Tabea Zimmermann

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Tabea Zimmermann, born on October 8, 1966 in Lahr, (Germany), is a German violist.

She began learning to play the viola at the age of three, and commenced piano studies at age five. At the age of 13, she studied viola with Ulrich Koch at the Conservatory of Freiburg and progressed to study with Sándor Végh at the Mozarteum [1] University of Salzburg. She soon gained notice in international competitions, winning first prizes in Genève (1982), Budapest (1984), and the "Maurice Vieux" viola competition in Paris (1983) for which she was awarded a superb instrument made by contemporary luthier Étienne Vatelot (1980) which she has played in her worldwide concert tours ever since.

As a soloist she has performed with numerous major orchestras, including the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the BBC Philharmonic, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, under the baton of noted conductors including Kurt Masur, Bernard Haitink, Christoph Eschenbach, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, and others.

Tabea Zimmermann is likewise actively involved in chamber music, having performed with Gidon Kremer (violin), Heinz Holliger (oboist and composer), Hartmut Höll (piano), Steven Isserlis (cello), and Pamela Frank (violin) at numerous festivals. She has devoted a significant part of her chamber career to the Arcanto Quartet [2], formed with violinists Antje Weithaas and Daniel Sepec and cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras.

Highly committed to the 20th century repertoire, she has attained noted success performing the “Sonata for Solo Viola” written for her by György Ligeti, premiering in 1994. Other contemporary composers who have written works for her include Heinz Holliger, Sally Beamish, Wolfgang Rihm, Georges Lentz and Menachem Wiesenberg.

Since 2002, Tabea Zimmermann is a professor of viola and chamber music at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music [3] in Berlin. Previously she was on the faculty of the Saarbrücken Music Academy (1987-1989) and the Frankfurt Conservatory (1994-2002). Her artistic achievements and contributions have garnered her numerous national and international awards, including the Frankfurt Music Prize, the Hesse (State) Cultural Prize, and the International Prize of the Chigiana Music Academy of Sienna.

She is the widow of conductor David Shallon (1950-2000), and is recently married to American conductor Steven Sloane. The couple have three children: Yuval and Jonathan (Shallon’s sons), and daughter Maya (born in 2003).

[edit] External links

  • Official website [4]

[edit] References

  • This article is based on a translation of the article in the French Wikipedia; retrieved May 27, 2006.