Category Archives: conductorDocs

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Jany Renz

During his international career as Lied accompanist and chamber musician he was partner of leading Lied singers and leading instrumentalists.

He studied conducting with Wilfried Boettcher in Basel. Master classes with Leonard Bernstein and Sergiu Celibidache completed his studies.

He was chief conductor of the symphony orchestra Dornach/Switzerland. His career began in Italy where he became first maestro and artistic vice director. Later he spent a long time in South Korea as director of the Masan Symphony Orchestra and guest conductor of the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra. In Finland he got in touch with the contemporary music scene and took up several works in his repertoire. He conducted “Aida” on the Opera Festival of Savonlinna and gave master classes of Lied and chamber music. He regularly worked with finnish orchestras. He also was guest conductor of the Budapest philhamronic orchestra and of the Opera Budapest.

In 1991 a recording of the 9th symphony of Bruckner was published with the Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra (ODE 764-2 www.ondine.fi ) which became the best sold version of this work in the USA in that year (and the best sold classical CD at all in August).

From 1990 to 1994 he was general music director in Freiberg/germany. As guest conductor he worked in other theaters, like in Darmstadt with “Falstaff” of Giuseppe Verdi. The success of his CD produced him invitations in the USA as in Portland, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and New York.

PRESS

Jany Renz heißt der Dirigent, der das Kunststück fertiggebracht hat, das Orchester zu einer so mitreissenden Leistung zu führen. Es gelang ihm eine packende Wiedergabe von Dvoráks Symphonie “Aus der Neuen Welt”, emphatisch, spontan, vital und dennoch präzise, beherrscht und kontrolliert, von hohem Ernst und starkem interpretatorischem Willen.

(Basler Zeitung, Switzerland)

In Mozart´s last piano concerto KV 595, Jany Renz figured not only as soloist but also as conductor. In this he performed a double task which has sometimes proved too exacting for many othe rinternational celebrities. But with the swiss Jany Renz it was a sheer joy to hear and see. His sovereign virtuosity and natural zest in playing did not stand in the way of a Mozart performance marked by the lucidity and delicacy of chamber music and crowned by a slow movement that was touchingly beautiful in its humility and unworldliness.

(Portland Press Herald, USA)

With a clear and quite unassuming baton, and with a punctilious constancy of tempo, Jany Renz gave a performance of convincing unity, lending an abundance of sound and dynamics to the strictly maintained great lines while shaping them with a lot of fince nuances, in which the orchestra followed him with astonishing precision and remarkable culture of sound.

(The New York Times, USA)

Jany Renz´s creative impulse, which found compelling expression in the extreme prescicion of baton technique, afforded him ideal scope with the orchestra and Anton Bruckner´s “Seventh” received an overpowering performance.

(Pittsburgh Press, USA)

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Samuel Wong

Samuel Wong (Chinese: 黃大德) is a Hong Kong-born Canadian conductor and ophthalmologist [1].

Trained at Harvard Medical School and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons,[1] Dr. Wong is an eye surgeon practicing in Manhattan and Brooklyn.

In another career, he has conducted many international orchestras including the New York PhilharmonicSeattle and Houston Symphonies, Toronto and Montreal Symphonies, orchestras in ItalySpainBelgium, and Israel. Wong led the New York Philharmonic in December 1990 after the untimely death of Leonard Bernstein, and replaced Zubin Mehta in Washington D.C. in January 1991 when Maestro Mehta traveled to Israel in an act of solidarity with the Israel Philharmonic during the Persian Gulf War.

(EN:) Wong pursued his first degree in Toronto at the Royal Conservatory of Music, where he graduated with a degree in piano performance. While there, he also studied composition, tuba and violin.

After obtaining his music degree, Wong moved on to Harvard to pursue a second degree in medicine. Wong was a Magna Cum Laude graduate of the applied mathematics program at Harvard and later graduated from Harvard Medical School with honors in ophthalmology, neurology and psychiatry. He
completed a one year internship in Internal Medicine and then began an ophthalmology residency at Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital in 1989.

His humanitarian work has brought him to Tibet, China, and Amman, Jordan to restore sight in refugees.

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Boyd Neel

Category : conductorDocs

Louis Boyd NeelO.C. (19 July 1905 – 30 September 1981) was an English, and later Canadian conductor and academic. He was Dean of the Royal Conservatory of Music at the University of Toronto. Neel founded and conducted chamber orchestras, and contributed to the revival of interest in baroque music and in the 19th and 20th Century string orchestra repertoire.

