
Christopher Hogwood conducts repertoire
ranging from the baroque to contemporary, always with the
prevailing philosophy of revealing the original sound-world
of the composer. Since founding The Academy of Ancient Music
in 1973, he has gained international recognition for his
performances of baroque and early classical repertoire with
period instruments. For more than forty years he has also
been performing music of the twentieth century, with a particular
affinity for the neo-baroque and neoclassical schools including
many works by Stravinsky, Martinu and Entartete composers.
With modern symphony and chamber orchestras he creates intriguing
juxtapositions of the new and the old (Tippett and Corelli,
Schoenberg and Handel, Webern and Bach) and has directed
premieres of works by European and American composers. He
is particularly interested in Czech music and was awarded
the Martinu Medal by the Bohuslav Martinu Foundation, Prague,
in 1999. He has also encouraged The Academy of Ancient Music
to commission contemporary pieces, with some considerable
successes with works by John Tavener, David Bedford and John
Woolrich.
In addition to his position as Director of The AAM, he continues
as Principal Guest Conductor of the Verdi Orchestra Milan
and the Kammerorchester Basel; he is Conductor Laureate of
Boston’s Handel and Haydn Society. Other engagements
this season include the Joven Orquesta Nacional de España,
Orchestra della Toscana, Bamberger Symphoniker, Orchestra
Teatro Lirico di Cagliari, Radio-Sinfonie-Orchester Frankfurt,
Residentie Orkest, and the Orchestra del Teatro La Fenice.
In opera he has worked with Opera Australia, Deutsche Oper
Berlin, Royal Opera Stockholm, Royal Opera Covent Garden,
Chorégies d’Orange and Houston Grand Opera.
Hogwood has a celebrated catalogue of more than 200 recordings
with The AAM for Decca, including the first complete Mozart
symphonies on period instruments. His recent projects range
from the symphonies and overtures of Niels Gade with the
Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra (Chandos) to the
Secret Bach, the first in a series of baroque and classical
music for clavichord (Metronome). Czech music and the Czech
Philharmonic are represented by three of Martinu’s
jazz ballets recently released on Supraphon and all his works
for solo violin and orchestra with Bohuslav Matousek as soloist.
On Oehms Classics the viola concertos of Hoffmeister with
soloist Ashan Pillai demonstrate the byways of the classical
period, with the neoclassical well represented in a series
of recordings with the Kammerorchester Basel on the Arte
Nova label including works by Martinu, Stravinsky, Honegger,
Britten, Tippett, Malipiero and Casella.
Hogwood’s academic positions include Honorary Professor
of Music at the University of Cambridge; Fellowships at Jesus
and Pembroke Colleges, Cambridge; Visiting Professor at the
Royal Academy of Music and regular work at Harvard University.
Visit www.hogwood.org for further information on Christopher
Hogwood and his work.
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