DANIEL GIGLBERGER

Foto: Florian Ganslmeier
Foto: Florian Ganslmeier

As concertmaster, Daniel Giglberger is a welcome guest with renowned orchestras and ensembles; he regularly works with the Kammerakademie Potsdam, the Camerata Salzburg and the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen, as well as with the hr-Sinfonieorchester, the Bayerisches Staatsorchester, the NYYD Ensemble (Tallinn) and the Kioi Hall Chamber Orchestra Tokyo. He has been concertmaster of the Munich Chamber Orchestra since 1999. He has also held the same position with the Haydn Philharmonic Orchestra in Eisenstadt since 2017. Daniel Giglberger is equally committed to the performance of contemporary music and the exploration of historical performance practices in the Baroque and Classical periods.

 

As a soloist and chamber musician, he has given numerous concerts in Japan, China, the USA and Europe and has been a guest at many renowned festivals, such as the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, the Rheingau Music Festival, Styriarte in Graz and the Carinthian Summer in Ossiach. In 2001, he made his debut in the Chamber Music Hall of the Berlin Philharmonie and has also performed at venues such as the Vienna Musikverein, the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, the Alte Oper Frankfurt and the Cologne Philharmonie.

 

Daniel Giglberger, born in Freising, studied with Christoph Poppen, Donald Weilerstein and most recently with Gerhard Schulz. He completed masterclasses with Franco Gulli, Walter Levin, Miriam Fried and Josef Gingold and was a scholarship holder of the European Mozart Foundation and the Karl Klingler Foundation.He also received important impulses from Reinhard Goebel in the field of historical performance practice.Daniel Giglberger was a prizewinner at the II Concours International de Château du Courcillon (France) and the chamber music competition of the Detmold University of Music.

Foto: Florian Ganslmeier

Zum Vergrößern klicken

Foto: Florian Ganslmeier

Zum Vergrößern klicken

Foto: Florian Ganslmeier

Zum Vergrößern klicken

Foto: Sammy Hart

Zum Vergrößern klicken
Menü