, András Adorján, Till Fellner, and Alexander Lonquich as well as Sabine Meyer and her wind ensemble. He won the Mendelssohn Prize of the city of Berlin in 2005. Mr. Santana has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2005.
Bruno Schneider studied horn with Michael Höltzel in Detmold and has served as the principal horn player of the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Lucerne Festival Orchestra, and the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande (until 1993). An active chamber musician, he has been a professor in Freiburg im Breisgau since 1997.
Born in Berlin, Kolja Blacher studied at The Juilliard School in New York and has appeared as a soloist with many major orchestras, including the Berliner Philharmoniker, the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the Munich Philharmonic, and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe. Besides working with such conductors as Claudio Abbado, Mariss Jansons, Daniel Barenboim, and Lorin Maazel, he maintains active chamber music partnerships with Natalia Gutman (cello) and Vassily Lobanov and Bruno Canino (piano), and has made prizewinning CD recordings. Mr. Blacher has been concertmaster of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since its foundation in 2003.
Latica Honda-Rosenberg began studying violin at the age of nine with Tibor Varga and later with Zakhar Bron, winning a silver medal at the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition in 1998. She made solo appearances with orchestras in Bonn, Hanover, Moscow, the German Symphony Orchestra in Berlin, and the Central German RSO in Leipzig, as well as festivals in Salzburg, Rheingau, Schwetzingen, Schleswig-Holstein, and Jerusalem. Among her chamber music partners are Claudio Bohorquez, Renaud Capuçon, Steven Isserlis, Jens Peter Maintz, and Daniel Müller-Schott. She has been a professor at the Freiburg Musikhochschule since 2003 and a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2003.
Raphael Christ was born in Berlin in 1982. He started taking violin lessons at the age of six and attended masterclasses with Igor Ozim, Christian Altenburger, Franco Gulli, Michel Schwalbé, and Zakhar Bron. Among his many awards is a prize from the Arles Competition, which he won with his sister, Sarah Christ (harp). He has made solo appearances with many major orchestras under such conductors as Arnold Östman, Jiří Bĕlohlávek, Christoph Müller, Werner Stiefel, Wolfram Christ, and Daniel Barenboim. At the invitation of Claudio Abbado, he has been concertmaster of the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra since 2003. Mr. Christ has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2006.
After taking violin lessons from the age of six, Wolfram Christ switched to the viola at age 12. His many prizes, including one from the Munich Competition, paved the way to an international concert career. Besides serving as principal violist with the Berlin Philharmonic (1978-99), he regularly made solo appearances at international venues, playing works from the baroque age to the avant-garde and working with renowned conductors. He was the artistic director and adviser of the Sydney Conservatory from 1995 to 2000. At the invitation of Claudio Abbado, he became a founding member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra.
Born in Karlsruhe in 1983, Simone Jandl studied viola with Wolfram Christ and chamber music with Walter Levin and Volker Jacobsen. She is presently at the Hanns Eisler Musikhochschule in Berlin. Besides winning many national and international awards, she has maintained an active concert career in Europe and Israel, playing chamber music with Martha Argerich, Bruno Canino, Jacques Zoon, Enrico Bronzi, Danusha Waskiewicz, Diemut Poppen, and members of the Berliner Philharmoniker. She was principal violist of the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra and is now a member of the Orchestra Mozart under Claudio Abbado. Ms. Jandl has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2003.
Iseut Chuat was born in Paris, where she won several first prizes at the Conservatory. After studying with Aldo Parisot at Yale University and János Starker at Indiana University, she joined the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and became principal cellist with the Dutch National Ballet and the Boston Philharmonic. In addition to her solo and chamber appearances, she is an active teacher and the principal cellist of the Orchestra Mozart. Ms. Chaut has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2005.
Born in Austria in 1945, Valentin Erben studied in Munich, Vienna, and Paris with André Navarra (cello) and Jean Hubeau and Josef Calvet (chamber music). After winning the Munich Competition in 1968, he co-founded the Alban Berg Quartet (1970), with which he has concertized worldwide and made numerous recordings. He has worked with such soloists as Alfred Brendel, Elisabeth Leonskaja, András Schiff, and Heinrich Schiff, while maintaining his own solo career. He teaches international master classes and is a professor at the Vienna Musikhochschule (since 1972) and a visiting professor of chamber music in Cologne (since 1993). Mr. Erben has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2004. Erben plays a cello built by Matteo Goffriller in 1722.
