Julius Berger (cellist)

Julius Berger (born 1954) is a German cellist, musicologist and an academic of chamber music and cello at the Leopold Mozart Centre of the Augsburg University. He recorded the sonatas and concertos by Luigi Boccherini, but also contemporary music by John Cage, Toshio Hosokawa, Adriana Hölszky and Sofia Gubaidulina. He is the artistic director of music festivals.

Julius Berger
Born1954 (age 6566)
Education
Occupation
  • Cellist
  • Academic
Organization
Websitewww.juliusberger.de

Career

Born in Augsburg, Berger studied at the Musikhochschule München with Walter Reichardt and Fritz Kiskalt, then at the Mozarteum in Salzburg with Antonio Janigro, before becoming his assistant from 1979 to 1982. He studied further at the University of Cincinnati with Zara Nelsova, and in a master class of Mstislav Rostropovich. He was appointed professor at the Musikhochschule Würzburg at age 28, as one of Germany's youngest professors at the time.[1] From 1992, he has held a class at the Internationale Sommerakademie Mozarteum Salzburg.

Berger is focused on the rediscovery of the complete works by Luigi Boccherini[1][2] and Leonardo Leo. He recorded all cello concertos by Boccherini in 1992, including a twelfth concerto which was then recently rediscovered, on Boccherini's own Stradivari instrument.[3] Berger is interested in the oldest music written for cello by Pietro degli Antonii and Domenico Gabrielli.[2] He has also played and recorded chamber music by Paul Hindemith, Ernst Bloch, Max Bruch, Richard Strauss, Robert Schumann and Edward Elgar to international recognition.[1]

In the field of contemporary music, Berger recorded works by John Cage, Toshio Hosokawa, Adriana Hölszky and Sofia Gubaidulina.[2][4] He is the artistic director of the festivals Eckelshausener Musiktage and Asiago Festival in Italy.[2] He authored Irritationskraft in the Hindemith-Jahrbuch 1992, Einheit in der Vielfalt - Vielfalt in der Einheit in the research magazine of the Mainz University in 1998, and Zeit und Ewigkeit for Cardinal Karl Lehmann in 2001, among others.

Berger has taught at the Musikhochschule Augsburg from 2000, serving as the deputy director of its Leopold Mozart Centre from 2010.[2] He plays a cello built by Andrea Amati in 1566.[5]

Recordings

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References

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