Neel was born in Blackheath, London, and wanted to be a pianist as a child.[2] His mother, Ruby Le Couteur, was a professional accompanist, and his father was an engineer.[3]

Neel attended Osborne Naval College and then Dartmouth, and was commissioned in the Royal Navy. Soon after he was commissioned, the armed forces underwent a drastic reduction (the so-called ‘Geddes Axe‘), and Neel left the navy to study medicine at Caius CollegeCambridge. He qualified in 1930, and became House Surgeon and Physician at Saint George’s Hospital, London, and Resident Doctor at King Edward VII’s Hospital, London.[4][5]

In 1930, while practising medicine, Neel studied music theory and orchestration at the Guildhall School of Music.[6]

For Neel, at this stage, music was still a hobby. He conducted amateur groups and formed an orchestra of young professionals, whom he recruited in 1932 from the Royal Academy of Music and the Royal College of Music.[7] The Boyd Neel London String Orchestra (later the Boyd Neel Orchestra) made its debut at the Aeolian Hall, London, on 22 June 1933. The programme included the first performance in England of Respighi’s Suite of Ancient Airs and Dances and the premiere of a new suite by occasional composer Julian Herbage. After the concert, Neel returned to his surgery and delivered a baby.[8] The second concert, at the same venue, took place on 24 November 1933, and included the first performance in England of the Serenade for Strings by Wolf-Ferrari. On 18 December 1933 the orchestra was invited to broadcast by the BBC for the first time.[9] When Decca offered Neel and the orchestra a contract, he left medicine to devote himself full-time to music.[4]

On 16 February 1934 the orchestra performed a concert of chamber works by Ernest Bloch at the Aeolian Hall, conducted by the composer.[10] Neel conducted the first music heard in the new Glyndebourne opera house in 1934, in private performances, at John Christie‘s invitation.[4] Among the Boyd Neel Orchestra’s early releases in 1936 were the first recordings of Vaughan Williams’s Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis and Britten’s Simple Symphony.[11] The following year, Neel and his orchestra were invited to the Salzburg Festival, for which Neel commissioned Britten’s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge.[4] In 1939 Boyd Neel commissioned John Ireland‘s three movement Concertino Pastorale for string orchestra, first played at the Canterbury Festival on 14 June 1939. It was subsequently recorded in February 1940.[12] The orchestra toured Great Britain and Europe until the outbreak of war.[13][14]

Boyd Neel Orchestra

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Giuseppe Sinopoli

Giuseppe Sinopoli (Italian pronunciation: [dʒuˈzɛppe siˈnɔːpoli]; 2 November 1946 – 21 April 2001)[1] was an Italian conductor and composer.

Sinopoli was born in Venice, Italy, and later studied at the Benedetto Marcello Conservatory in Venice under Ernesto Rubin de Cervin and at Darmstadt, including being mentored in composition with Karlheinz Stockhausen.[citation needed] He also obtained a degree in medicine from the University of Padua, and completed a dissertation on criminal anthropology.[2]

Sinopoli began to make a name for himself as a composer of serial works, becoming professor of contemporary and electronic music at the Venice Conservatoire Benedetto Marcello in 1972, and a major proponent of the new movement in Venice for contemporary music. He studied conducting at the Vienna Academy of Music under Hans Swarowsky; and in Venice, founded the Bruno Maderna Ensemble in the 1970s. His single most famous composition is perhaps his opera Lou Salomé, which received its first production in Munich in 1981, with Karan Armstrong in the title role.[3]

Sinopoli was appointed principal conductor of the Philharmonia in 1984, and served in this position until 1994, making a number of recordings with them, including music by Elgar and the complete symphonies of Mahler.[4] Sinopoli was supposed to take over the position of chief conductor at Deutsche Oper Berlin in 1990. However, even before the start of his term he receded from his contract. He became principal conductor of the Staatskapelle Dresden in 1992. He also joined the Bayreuth Festival‘s roster of conductors. He is best known for his intense and sometimes controversial interpretations of opera, especially works by Italian composers and Richard Strauss. Sinopoli specialized in late-nineteenth century and early-twentieth century music, from Wagner and Verdi to Strauss, Mahler and the Second Viennese School. His conducting was the object of much controversy, especially in the symphonic genre, with some berating the “eccentricity” of his interpretations, while others praised the insightfulness of his often intellectual approach to works.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSNJJUREbr4

Every October since 2005, Taormina Arte has dedicated a festival to Giuseppe Sinopoli, the artistic director of the Music section of the Taormina Festival from 1989 to 1997. The Giuseppe Sinopoli Festival celebrates the man not only as a musician and as a conductor but also as a composer, a doctor, an archaeologist and intellectual, with a variety of events from music and literature, theatre and art to conferences, exhibitions, publications and concerts. Every year the Festival welcomes important orchestras to Italy.