Born in Hamburg, Jens Peter Maintz studied with David Geringas and attended master classes with Heinrich Schiff and others. His repertoire encompasses works of every period, from the Baroque to the most recent avant-garde. Since winning a first prize at the Munich Competition (1994), he has become one of the leading cellists of his generation. He was first solo cellist of the German Symphony Orchestra in Berlin under Kent Nagano (1995–2004) and toured with Bobby McFerrin and the Munich Radio Symphony Orchestra in the 2004–05 season. His concert tours have taken him to Europe, Japan, South America, and the United States. Mr. Maintz has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2005.
Copy from Carnegie Hall webpage
Quartet for Flute, Violin, Viola, and Cello in D Major, K. 285 (1777)
Jacques Zoon, Flute
Raphael Christ, Violin
Wolfram Christ, Viola
Iseut Chuat, Cello
Leos Janacek (1854-1928)
Mladi (1924)
Jacques Zoon, Flute
Diethelm Jonas, Oboe
Sabine Meyer, Clarinet
Reiner Wehle, Clarinet and Bass Clarinet
Guilhaume Santana, Bassoon
Bruno Schneider, Horn
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
String Sextet No. 2 in G Major, Op. 36 (1864-65)
Kolja Blacher, Violin
Latica Honda-Rosenberg, Violin
Wolfram Christ, Viola
Simone Jandl, Viola
Valentin Erben, Cello
Jens Peter Maintz, Cello
Zankel Hall Sun Oct 07 2007 7:30 PM
Section PB15 Box 15 Seat 11
Web Student 10.00
看到Sabine Meyer 好興奮喔
也很喜歡Guilhaume Santana
After studying flute with Koos Verheul and Harrie Starreveld at the Sweelinck Concervatory in Amsterdam, Jacques Zoon won prizes at the Jean-Pierre Rampal Flute Competition and the Scheveningen International Competition. He has appeared as principal flutist with such orchestras as the Amsterdam Philharmonic, the Royal Concertgebouw, the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He presently plays in the Orchestra Mozart and the Lucerne Festival Orchestra, both headed by Claudio Abbado. Besides his career as a soloist and chamber musician, he teaches in Rotterdam, Boston, Berlin, and Geneva and has made many CD recordings. Mr. Zoon has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2004.
Diethelm Jonas studied with Heinz Holliger (Freiburg) and Lady Rothwell Barbirolli (London), and won prizes at competitions in Prague, Toulon, and Colmar, after which he became solo oboist of the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra. He is a member of the Aulos Quintet and professor at the Lübeck Musikhochschule (since 2003). Mr. Jonas has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2003.
Born in Crailsheim, Germany, Sabine Meyer studied in Stuttgart under Otto Hermann and in Hannover under Hans Deinzer. She began her career as solo clarinettist of the Baravian Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Berliner Philharmoniker, a position she left as she became increasingly in demand as one of the most outstanding soloists of our time, performing with all major orchestras around the world. Sabine Meyer is also in demand as a teacher and is a committed performer of chamber music, especially with her own two ensembles, the Trio di Clarone and the Bläserensemble Sabine Meyer. Since its foundation in 2003, Sabine Meyer has been principal clarinettist of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra.
Reiner Wehle studied the clarinet with Hans Deinzer and Guy Deplus in Paris. He has been awarded numerous international prizes, was a member of several orchestras including the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, and performed as a soloist with many different ensembles worldwide. He is an active chamber musician and has performed internationally with the Trio di Clarone, the Bläserensemble Sabine Meyer, the Ensemble Kontraste, and the Trio Integral. He teaches at the Musikhochschule Lübeck and holds a large number of master classes around the world. He has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since its inception.
Guilhaume Santana was born in 1982 in Toulouse, where he took violin and bassoon lessons at the local conservatory. After studying bassoon with Dag Jensen and at the orchestra academy of the Berliner Philharmoniker, he became solo bassoonist with the Mahler Chamber Orchestra and the Orchestra Mozart. He has played chamber music with Emanuel Ax, Albrecht Mayer, András Adorján, Till Fellner, and Alexander Lonquich as well as Sabine Meyer and her wind ensemble. He won the Mendelssohn Prize of the city of Berlin in 2005. Mr. Santana has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2005.
Bruno Schneider studied horn with Michael Höltzel in Detmold and has served as the principal horn player of the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Lucerne Festival Orchestra, and the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande (until 1993). An active chamber musician, he has been a professor in Freiburg im Breisgau since 1997.
