Ádám Fischer
Ádám Fischer (born 9 September 1949, Budapest) is a Hungarian conductor. He is the general music director of the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra,[1] with which he has recorded the complete Haydn symphonies for the Nimbus label, the first digital recording of the cycle. He is also Music Director of the Hungarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, and Chief Conductor of the Danish National Chamber Orchestra.
Career
Ádám Fischer is an elder brother of the conductor Iván Fischer. The two belonged to the children's choir of Budapest National Opera house, and sang as two of the three boys in Mozart's Die Zauberflöte.
Ádám Fischer studied piano and composition at the Bartók Conservatory in Budapest, and conducting with Hans Swarowsky in Vienna.[2] He won first prize in the Milan Guido Cantelli Competition.[2] His career began with opera conducting in Munich, Freiburg, and other German cities. In 1982 he made his Paris Opéra debut, leading Der Rosenkavalier, and in 1986 he made his debut at La Scala, Milan, leading Die Zauberflöte.[2] Between 1987 and 1992 he was the general music director in Kassel.[2]
He has led symphonic concerts since the mid-1970s with such orchestras as the Helsinki Philharmonic, the Vienna Philharmonic, Vienna Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre de Paris, the London Philharmonic, the Philharmonia, the Royal Philharmonic, the Dresden Philharmonic, the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra, the Tonhalle Orchestra of Zurich, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. He has appeared the New York Mostly Mozart festival four times.
He began a long collaboration with the Vienna State Opera in 1973, and also has worked regularly with the Royal Opera House, the Metropolitan Opera, and elsewhere.
In 1987 Ádám Fischer established the Austrian-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra and started the Haydn Festival in the Austrian Eisenstadt. In July 1989, Fischer started the first Gustav Mahler Festivals in Kassel, and he directed as an artistic director. In 1998 Fischer was appointed chief conductor of the Danish National Chamber Orchestra.[3] Fischer has recorded the complete Opere serie by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart with this orchestra, and is currently recording Mozart's complete symphonies.[2]
Ádám Fischer has recorded for Nimbus, CBS, EMI, Hungaroton and Delta. In 1982 he won the Grand Prix du Disque.[2]
At the end of 2010 Fischer resigned as Music Director of the Hungarian State Opera in protest against the controversial media law introduced in Hungary in 2011. Speaking in Brussels on 11 January 2011 he told reporters, 'A lot of the attention has focused on the new law but the problems run far deeper. Even more worrying are changes to the national constitution that are being drafted and the rise of anti-Semitism, homophobia and xenophobia in Hungarian society.'[4] He joined with András Schiff, Miklós Jancsó and others in an open letter condemning the Hungarian government's record on these issues.[5][6]
References
- ↑ Haydn Philharmonie In German
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Biography - Ádám Fischer". haydnphil.org. Retrieved 2010-01-24.
- ↑ "Koncerthuset". Retrieved 23 April 2016.
- ↑ Vanessa Mock (2011), Mock, Vanessa (January 12, 2011). "Hungary's artists". The Independent (London). Retrieved May 10, 2012.
- ↑ letter on site of Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra retrieved 14.1.2011
- ↑ Szemere Katalin (24 September 2010). "Kultúra: Miért mondott le Fischer Ádám? - NOL.hu". NOL.hu. Retrieved 23 April 2016.
Sources
- (German) Dr. Raab and Dr. Böhm Artist Management (Austria), official artist biography of Adam Fischer
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