On the occasion of the first edition of the Giuseppe Sinopoli Festival the Sinopoli Chamber Orchestra was formed, in collaboration with the Conservatorio “Arcangelo Corelli” of Messina. The Orchestra, made up of young talented musicians, both pupils and teachers of the Conservatorio, mostly performs works by Sinopoli.

Lou Salomé https://www.stretta-music.de/sinopoli-lou-salom-nr-778511.html

Uraufführung: 10. Mai 1981 an der Bayerischen Staatsoper, München

Komponist: Giuseppe Sinopoli
Libretto: Karl Dietrich Gräwe
Regie: Götz Friedrich
Musikalische Leitung: Giuseppe Sinopoli
Audio-CD (Auszüge, andere Einspielung):
Lou Salomé – Orchestersuiten
Rezensionen:
Bachmann, C.-H.: Trügerische Balance auf dem Hochseil der Oper. Guiseppe Sinopoli: Lou Salomé – Uraufführung in München, in: Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, 4, 1981, S. 382–384

Herbort, H. J.: Oper: Gedachte Musik. Lou Salomé in München, Aus Deutschland in Berlin, in: DIE ZEIT, Nr. 41, 1983

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https://venetiancat.blogspot.com/2012/01/lou-salome-at-la-fenice-and-il-giorno.html


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Domingo Federico

Domingo Serafín Federico (4 June 1916, in Buenos Aires – 16 April 2000) was an Argentine bandoneon player, songwriter and actor.[1]

Nombre real: Federico, Domingo Serafín

Bandoneonista, director, compositor y docente

(4 junio 1916 – 6 abril 2000)

Lugar de nacimiento:
Buenos Aires Argentina

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Wolfgang Ellenberger

piano = Handgepäck | hand luggage

Wolfgang Ellenberger, the author of this web site has studied also piano diploma and concert exam besides music therapy.
1987-1989 he worked at the ballet of the Scala of Milano as pianist.
1994 debut as conductor with the Sibirian State orchestra Kemerovo. In the nineties he conducted three choirs and in the opera project Magic Flute.
He has lived three years of his life in a camper on camping sites.
He invented several things: piano-lift-hydraulics, piano fingering system and he introduced cinema therapy to a psychosomatic hospital.
Since 1982 he manages an event service (see clients list).
In his youth he played a pneumatic organ in a church in Hamburg Altona for 12 years.
Since his workshop with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross he studied spirituality intensively and finally wrote a film script about the communication with the spiritual world according to the book of Johannes Greber.
He produced many hundreds of films for his youtube account and other places.
In 2011 he moved to Switzerland (with two interruptions in Germany) where he likes to hike in the mountains.

Ellenberger worked as a waiter fully employed @ maritim hotel Würzburg for some months.

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https://linktr.ee/ellenberger

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Otmar Desch

Dear Mr. Ellenberger!
Thank you for your activity to bring together the right people. TO support your work and simplify it herewith you get my permission to use any material from my homepage
www.desch-musicproduction.de ). I feel you have the right touch to present colleagues at www.DoctorsTalents.com .

There is little to say about my professional career. Music, piano and composition studies were runing parallel with the medical studies…..
[remark from Wolfgang Ellenberger: Right, Otmar, nothing easier than that!]
After my medical exam I was working at the theatre in Münster/Germany for 15 years (my parents were frightened), then I went to Berlin to have an own office as a general practitioner
(and NOT give up to compose and give recitals in the Berlin area). As I had planned I sold the office at age 60 and from end of 2001 I am musical director, pianist and composer at the theatre in Stendal/Germany.

Focus of my composition style (just besides the oratorium and many many stage music pieces exposed n my homepage) is concert music between twelve tone music and jazz,
as it can be found in my two concerts for piano and orchestra (a sample will be sent…).
Since 2007 I finally have the time to concentrate on marketing of these products since I make only contracts with the theatre about single productions.
By the way I am looking for prominent editors … see what happens…. this much for today!
Desch

Musicals:

Villa Traiano South Italy

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Profil ausführlicher Lebenslauf | c.v. perfect!

