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Biography
Principal Guest Conductor: Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien
Composer, conductor and teacher, Peter Eötvös’ music features regularly in the programmes of orchestras, theatres, contemporary music ensembles and festivals worldwide. His operas, Le Balcon, Angels in America, Lady Sarashina and Love and Other Demons have followed the lead of his Three Sisters by generating an ever-increasing number of new productions; and Eötvös’s latest opera, Die Tragödie des Teufels, was premiered in 2010 at the Bayerische Staatsoper Munich. Equally in demand as a conductor Peter Eötvös is invited by many of the world’s most prestigious orchestras and ensembles including the Berliner Philharmoniker, Wiener Philharmoniker, Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, and the Royal Concertgebouw, London Symphony, and Cleveland orchestras. He also works regularly with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, NHK Symphony Orchestra, Ensemble intercontemporain and Ensemble Modern. He is the Principal Guest Conductor of Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien.
Reviews
"Like any opera, Eötvös's Angels has to stand on its own feet, dramatically and musically, and to judge by the UK premiere at the Barbican, it manages that convincingly... this is high-class music theatre." (The Guardian, March 2010)
“With the composer himself on the podium, a chamber ensemble in the pit, a full symphony orchestra behind a dark gauze at the back of the stage, and a superbly matched cast of first-rate soloists, the odds were stacked towards success. And indeed, the 110-minute work was flawlessly performed and warmly received by a full house… Eötvös has written an immediate and engaging work, the vocal lines eminently singable, the orchestration full of small jokes, descriptive effects and beautiful soundscapes.” (Financial Times, February 2010)
Composer, conductor, teacher – “His is a music which must be experienced live. Even more important, one must pay attention to every note, every movement, every gesture. This music, while stunningly beautiful at times, is neither reverie nor comfort. It is a music memory and sorcery and produces ever-increasing awe.” (Concertonet.com, January 2009)
“Eötvös's confident score… is full of authentically magical things. His orchestral imagination is keen and he has simplified his musical language without ever making it simplistic. There are ravishing sounds here, combined with equally convincing vocal writing often spun over diaphanous textures…” (The Guardian, August 2008)








