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Ulf Schirmer

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Ulf Schirmer became one of the most rapidly-developing young conducting talents in the 1990s.

He studied conducting and composition at the Bremen Conservatory and the Hamburg Adacemy of Music, where his instructors included composer György Ligeti and conductors Christoph von Dohnányi and Horst Stein.

In 1980 he was engaged as a choral director at the Vienna State Opera. Soon after that he became an assistant to the music director, Lorin Maazel. During his years in Vienna he conducted the State Opera in the operas Un re in ascolto (Berio), Die Entführung aus dem Serail (Mozart), and Werther (Massenet), as well as the ballets Raymunda (Glazunov) and Orpheus (Henze).

In 1988 Schirmer was hired as Principal Music Director of the Landeshaupstadt Wiesbaden and Artistic Director of the symphony concerts given by the orchestra of the Hessian State Theater. This position lasted into 1991, at which time he began to conduct more performances at the Vienna State Opera. From 1993 to 1995 he held the position of music consultant to the directors of the Vienna State Opera.

Meanwhile, he had debuted with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1992, and in September 1993, with the Berlin Philharmonic during the annual Berlin Festival Week. The Berlin Philharmonic engaged him for the 1994-1995 season.

In 1995 Schirmer was appointed Music Director of the National Radio Symphony, the world's oldest radio orchestra. He served in that capacity into 1998. During that time he took the orchestra on important tours through Europe and to the United States. On one tour, when he took the DNRO to be a guest ensemble at the BBC Proms concert in August, 1995, making his British Debut.

After the end of his tenure with the DNRO he embarked on some seasons as a guest conductor, including performances of Wagner's Siegfried and Götterdämmerung in Graz and Strauss's Rosenkavalier and Berg's Lulu at Paris's Opéra de la Bastille.

On records, notable recordings include Richard Strauss's Capriccio with Dame Kiri Te Kanawa and the Carl Nielsen's Maskarade.