Born in Berlin, Kolja Blacher studied at The Juilliard School in New York and has appeared as a soloist with many major orchestras, including the Berliner Philharmoniker, the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the Munich Philharmonic, and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe. Besides working with such conductors as Claudio Abbado, Mariss Jansons, Daniel Barenboim, and Lorin Maazel, he maintains active chamber music partnerships with Natalia Gutman (cello) and Vassily Lobanov and Bruno Canino (piano), and has made prizewinning CD recordings. Mr. Blacher has been concertmaster of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since its foundation in 2003.
Latica Honda-Rosenberg began studying violin at the age of nine with Tibor Varga and later with Zakhar Bron, winning a silver medal at the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition in 1998. She made solo appearances with orchestras in Bonn, Hanover, Moscow, the German Symphony Orchestra in Berlin, and the Central German RSO in Leipzig, as well as festivals in Salzburg, Rheingau, Schwetzingen, Schleswig-Holstein, and Jerusalem. Among her chamber music partners are Claudio Bohorquez, Renaud Capuçon, Steven Isserlis, Jens Peter Maintz, and Daniel Müller-Schott. She has been a professor at the Freiburg Musikhochschule since 2003 and a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2003.
Raphael Christ was born in Berlin in 1982. He started taking violin lessons at the age of six and attended masterclasses with Igor Ozim, Christian Altenburger, Franco Gulli, Michel Schwalbé, and Zakhar Bron. Among his many awards is a prize from the Arles Competition, which he won with his sister, Sarah Christ (harp). He has made solo appearances with many major orchestras under such conductors as Arnold Östman, Jiří Bĕlohlávek, Christoph Müller, Werner Stiefel, Wolfram Christ, and Daniel Barenboim. At the invitation of Claudio Abbado, he has been concertmaster of the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra since 2003. Mr. Christ has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2006.
After taking violin lessons from the age of six, Wolfram Christ switched to the viola at age 12. His many prizes, including one from the Munich Competition, paved the way to an international concert career. Besides serving as principal violist with the Berlin Philharmonic (1978-99), he regularly made solo appearances at international venues, playing works from the baroque age to the avant-garde and working with renowned conductors. He was the artistic director and adviser of the Sydney Conservatory from 1995 to 2000. At the invitation of Claudio Abbado, he became a founding member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra.
Born in Karlsruhe in 1983, Simone Jandl studied viola with Wolfram Christ and chamber music with Walter Levin and Volker Jacobsen. She is presently at the Hanns Eisler Musikhochschule in Berlin. Besides winning many national and international awards, she has maintained an active concert career in Europe and Israel, playing chamber music with Martha Argerich, Bruno Canino, Jacques Zoon, Enrico Bronzi, Danusha Waskiewicz, Diemut Poppen, and members of the Berliner Philharmoniker. She was principal violist of the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra and is now a member of the Orchestra Mozart under Claudio Abbado. Ms. Jandl has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2003.
Iseut Chuat was born in Paris, where she won several first prizes at the Conservatory. After studying with Aldo Parisot at Yale University and János Starker at Indiana University, she joined the Chamber Orchestra of Europe and became principal cellist with the Dutch National Ballet and the Boston Philharmonic. In addition to her solo and chamber appearances, she is an active teacher and the principal cellist of the Orchestra Mozart. Ms. Chaut has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2005.
Born in Austria in 1945, Valentin Erben studied in Munich, Vienna, and Paris with André Navarra (cello) and Jean Hubeau and Josef Calvet (chamber music). After winning the Munich Competition in 1968, he co-founded the Alban Berg Quartet (1970), with which he has concertized worldwide and made numerous recordings. He has worked with such soloists as Alfred Brendel, Elisabeth Leonskaja, András Schiff, and Heinrich Schiff, while maintaining his own solo career. He teaches international master classes and is a professor at the Vienna Musikhochschule (since 1972) and a visiting professor of chamber music in Cologne (since 1993). Mr. Erben has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2004. Erben plays a cello built by Matteo Goffriller in 1722.
Born in Hamburg, Jens Peter Maintz studied with David Geringas and attended master classes with Heinrich Schiff and others. His repertoire encompasses works of every period, from the Baroque to the most recent avant-garde. Since winning a first prize at the Munich Competition (1994), he has become one of the leading cellists of his generation. He was first solo cellist of the German Symphony Orchestra in Berlin under Kent Nagano (1995–2004) and toured with Bobby McFerrin and the Munich Radio Symphony Orchestra in the 2004–05 season. His concert tours have taken him to Europe, Japan, South America, and the United States. Mr. Maintz has been a member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra since 2005.
Copy from Carnegie Hall webpage












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