Matthias Wollong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Matthias Wollong (born 31 December 1968) is a German violinist.

Career[edit]

Matthias Wollong an der Violine
Matthias Wollong (2016)

Born in Berlin, Wollong began playing the violin at the age of five. After training in the master class of Werner Scholz, he went to Switzerland from 1987 to 1989 to study with violinist and pedagogue Tibor Varga. During this time, he performed as a soloist in the Federal Republic, France and Switzerland. He ended his studies there by winning the violin competition named after his teacher. Further prizes followed, such as the main prize at the "Joseph Joachim" violin competition in Austria.

As a soloist he has worked with the conductors Ádám Fischer, Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, Marek Janowski, Vladimir Jurowski and Colin Davis and the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Staatskapelle Dresden,[1] the Berliner Symphoniker and the Deutsches Nationaltheater und Staatskapelle Weimar.

In his younger years he was a member of the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra. Since 1999, Wollong has been 1st concertmaster of the Sächsische Staatskapelle, after holding the same position with the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin from 1991 to 1999. During the summer months, he plays as 1st concertmaster in the orchestra of the Bayreuth Festival.[2]

Wollong devotes himself intensively to chamber music. He has performed in various formations at the Salzburg Easter Festival and at the International Shostakovich Days Gohrisch.[3] As a chamber musician, he has released radio and CD recordings, such as the complete works for violin by Othmar Schoeck and Wilhelm Furtwängler, the piano trios by Johannes Brahms and Ludwig van Beethoven (Genuin). In 2008 he received an "Echo Klassik" for the recording of chamber music by Erich Wolfgang Korngold.

Since 2003, he has had an ongoing collaboration as conductor and soloist with the European Union Chamber Orchestra, with whom he has toured Europe, the Far East and North and South America.

As a conductor, he has led the German Chamber Orchestra, the Thüringen Philharmonie Gotha-Eisenach and made guest appearances with the Cairo Symphony Orchestra.

Wollong has a professorship at the Hochschule für Musik Franz Liszt, Weimar[4] where he also lives. He plays on a violin by Andrea Guarneri from 1676.

Recordings[edit]

Work Contributors Label
Alfredo Casella

Violinkonzert a-moll op. 48

Michael Sanderling

Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin

Capriccio
Alfredo Casella

Tripelkonzert op 56

Danjulo Ishizaka, violoncello

Frank Immo Zichner, piano

Capriccio
Ernest Bloch

Konzert für Violine und Orchester

Vladimir Jurowski

Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin

Capriccio
Salomon Jadassohn

Klaviertrio op. 85, Klavierquartett op. 77, Klavierquintett op. 126

Birgitta Wollenweber [de], piano

Matthias Wollong, Jörg Faßmann, violins, Hartmut Rohde, viola

Michael Sanderling, violoncello

Real Sound
Erich Wolfgang Korngold

Suite op. 23

Trio Parnassus Musikproduktion Dabringhaus und Grimm
Florent Schmitt

Klavierquintett op. 51

À tour d'anches op. 97

Solistenensemble Berlin Naxos
Gaetano Donizetti

La Favorite, arranged for two violins by Richard Wagner

Matthias Wollong, Jörg Faßmann, violins

Daniel Morgenroth [de], narrator

Oehms Classics
Wilhelm Furtwängler

Violinsonaten Nr. 1+2

Birgitta Wollenweber, piano cpo
Othmar Schoeck

Sonaten für Violine und Klavier

Patricia Pagny, piano Musikszene Schweiz, MGB
Johannes Brahms

Klaviertrios Nr. 1–3

Trio Ex Aequo Genuin
Ludwig van Beethoven

Klaviertrios op 70 Nr. 1 ("Geistertrio"), op. 121a, op. 1 No. 2

Trio Ex Aequo Genuin

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Advert - Staatskapelle Dresden". Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  2. ^ Nordbayerischer Kurier Germany. "Wollong: Mit der Präsenz eines Solisten - Nordbayerischer Kurier" (in German). Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Concertmaster Matthias Wollong on Gohrisch, Shostakovich and the Staatskapelle Dresden". Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  4. ^ "Hochschule für Musik FRANZ LISZT Weimar - Mitarbeiter - Lehrende". Retrieved 2 March 2021.

External links[edit]