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Jean-Marie Zeitouni, conductor |
b i o g r a p h y...........back to roster....up June 2012 Jean-Marie Zeitouni, music director of the Columbus Symphony and since 2011 principal conductor and artistic director of I Musici de Montréal, has emerged as one of Canadas brightest young conductors whose eloquent yet fiery style results in regular re-engagements across North America. Enjoying also an association with Les Violons du Roy that goes back many years, first as conductor-in-residence, then as associate conductor, and since 2008 as principal guest conductor, he has led the ensemble in more than 200 performances in the province of Québec, across Canada and in Mexico. In 2006, he recorded his first CD with Les Violons du Roy entitled "Piazzolla" which received a JUNO Award for Classical Album Of The Year in the category Solo or Chamber Ensemble in 2007. They also recorded two subsequent CDs: "Bartok" in 2008 and "Britten" in 2010. Next season promises another active guest-conducting schedule that brings him to the Calgary Philharmonic, the symphonies of Montreal, Edmonton and Victoria as well as the Grand Rapids Symphony, among other orchestras. He also conducts Offenbachs opera La belle Hélène in the Théâtre du Capitole, Toulouse. Audiences in 2011/12 saw him conduct the major Canadian orchestras, including subscription concerts with the Vancouver Symphony, Toronto Symphony and Montreal Symphony as well as a return to the Edmonton Symphony. In the US he led the Seattle Symphony, Phoenix Symphony and Handel & Haydn Society, and bowed in the pit of the St. Louis Opera for a Così fan tutte production in June 2012. 2010/11 brought a slew of return engagements in North America. Highlights in Canada included a Werther production with the Montreal Opera, and engagements with the Edmonton Symphony, Calgary Philharmonic, Quebec Symphony, Symphony Nova Scotia and I Musici de Montréal in a rare guest-appearance. In the US, he conducted the Oregon Symphony, San Antonio Symphony and Rigoletto with the Cincinnati Opera. In Canada, he returned in 2009/10 for three separate engagements with the Edmonton Symphony, the Montreal Symphony, Vancouver Symphony and the National Arts Center Orchestra. He appeared at the Lanaudière Festival and for the first time with the Toronto Symphony (conducting Handels Messiah and Bruckners 9th Symphony). In addition, he made subscription debuts with Winnipeg Symphony and Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony. In the US, he debuted in a subscription series with the Omaha Symphony, and returned to the San Antonio Symphony and Columbus Symphony. Earlier highlights in the opera pit included Faust at Calgary Opera, his debut with Edmonton Opera in Carmen, Mozarts Il re pastore with Opera Theatre of St. Louis, and Lucie de Lammermoor at Cincinnati Opera in its first staging of that work ever. Symphonic concerts of note were his subscription debuts with the Houston Symphony, Vancouver Symphony and the symphonies of San Antonio, Oregon, and Omaha in addition to his European conducting debut with the Philharmonique de Marseille. From 2002-2006 Jean-Marie Zeitouni was associate conductor and chorus master at lOpera de Montreal and was Music Director of their Young Artist Program. He was also music director of the Banff Centre "Opera as Theatre" program (2005-06), chorus master at lOpéra de Québec (2003-05) and choir director of the Québec Symphony Orchestra (2001-03). He was as well director of the orchestra and opera workshop of the Faculty of Music at Laval University (1999-2002). In the summer of 2004, Zeitouni acted as assistant conductor at the Mostly Mozart Festival in New York City for the Jonathan Miller production of Così fan tutte. Jean-Marie Zeitouni graduated from the Montreal Conservatory in conducting, percussion and theory. He studied with Maestro Raffi Armenian.
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. r e v i e w s...........back to roster....up Handel & Haydn Society Seattle Symphony Zeitouni took lots of chances. The "Hallelujah" Chorus, for instance, began not as the usual grandiose declaration, but instead rather quietly the better to build the drama into a gradual crescendo of considerable impact. Zeitouni's interpretive choices were underscored by his decision to have the strings play without vibrato, in a modern interpretation of 18th-century style. There was no sense of the routine or humdrum; instead, there were huge, dramatic pauses (notably at the ending of the "Hallelujah" Chorus) and movements taken at warp speed (such as "He Trusted in God"). It was an edgy and exciting reading, with a responsive orchestra and an eager Seattle Symphony Chorale following Zeitouni's every sweeping gesture. The life-and-death drama of the score was fully realized in this performance. Montreal Opera (Massenet’s Werther) Festival de Lanaudière The breadth of this concert showed off the remarkable talents of Zeitouni. In a program that could have been mawkish and sentimental, the maestro demonstrated balance and restraint. Yet, although he treated the composers with infinite respect, Zeitouni also understood their dramatic arc. The works radiated musical theatricality that included beautiful modulation and articulation. Toronto Symphony Toronto Symphony Toronto Symphony (debut) Winnipeg Symphony
Columbus Symphony
Montreal Symphony Opera Theatre of St. Louis (debut) Mozart’s Il re pastore Honolulu Symphony Columbus Symphony (debut)
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