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Born in 1942
Composer, pianist, specialist in general medicine
(Focus: psychosomatics)
Pianistic training: most recently with Prof. Klaus Hellwig (Münster / Berlin, University of the Arts)
Composition studies with Prof. Harry Höfer (Münster)
Composition courses with Mauricio Kagel (Cologne / WDR)

In 1960, at the age of 18, he began coaching ballet at the Münster Municipal Theater and, after completing his studies, was permanently employed as a solo accompanist (opera, operetta, and musical).
In parallel with his coaching, he composed numerous stage scores and, after two more years, took over as director of incidental music at the municipal theaters and at the Münster Zimmertheater (Wolfgang Borchert Theater).

This was followed by guest engagements at various German stages (including the Landesbühne Niedersachsen / Wilhelmshaven) with commissions for further stage music, arrangements and musical direction of musicals, stage music and revues (including Hallo Dolly, Kiss Me Kate, Irma-La-Douce, Happy End, Threepenny Opera, Dance on the Volcano, Black Fair, The Romantics, Charly’s Aunt, Wirtshaus im Spessart, Puntila and his servant Matti, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, At the White Horse Inn, Secretaries, Men).

With the “Otmar Desch Jazz Trio” (now “1-stein Jazz Trio”), he performed nationwide, composed and accompanied (at concerts in Hamburg, Munich, Bremen, Detmold, Münster, and Marburg) chanson programs by singer and actor Thomas Kylau (with live performances on WDR/NDR and participation in the North German Chanson Festival in Hamburg), and produced the chanson record “Lieder statt Kakteen” (German Progressive / (Kraut-) Rock – Record Price Guide).

As a pianist with the North German rock-jazz group “Humus,” he also performed nationwide and recorded his first record, “Offshore,” with the Planungs-Verlag Dortmund publishing house in 1976 (The JAZZ Discography – by Tom Lord).

He can be counted among the first German composers to combine “serious” music with “pop” music and to introduce it into symphony concert programs (composition and spectacular premiere of his “Requiem For Elvis Presley” with the rock jazz group “Humus” and members of the Münster Municipal Symphony Orchestra, among others).

He taught as a pianist at the Westphalia-Lippe University of Education for several semesters.

At the Westphalian School of Music (Münster, under the direction of Prof. Vetter), he led the jazz department of what is now the University of Music. He also served for several years as the responsible director of national jazz and pop music courses within the Westphalia-Lippe State Association for Music.

He directed several regional choirs (mixed choirs, men’s choirs, and women’s choirs) and successfully performed the first “choir shows” in the Westphalia region.

He composed numerous “ecumenical songs” for Protestant and Catholic congregations in the Westphalia region and played various jazz masses of his own in the ecumenical arena (performing with “Pit” Janssens, among others).

His artistic collaborators include well-known artists such as actor Mario Adorf and mime artist Prof. Sammy Molcho (Vienna), as well as actresses Anja Kruse, Ute Lemper, and Marie-Luise Marjan, as well as Udo Lindenberg (drums / “modern jazz”) and TV presenter Götz Alsmann.
He has also performed as a pianist on talk shows with Alfred Biolek, among others.

In 1980, parallel to his artistic activities, he opened a general practice in Berlin-Lichtenrade and continued his studies as a hypnotherapist at the I.H. Schultz Institute in Berlin (directed by Dr. Dr. med. Thomas).

He caused a sensation in 1976 with the premiere of his orchestral suite (“Pick-Up Suite”): “Such a powerhouse! Otmar Desch blasts his self-composed musical into the keys, tearing the audience from their seats…” – Berliner Zeitung

As a result of his medical and hypnotherapeutic experiences, he composed the full-length oratorio “Fried’, üßer Vogel” (Fried, sweet bird) for organ, soloists, and small orchestra (premiered in 1999 in Berlin-Britz).

With his wife Ines Desch (née Irmer) – formerly principal oboist of the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – he began establishing “INESSA Music Production” in 2001 and now primarily produces various CDs, in addition to music for therapeutic use.

Current Position:
Since 2001, he has been employed as Musical Director of the Dramatic Music Department at the Theater der Altmark (TdA), Stendal.


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Johannes Havla

The founder and conductor of the Medizinerchor Erlangen is Johannes Havla, a A-class church musician and concert organist (Hochschule für Musik Detmold, master-class Prof. G. Weinberger).

With an vocal ensemble “TonArt” built from the Regensburger Domspatzen he won a 1st prize at the international choir festival in Apeldoorn/Netherlands.

He performed with the German-American Doctors Orchestra -NMMG and guests- an organ concerto at the Frankfurt medical faculty as conductor and much more.

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