French Horn

Bruno Schneider is among the wolrd’s most sought after hornists. Principal horn in Claudio Abbado’s Lucerne Festival Orchestra, he is a regular guest of the most prestigious chamber music venues with such artists as Sabine Meyer, Eric Le Sage, Paul Meyer, François Leleux, Emmanuel Pahud, …

After having played for 15 years as solo horn in Zürich, Münich and finally Geneva in the OSR (Suisse Romande Orchestra), he now teaches at the Music Conservatory in Geneva and at the Musikhochschule in Freiburg, Germany.

Bruno Schneider is among the wolrd’s most sought after hornists. Principal horn in Claudio Abbado’s Lucerne Festival Orchestra, he is a regular guest of the most prestigious chamber music venues with such artists as Sabine Meyer, Eric Le Sage, Paul Meyer, François Leleux, Emmanuel Pahud, …

After having played for 15 years as solo horn in Zürich, Münich and finally Geneva in the OSR (Suisse Romande Orchestra), he now teaches at the Music Conservatory in Geneva and at the Musikhochschule in Freiburg, Germany.

Many composers such as Norbert Moret, Jost Meyer, Eric Chasalow and Jörg Widmann have written major works for him.

Founder of the Académie de cor de La Chaux de Fonds and of the Swiss horn society, Bruno Schneider is currently vice president of the International Horn Society.

A large part of the horn repertoire has been recorded by Bruno Schneider at AVI, EMI, CLAVES, ARION, ERATO and CPO. Since 2003 Bruno Schneider has been principal horn in Maestro Claudio Abbado’s Lucerne Festival Orchestra.

Performances

Jordan Hall at New England Conservatory | January 27, 2012

News and Press

[Concert Review] Mandolin Power! And other Unexpected Delights

On Friday, January 27, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project (a.k.a. BMOP) presented Strange Bedfellows: Unexpected Concertos, showcasing instruments don't get to be concerto soloists as often as their ubiquitous cousins, like violin or piano. Here, the spotlight was on viola, electric guitar, mandolin, theremin and French horn. All but one of the pieces were written in the last six years, and together they showed that contemporary classical music is thriving — don't let anyone tell you different!

Miss Music Nerd Full review
[Concert Review] BMOP five concertos cover some brave, new frontiers

The Boston Modern Orchestra Project called its program of five "unexpected concertos" at Jordan Hall Friday "Strange Bedfellows." None (well, almost none) of the music induced slumber, however. Created for an odd array of solo instruments (viola, electric guitar, theremin, mandolin, French horn) accompanied by instrumental ensembles of various size and composition, the works prodded at the frontiers of traditional concerto form. Electronic and acoustic sounds engaged in conversation - sometimes in rancorous argument - across the centuries, forcing us to rethink this venerable genre.

The Boston Globe Full review
[Concert Review] BMOP Revitalizes the Concept of a Concerto Concert

Leave it to the Boston Modern Orchestra Project (BMOP) to completely revitalize the concept of a concerto concert. This past Friday night at Jordan Hall, the orchestra, conducted by music director Gil Rose, presented a thoroughly energizing and invigorating concert of five concerti written by composers born between 1923 and 1979.

Billed as Strange Bedfellows: Unexpected Concertos, the program featured concertos for, respectively, viola, electric guitar, mandolin, theremin, and horn.

The Arts Fuse Full review
[Concert Review] Oooh-weee-oooh: BMOP unveils a concerto for theremin, among works for other offbeat instruments

If you're one of those concertgoers who look forward most to the concerto, the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, led by its artistic director Gil Rose, had a concert for you Friday night at Jordan Hall.

Boston Classical Review Full review
[Press Release] BMOP Unites Five Varying Composers and Concertos for One Night

The Boston Modern Orchestra Project (BMOP), the nation's premier orchestra dedicated exclusively to commissioning, performing, and recording new orchestral music, presents "Strange Bedfellows: Unexpected Concertos" – a program of five incongruous concertos by five different composers featuring five of today's most revered solo artists. Spearheading the evening is the world premiere of Eric Chasalow's Horn Concerto with horn soloist Bruno Schneider.

Full review