Dirk Brosse
Dirk Brosse, born in Ghent in 1960, is one of Europe's most talented and multi-faceted composers and a gifted and respected conductor on the international music scene. Since 1999 he has held the title of Music Director of the Tokyo International Music Festival and is also Musical Host of the prestigious International Flanders Film Festival in Ghent. Dirk Brosse's musical studies were initially undertaken at the Royal Music Conservatory of Ghent and Brussels before focusing on conducting studies in Maastricht, Vienna and Cologne, gaining his conducting diploma from the Musikhochschule of Cologne. His many current academic responsibilities include the position of Professor in Composition and Conducting at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Ghent. In his home country, Dirk Brosse has been invited to conduct many of Belgian's major orchestras, including the Flemish Radio Orchestra (VRT) and the National Orchestra of Belgium. Abroad he has conducted the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the Philharmonic Orchestra of Shanghai, the Elgin Orchestra of Chicago, the Volgograd Philharmonic Orchestra, the Camerata St Petersburg, the Ulster Orchestra of Northern Ireland, the Philharmonic Orchestra of Milano, the Orquestra Metropolitana de Lisboa and the National Orchestras of Venezuela, Colombia and Ecuador. In 2001 he started working with The Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, The London Symphony Orchestra and The KBS Symphonic Orchestra of Seoul. Brosse is a versatile and internationally successful composer. His works include songs, chamber music, symphonic works, oratorios and music for the theatre and film. Among his 20 distinctive sound-tracks for award-winning films are "A Peasant's Psalm", "When the Light Comes", "Marie" (Nominated Overall Winner in the French Film Section at the Venice Film Festival in 1994), "Daens" (Academy Award Nomination 1993) and the classic silent film "Visages d?Enfants". Brosse's symphonic music is performed throughout the world. His major classical works include: "La Soledad de America Latina", which was written in collaboration with the Nobel Prize-winner Gabriel Garcia Marquez for the official opening of the 1992 World Exhibition in Seville and was subsequently performed in Stockholm, as part of that city's Cultural Capital of Europe celebrations, followed by further performances in Quito, Ecuador; the symphonies "Artesia" (which received the official patronage of the European Union) and "The Birth of Music" (where a synthesis of ethnic and classical instruments is created); the violin concertino "Black, White and in Between" and violin concerto "Sophia"; the "War Concerto" for clarinet soloist and orchestra; "Elegy for Cello and Orchestra"; and for soprano and orchestra the song cycles "Eppur si muove" and "La Vida es un Sueno". Artists with whom he has collaborated in performance include clarinettist Sabine Meyer, cellist Julian Lloyd Webber, the singers Anne Cambier, Claron McFadden, Derek Lee Ragin, Guy de Mey and, on a broader musical platform, the renowned Toots Thielemans, Hans Zimmer and Youssou N'Dour. With his scoring of the musical "Sacco & Vanzetti" commissioned by the Theatre of the Royal Ballet of Flanders in 1996, Dirk Brosse added a new dimension to the wide range of his oeuvre. With 92 critically acclaimed performances in the Netherlands and Belgium, this dramatic study of minority victims in a hyper-patriotic state, is now scheduled to appear on New York's Broadway. More recently, Brosse wrote the score for the musical based on the world-famous cartoon character "Tintin" created by Herge, which premiered in September 2001 in Belgium.