Justus Frantz
Justus Frantz (born May 18, 1944 in Inowrocław, Poland, then Hohensalza, Germany) is a German pianist, conductor, and television personality.
Life
Frantz began playing piano at the age of ten and later studied with Eliza Hansen and Wilhelm Kempff at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg under a scholarship from the Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes, or German National Scholarship Foundation.[1] He and another man won second place in a competition by playing a duet for cello and piano. In 1967, he won an international musical competition hosted by a famous German television station. He first played with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Herbert von Karajan in 1970. In 1975, he played in his United States debut concert with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Leonard Bernstein, who became his lifelong friend. Other conductors with whom he has played include Carlo Maria Giulini and Rudolf Kempe. He founded the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival in 1986 and became a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador in 1989, a post from which he has since retired. He also founded the Philharmonia of the Nations in 1995. From September 2013 Maestro Frantz serves as musical director of Israel Sinfonietta Beer Sheva.
He has two sons, Christopher Tainton, whom he had with pianist Carol Tainton, and Justus Konstantin Frantz, whom he had with Xenia Dubrowskaja.
Repertoire
Frantz mostly plays music from the Classical and Romantic periods, particularly by Mozart. He has played many pieces for piano duet or four hands with Christoph Eschenbach.
Performances (selection)
- Festspiele Balver Höhle (1994 - 2007)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Justus Frantz. |
- Official website (Under construction) (in German)
- Biography
- http://archiv.handwerk-special.de/archiv/hw_spec/57_20.htm (in German)
- Interview with Justus Frantz by Bruce Duffie, February 20, 1991
References
- ↑ Justus Frantz auf Mallorca: ´Ein Tag allein am Klavier - das ist Glück´ in: Mallorca Zeitung vom 22. Juli 2010