Matt Schicker, Paula Mlyn, Li-Ling Wang, Janet Kessin
The Juilliard Symphony, Conducted by Otto-Werner Mueller, Plays Music of Beethoven, Brahms, and Prokofiev Tuesday, November 26 at 8 PM in Alice Tully Hall
Violin soloist to be announced November 9, 2002.
Juilliards Director of Orchestral Studies Otto-Werner Mueller conducts the Juilliard Symphony on Tuesday, November 26 at 8 PM in Alice Tully Hall, in a program of Beethovens Coriolan Overture, Op. 62, and Prokofievs Symphony No. 5 in B-flat Major, Op. 100. Brahms Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 77 also will be played; the student violin soloist for this work will be announced after November 9, 2002. Free tickets are required and will be available starting November 12, 2002 at the Juilliard Box Office. For more information, please call the box office at (212) 769-7406. The Juilliard Box Office, located at 60 Lincoln Center Plaza, is open Monday-Friday from 11 AM - 6 PM.
Born in Bensheim, Germany in 1926, conductor Otto-Werner Mueller has helped shape the orchestral training programs of distinguished musical institutions in the United States and Canada. After studying conducting, composition, piano, trumpet, and viola in Frankfurt, Mr. Mueller became director of the chamber music department for Radio Stuttgart at the age of nineteen, and was founder and conductor of the celebrated Radio Stuttgart Chamber Choir. Two years later, he served as conductor of opera and operetta for the Heidelberg Theater. In Heidelberg, he founded the orchestra for dependents of United States military forces stationed there. Emigrating in 1951 to Canada, Mr. Mueller worked extensively for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as conductor of opera, ballet, and symphonic presentations, and in 1958 became teacher and conductor at the Montreal Conservatory. He later served as director of the Victoria Symphony, and was founder and dean of the Victoria School of Music.
Mr. Mueller was a guest professor at the Moscow State Conservatory in 1963, and toured the Republics of the former Soviet Union in 1968 and 1970, conducting the Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Riga symphonies. He has conducted throughout North America and was a guest conductor at the Scottish National Orchestra and the Krakow Philharmonic.
Mr. Mueller has trained the conductors of many American orchestras, teaching at the Yale University School of Music, University of Wisconsin-Madison, American Choral Foundation's Summer Institute, Aspen Music Festival, American Symphony Orchestra League's conducting seminars, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute. He is currently a member of the faculty at The Curtis Institute of Music and Director of Orchestral Studies at The Juilliard School.