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Philippe Tondre

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Philippe Tondre (born in 1989) is a French-British contemporary classical oboist.

Early days

Born in Mulhouse, Philippe Tondre started studying the oboe at the age of six in Yves Cautrès's class at the Mulhouse National School of Music before joining the Conservatoire de Paris in David Walter's class where he won his Prize of oboe as well as his master's degree in music interpretation. He also followed lessons by teachers such as Heinz Holliger, Maurice Bourgue, Jacques Tys,[1] Jean-Louis Capezzali and Ingo Goritzki.

Career

Very attached to orchestral activity, during his studies he integrated the Orchestre français des jeunes [fr] and the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester under the direction of Sir Colin Davis and Herbert Blomstedt. At the age of eighteen, he was appointed solo oboe of the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra (Südwestrundfunk) under the direction of Sir Roger Norrington and Georges Prêtre, a position he held from 2008 to 2016. At the age of 19, he was spotted by Seiji Ozawa in Japan and became in 2010 a member of the Saito Kinen Orchestra of Matsumoto and then, in 2012, the Mito Chamber Orchestra[2] under his direction. Since then, he has undertaken international tours with these two bands. As a guest solo oboe, Philippe Tondre has performed regularly with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Amsterdam, Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France, the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra.

He had the opportunity to perform as a soloist with the Orchestre de chambre de Genève, the New Mozart Orchestra[3] of London, the Collegium Musicum Basel [de], the Stuttgarter Kammerorchester, the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, the Kansai Philharmonic Orchestra, the Philharmonic Orchestra of Thailand, the Orchestre de Chambre de Munich,[4] the "Ensemble La Folia",[5] the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Saito Kinen Festival Orchestra and participates in many festivals in Asia, Europe and the United States.

In 2013, Philippe played the German premiere of James MacMillan's Oboe concerto under the direction of the composer in Stuttgart with his orchestra. In June of the same year, he played his "Debüt Konzert" at the Berlin Philharmonic with the Deutsche Sinfonie Orchester Berlin. He shared with Jacques Zoon the Japanese premiere of Gyorgy Ligeti's Double Concerto with Seiji Ozawa's orchestra in Matsumoto in 2013 and participated in the ARTE program "Stars de Demain" presented by Rolando Villazón in Berlin. He also leads numerous masterclasses in Germany, Taiwan, China and Japan.

In 2015 he joins the Budapest Festival Orchestra as Principal Oboe under the baton of Ivan Fischer and one year later becomes the Solo Oboe at the Leipzig Gewandhaus with Andris Nelsons, position he will hold one season before deciding to return to Stuttgart, rejoining the new named "SWR Symphony Orchestra" currently lead by Teodor Currentzis. Philippe Tondre is a teacher at the Hochschule für Musik Saar since 2015, becoming one of the youngest woodwind professor on german territory. Since march 2019, he has been the principal Oboe of the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, succeeding Douglas Boyd, Francois Leleux and Kai Frömbgen.

He is appointed, at the end of the recruitment process which ended on Sunday October 13, 2019, principal oboe of the Philadelphia Orchestra which he will join for summer festivals and then September 14, 2020 for the 2020-2021 season, following the retirement of Richard Woodhams. He thus perpetuates, following Marcel Tabuteau who held this same post from 1915 to 1954, the tradition of the presence of the French school of oboe in Philadelphia.

Awards

Tondre is the winner of all major international competitions dedicated to oboe: Third Prize and Gustav Mahler Prize at the Prague International Spring Music Competition,[6] First Prize at the Gillet-Fox competition of the International Double Reed Society in the United States, Second Prize at the International Competition of Japan organized by the Sony Foundation and Third Prize at the Geneva International Music Competition. In September 2011, he won the 60th ARD International Music Competition of Munich as well as three special prizes, including the Public Prize and the Prize for the best interpretation of Liza Lim's work composed for the competition, "Gyfu".[7] The following year, in September 2012, following his concert at the Bonn International Festival, he was awarded the Beethoven Ring, making him the first oboist to receive this prestigious award, which had previously been awarded to great musicians such as Gustavo Dudamel, Julia Fischer and Lisa Batiashvili.

References