Kyoto Symphony Orchestra
Conductors
♪Junichi HIROKAMI (Chief Conductor)
♪Naoto OTOMO (Conductor Laureate)
♪Chief Conductors of the Kyoto Symphony Orchestra
Junichi HIROKAMI
(The 12th Chief Conductor of KSO)
Photo:Greg Sailor
Born in Tokyo in 1958, Junichi Hirokami studied conducting, piano, musicology, and
viola at the prestigious Tokyo College of Music. He began his conducting
career at age
26, after winning the first Kondrashin International Conducting Competition
in
Amsterdam. The jury included distinguished international musicians Bernard Haitink
and Vladimir Ashkenazy, who subsequently invited Hirokami to conduct during
a 1985
concert tour in Japan with the NHK Symphony Orchestra. The success of that
tour
was followed by another collaboration with Ashkenazy the following year, with the
Orchestre National de Paris.
Maestro Hirokami is a favorite at the Japan Philharmonic, where he served
as
Principal Guest Conductor. Other regular engagements in Japan include concerts
with
the NHK Symphony Orchestra (Tokyo), Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra,
Tokyo
Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra, and orchestras in other large Japanese cities,
including Osaka, Nagoya, Sapporo, Kyushu (Fukuoka), Kanagawa (Yokohama),
Sendai, and Kanazawa.
Since 1990, he has conducted major orchestras in Europe, including the
Concertgebouw, the Oslo and Stockholm philharmonics, the Vienna Symphony,
Barcelona Symphony Orchestra, Madrid Symphony Orchestra, Gewandhaus
Orchestra Leipzig, Slovenian Philharmonic and Verdi Orchestra Milan. Between 1988
and 1995, Hirokami was affiliated with Sweden’s Norrkoping Symphony Orchestra
where, during his tenure as Chief Conductor, he recorded for the BIS (Sweden)
and
Fun House (Japan) labels, toured the orchestra to Japan, and oversaw the building of
a state-of-the-art concert hall.
His acclaimed debut with the Philharmonia Orchestra of London in April 2000
followed overwhelming successes with the London Philharmonic, London Symphony,
and the BBC Orchestra. Since 1992, he has worked regularly with the Royal
Philharmonic Orchestra, including recording the highly praised release
of Mahler's
Symphony No. 4 and Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique on the Denon label.
Hirokami launched his North American career in 1996 with the Toronto Symphony,
Cincinnati Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and Dallas Symphony. Other
symphonic engagements have included Baltimore, Columbus, Denver, Detroit,
Fort
Worth, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Ottawa, Pittsburgh, St Louis, Seattle,
Vancouver,
Winnipeg, Calgary, and Charlotte.
In 1989, Hirokami made his operatic debut in a new production of Verdi’s
Un Ballo in
Maschera with the Australian Opera in Sydney, and was immediately re-invited to
conduct Rigoletto in 1990 and La Forza Del Destino in 1992. Hirokami served
as Chief
Conductor of the Limburg Symphony Orchestra in Holland, directing their
opera as
well. He was the first Japanese conductor to direct the Israel Philharmonic. He was
Principal Guest Conductor with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic from 1997-2000,
achieving great success directing choral works, including Beethoven’s Ninth
Symphony, Brahms’ German Requiem, Mozart’s Requiem, and Haydn’s Creation.
From 2006 -2008, Hirokami was Music Director of the Columbus Symphony
Orchestra. And he is Chief Conductor of Kyoto Symphony Orchestra from April
2008.
One of the leading conductors of his generation, Naoto Otomo is constantly in
demand, regularly conducting all the major Japanese orchestras.
Mr. Otomo began his career at the age of 21 as Assistant Conductor of
the NHK
Symphony Orchestra, and made his debut with the orchestra a year later. After five
years with the NHK Symphony Orchestra, he went on to hold posts at the
Japan
Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra and the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra, with
which he gave a highly successful tour of Europe in 1986. Mr. Otomo also
enjoys a
very close relationship with the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, conducting them
regularly in Japan as well as leading them on several tours: Southeast
Asia in 1988
and throughout Europe in 1994 and 1996. Recent activities outside Japan include,
include performances with the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, the Philharmonia, the
Colorado Symphony and the Indianapolis orchestras.
In 1992, Naoto Otomo and contemporary composer Shigeaki Saegusa combined
strengths to form the Japan Virtuoso Symphony Orchestra. This ad hoc group is
made up of members from the ranks of Tokyo's nine major orchestras and performs
several times a year throughout Japan. The ensemble has achieved great
recognition,
through not only their live performances, but also through broadcasts on
NHK
television and radio, and CD releases on Sony Music.
Mr. Otomo made his opera debut in November 1988 with Weber's Freischutz
to the
enthusiastic acclaim of press and audiences alike. Following this triumph, he
continued with a succession of opera productions including Gluck's Orfeo and
Eurydice with Tokyo's Nissay Arts Theater (1990-1991); Verdi's Rigoletto, together
with the Nikikai Opera Foundation (1991-1992); and The Magic Flute, as
the first opera
performance to be staged at Aichi Prefectural Arts Theater (1992-1993).
During the
1997 season, he conducted the world premiere Chushingura by Shigeaki Saegusa.
Naoto Otomo's career includes collaborations with a host of international
artists
including: violinists Gil Shaham, Augustin Dumay, Frank Peter Zimmermann,
Joshua
Bell, Shlomo Mintz, Régis Pasquier, and Jean-Jacques Kantorow; violists
Yuri
Bashmet, Bruno Pasquier, and Gérard Caussé; cellists Mario Brunello and
David
Geringas; pianists Radu Lupu, André Watts, Stephen Kovacevich, Bruno-Leonardo
Gelber, Ivan Moravec, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Cyprien Katsaris, Jean-Phillipe
Collard,
Cristina Ortiz, Christian Ivaldi, Hüseyin Sermet, Georges Pludermacher, and Hélène
Grimaud; trumpeter Maurice André; soprano Sumi Jo and tenor José Carreras. His
successful partnerships with these artists have resulted in requests for further
collaborations.
Since his first recording at the age of 20, Mr. Otomo's wide repertoire,
ranging from
classical to contemporary works, has been featured on numerous other releases.
Currently, Naoto Otomo is Conductor Laureate of the Kyoto Symphony Orchestra
after seven years as its Chief Conductor, Permanent Conductor of the Tokyo
Symphony Orchestra and Music Director of the Tokyo Bunka Kaikan.
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