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Gerd Kühr

Gerd Kühr dirigiert
© Werner Kmetitsch

The conductor and composer was born in Austria in 1952 and studied at the Mozarteum in Salzburg. Gerd Kühr achieved his international breakthrough in 1988 with the premiere of the opera "Stallerhof" and has since been celebrated for his commissioned works.

About the Artist

Gerd Kühr mit nachdenklichem Blick

To me, composing means not so much inventing but rather finding.

Gerd Kühr, born in Austria in 1952, studied composition at the Mozarteum Salzburg under Josef Friedrich Doppelbauer and Hans Werner Henze in Cologne, and also studied conducting with Gerhard Wimberger (Mozarteum) and Sergiu Celibidache. From 1992 to 1994, Gerd Kühr was guest professor for composition at the Mozarteum and from 1994 in Graz. In 1995, he became a tenured professor for composition and music theory at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Graz.

His international breakthrough came with the world premiere of the opera “Stallerhof” (libretto by Franz Xaver Kroetz) in 1988 at the 1st Munich Biennale (with further productions in Germany, Austria and Switzerland). In 1992, Vienna Modern presented several works by Gerd Kühr as part of the programme “Representatives of the Young Generation”.

In 1999, the opera „Tod und Teufel“ (libretto by Peter Turrini) was performed at the Graz Opera House. Further highlights of his musical work include two portrait concerts in the series “Next Generation” at the Salzburg Festival in 2000, his work as “composer in residence” at the Vienna Concert Association in 2001-2002 (Chamber Orchestra of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra), a performance at the Styriarte Festival of 2003, and the Gerd Kühr Project ⎯ an opening concert in the programme „musikprotokoll“/steirischer herbst 2005.

In January 2012, Gerd Kühr received the Austrian Art Prize for Music and in 2014, the Andrzej Dobrowolski Composition Prize of the Federal State of Styria.

With the positioning of debut performances, Gerd Kühr makes a lasting impression and can always count on the close attention of a very interested audience. This was the case in the Mozart Year 2006 with “Movimenti” for violin and Orchestra being heard for the first time at the Wiener Musikverein. During the Salzburger Festspiele 2006, “Stop the Piano” was received with enthusiasm by both the audience and the critics.

Gerd Kühr created numerous commissioned works (for orchestra, ensemble, chamber music, choir) that were performed, among others, at the Wien Modern, Almeida Festival, Huddersfield Festival, steirischen herbst, musica viva, Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, and the Bregenzer Festspiele. Gerd Kühr has worked artistically with numerous ensembles and soloists, including  Ensemble Modern, ensemble xx.jahrhundert, Klangforum Wien, Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, Arnold Schoenberg Choir, Bavarian Radio Choir, with Ulf Schirmer, Emilio Pomárico, Bertrand de Billy, Stefan Asbury, HK Gruber, Dennis Russell Davis, Friedrich Cerha, Lothar Zagrosek, Oliver Knussen, Arturo Tamayo as well as Reto Bieri, Paul Meyer, Heinrich Schiff, Stefan Vladar, Florian Kitt, Markus Hinterhäuser und Patricia Kopatchinskaja.

With the support of the Ernst von Siemens Music Foundation, the Leipzig Opera has commissioned Gerd Kühr and the librettist Hans-Ulrich Treichel with composing the opera Paradiese  – the world premiere is scheduled for 3 July 2021.

Gerd Kühr – the conductor can also be experienced in the upcoming seasons. Gerd Kühr has conducted numerous concerts in Austria, Italy, Germany, Russia and Guatemala.

Gerd Kühr was to conduct Ligeti’s violin concerto in April 2020 in Graz, as part of the Styriarte programme. As this event could not take place due to the corona crisis, he found the time to write a special piece for this special period: “Corona Meditation”,  a piece for any number of pianos and for pianists of various artistic levels, to be performed in the space that is currently open to art, the Internet.

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