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Enrique Arturo Diemecke
Flint Symphony Orchestra Music Director and Conductor
Maestro
Diemecke brings an electrifying balance of passion, intellect and technique
to his performances. Warmth, pulse, and spontaneity are all hallmarks of his
conducting – conducting that has earned him an international reputation
for performances that are riveting in their sweep and dynamism. In the words
of The New York Times, Diemecke is a conductor of “fierceness and authority.” A
noted interpreter of the works of Mahler, Maestro Diemecke has been awarded
a Mahler Society medal for his performances of the composer’s complete
symphonies.
In his third season as Music Director of the Buenos Aires Philharmonic of
the famed Teatro Colon, Enrique Arturo Diemecke enters his eighth season as
Music Director of the Long Beach Symphony in California and his twentieth season
as Music Director of the Flint Symphony Orchestra. Having completed his tenure
of 20 years at the helm of the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de México,
Maestro Diemecke returned to opera as he opened the 2007-2008 leading a new
production of Werther at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires, which followed performances
of Le Jongleur de Notre Dame with tenor Roberto Alagna, which has been recorded
by Deutsche Grammophon.
A frequent guest of orchestras throughout the world,
Maestro Diemecke makes his debut with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra
in 2008. His most recent appearances have included performances with the French
National Orchestra, the BBC Symphony, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, L’Orchestre
de Paris, the Pacific Symphony, the Residentie Orkest in The Hague, the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, Charlotte Symphony, Winnipeg Symphony, Phoenix Symphony,
the Hartford Symphony, the Simon Bolivar Orchestra in Caracas, l’Orchestre
National de Lorraine, the National Orchestra of Montpellier, the Columbus Symphony
Orchestra, the Valladolid Symphony, the ORCAM Madrid, L’Orchestre de
Isle de France, the Chautauqua Symphony Orchestra, the Columbus Symphony, the
National Orchestra of Colombia, the National Symphony in Washington, D.C.,
and the symphony orchestras of Baltimore, Houston, Minnesota, Colorado and
Fort Worth.
An experienced conductor of opera, Maestro Diemecke served as Music Director
of the Bellas Artes Opera of Mexico from 1984-1990, where he led more than
20 productions, including Faust, La Boheme, Salome, Elektra, Ariadne auf
Naxos, Der fliegende Hollander, Rigoletto, Turandot, Madama Butterfly, and Romeo
et Juliette. He has since returned as a guest conductor with new productions of
Lohengrin in 1996, Boris Godunov in 1997 and Gluck’s Orfeo
ed Euridice in 2005. He led Opera Pacific’s 2005 production of I
Pagliacci and Carmina Burana, is a regular guest of the famed Teatro Zarzuela in Madrid, and was
awarded the Jean Fontaine Orpheus d’Or Gold Medal for “best vocal
music recording” by France’s Academy of Lyric Recordings for his
recording of Donizetti’s The Exiles of Siberia with the L’Orchestre
Philharmonique de Montpellier-Languedoc-Roussillon. Maestro Diemecke was previously
honored with a Gold Medal from the Academy of Lyric Recordings in 2000 when
he was awarded the Bruno Walter Orpheus d’Or Prize for Best Opera Conductor
for his live recording of Mascagni’s Parisina, made at the Radio France
Festival during the summer of 1999.
Maestro Diemecke led the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de México
on a ten-city tour of the United States, culminating with a program of Latin
American masterworks at New York’s Carnegie Hall. He and the Orquesta
Sinfónica Nacional de México were nominated for Best Classical
Album for the 3rd Annual Latin Grammy Awards for 2002, for their CD disc of
Carlos Chávez’s Violin and Piano Concertos with violinist Pablo
Roberto Diemecke and pianist Jorge Federico Osorio.
Diemecke led the National Orchestra of France and Cecilia Bartoli, Jean-Yves
Thibaudet, Maria Joao Pires, and Pierre Amoyal for the sixth edition of Les
Victoires de la Musique Classique et Jazz, which was aired on French television
and radio.
Diemecke has collaborated with some of the finest artists of our time, including
Mstislav Rostropovich, Yo-Yo Ma, Ravi Shankar, Ivo Pogorelich, Midori, Shlomo
Mintz, Henryk Szeryng, Placido Domingo, and Frederica von Stade. He is also
frequently invited to festivals such as the Lincoln Center Summer Festival,
the Hollywood Bowl Festival, Wolf Trap, Autumno Musicale a Como (Italy), Europalia
(Brussels), World Fair Expo Sevilla (Spain), and Festival International Radio
France.
Maestro Diemecke is an accomplished composer and orchestral arranger, and
has conducted his own composition, Die-Sir-E, during the Mexican National Symphony
Orchestra tour of the U.S. in 1999. The Die-Sir-E was commissioned by the Radio
France Festival for the World Cup Final Concert in France in 1998. Maestro
Diemecke was commissioned to write a tone poem for the Flint Symphony Orchestra,
and his works Chacona a Chávez and Guitar Concerto have received many
performances both in Europe and in the United States. During the 2001-2002
season, he gave the world premiere of his work Camino y vision, which is dedicated
to former President Vincente Fox of Mexico, with the Tulsa Philharmonic. Maestro
Diemecke’s recent recording with the Flint Symphony Orchestra of the
1896 version of Mahler’s First Symphony (which includes the subsequently
deleted “Blumine” movement) was nominated for a Grammy Award.
Diemecke has also recorded the music of Revueltas, Chávez and Moncayo
for Sony/Mexico with the Orquesta Sinfónica de México, which
have became best-sellers in Mexico, earning the conductor and orchestra the
Golden Record Award. Other releases by Maestro Diemecke have included the music
of Villa-Lobos and Silvestre Revueltas on the Dorian label with the Simon Bolivar
Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela. In these recordings, as well as in his concert
performance, Maestro Diemecke has earned particular renown as a pioneering
advocate of the music of Chávez and Revueltas, Mexico’s greatest
composers, and his CD of Revueltas’ masterwork La noche de los Mayas has become a recording classic.
Born in Mexico, Enrique Diemecke comes from
a German family of classical musicians. He began to play the violin at the
age of six studying for many years with the legendary violinist Henryk Szeryng.
At the age of nine he added French horn, piano and percussion to his studies.
Diemecke attended Catholic University in Washington, D.C. and continued his
studies with Charles Bruck at the Pierre Monteux School for Advanced Conductors
on a scholarship granted by Madame Pierre Monteux. |
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