B i o g r a p h y
Frederic Chaslin
Frédéric Chaslin currently holds the position of Chief Conductor and Music Director of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra
Conductor, pianist, composer and author, Frédéric Chaslin was born in Paris and educated at the Paris Conservatoire and the Salzburg Mozarteum. He began his conducting career in 1989 as assistant to Daniel Barenboim in Paris and Bayreuth. He became Pierre Boulez’s assistant at the Ensemble Intercontemporain in Paris in 1991.
Mr. Chaslin served four seasons as Chief Conductor/Music Director of the Santa Fe Opera Festival where he made his Santa Fe Opera debut in 2009 conducting Verdi’s La Traviata. He opened the 2011 season with Gounod’s Faust and in 2012, he conducted Tosca with Thomas Hampson and Rossini’s Maometto II.
Major international festivals and companies at which Mr. Chaslin has appeared include leading houses in New York, Berlin, Munich, Leipzig, Madrid, Barcelona, Rome, Venice, Scotland, and Wales. He has also led all the major Parisian orchestras, the Vienna Symphony and Philharmonic, the Manchester Hallé, and the London Symphony and Philharmonia.
Mr. Chaslin, who served as music director at Rouen Opera for three years, made his international début in 1993 at Austria’s Bregenz Festival, where he conducted for four seasons and collaborated with David Pountney on notable productions of Nabucco and Fidelio. He served as the chief conductor of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra from 1999 to 2002, and was resident conductor at the Vienna Staatsoper starting in 1997, conducting more than 110 performances of major repertory. He was named general music director of Germany’s Nationaltheater Mannheim in 2005. Mr. Chaslin completed a series of Tosca performances for the New National Tokyo Theatre and returned there in the fall of 2010 to conduct Andrea Chénier, and will be back in Tokyo for Tales of Hoffmann in 2013.
Mr. Chaslin made his Metropolitan Opera debut in 2002, conducting Il Trovatore to great acclaim and since then has led Met productions of The Tales of Hoffmann, Sicilian Vespers, The Barber of Seville, and La Bohème. He conducted Romeo and Juliet at the Los Angeles Opera in 2005, with Rolando Villazon and Anna Netrebko in the title roles. Mr. Chaslin returned to the Vienna State Opera to conduct La Juive with Neil Shicoff and Werther with Jonas Kaufmann.
With a symphonic and operatic repertoire that ranges from Bach to contemporary music and drawing on his experience working with Barenboim in Bayreuth, he led a complete Ring cycle in Hanover. In Mannheim he conducted other Wagner operas including Tristan und Isolde and Tannhäuser as well as all of Richard Strauss’s major works.
Among his performances as pianist, Mr. Chaslin appeared with the Vienna Philharmonic in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5 and from the keyboard, he conducted Ravel’s G Major Concerto in Japan, Italy, Israel.
Mr. Chaslin considers the renewal of the repertoire an absolute priority and has been involved in more than twenty world premieres of contemporary works. He addresses this topic in his latest book, Music in Every Sense, an in-depth look at aspects of modern music and its relationship with the audience. Already published in French and German, the book will soon appear in English.
As a composer, Mr. Chaslin has written orchestral pieces, movie soundtracks and operas. His compositions include the Chagall Suite for Orchestra whose world premiere was performed by the Jerusalem Symphony, “Diva Dance” for the film The Fifth Element, and the opera Wuthering Heights on a libretto by P.H. Fisher and recorded by the London Philharmonia and the London Sympony Chorus. The Overture and Choral Suite from Wuthering Heights have been recently performed in Oslo, Bologna, Israel. Wuthering Heights selections were heard in St. Petersburg with Valery Gergiev conducting Natalie Dessay, singing two of the lead arias from the opera. Soprano Diana Damrau features the Vocalize from Wuthering Heights on her upcoming CD due for release in 2013. In musical theater, he conceived and conducted Le Tour de Gaule de Asterix for the 50th Anniversary celebration of Asterix in Paris. Frédéric Chaslin has written 3 song cycles based on the poems of Robert Frost which premiered in Santa Fe.
Current works-in-progress include a symphonic work and an operatic Diptyque Fantastique: La Morte Amoureuse coupled with Avatar, based on the short works of French author Theophile Gautier, libretto by P.H. Fisher
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