Anssi Karttunen
Anssi Karttunen (born 1960) is a Finnish cellist.
Anssi Karttunen's repertoire ranges from the early baroque to the most recent composers. He performs with most world-class orchestras in Europe (Philharmonia, BBC Symphony, Orchestre de Paris, Filarmonica della Scala, RAI Torino, Munich Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra etc.), Asia (NHK Orchestra, Tokyo Symphony, Shanghai Symphony, Hong Kong Sinfonietta etc.) and the Americas (Boston Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra etc.) and at major festivals worldwide.
Karttunen has given world premieres of over 125 works for cello, among them 23 concertos. These include Fred Lerdahl's 2010 Arches. A large number of composers have dedicated works to him, among them Luca Francesconi, Magnus Lindberg, Kaija Saariaho, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Tan Dun, and Rolf Wallin. Karttunen has transcribed over 50 pieces for cello or various chamber ensembles, such as Brahms's Piano Quintet for String Quintet, Händel-Variations for String Trio and Schumann's Cello Concerto for solo cello and String Quartet.
Karttunen plays in the Zebra Trio with the violinist Ernst Kovacic and the violist Steven Dann.
Between 1994 and 1998 Karttunen was the artistic director of the Avanti! Chamber orchestra in Finland. He was the artistic director of the Helsinki Biennale (1995, 1997) and the Suvisoitto-festival in Porvoo, Finland (1994-1997). He was the principal cellist of the London Sinfonietta (1999-2005).
Karttunen's teachers included Erkki Rautio, William Pleeth, Jacqueline du Pré and Tibor de Machula. He plays a cello by Francesco Ruggeri.
Together with Kaija Saariaho, Jean-Baptiste Barrière and Muriel von Braun, Karttunen created www.petals.org, a non-profit organisation for distributing music in different forms over the internet.
Anssi Karttunen lives in Paris and is married to the Venezuelan-Finnish painter and sculptor Muriel von Braun.
External links
- Karttunen.org the cellist's official website
- [1] Zebra Trio website
- Petals.org Petals website