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All Music Guide:
Said to be one of the most innovative conductors around, Dennis Russell Davies has performed with the best orchestras the world of classical music and opera have to offer.
Davis was born in Ohio in 1944. He later moved to New York to study piano and conducting at the famous Juilliard School of Music; in 1968 he began to conduct the school's ensemble. He became the musical director for the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra in 1972.
In 1980, Davies moved to Germany, but continued to perform in the United States, as well as other countries. He has served as conductor or music director for the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra, the Basel Symphony Orchestra, the Brooklyn Philharmonic Orchestra, the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Beethovenhalle Orchestra, the Cologne Philharmonic, the Berlin Philharmonic, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, the Munich Philharmonic, and others.
In 1982, Davies saw the release of an album, Ritual, recorded under the ECM Records label. That was far from his first recording though, since he has appeared on albums as conductor for many artists, including Philip Glass, John Zorn, Duke Ellington, and Dave Brubeck.
The prominent ECM recording Abii ne Viderem, won Davies the Japan Record Academy Award for Modern Music in 1995.
Davies had his successful metropolitan opera debut in 1996 with a splendid production of Philip Glass' opera, The Voyage. Davies has also conducted Virgil Thompson's Four Saints in Three Acts, Wagner's Flying Dutchman, The Rake's Progress, William Bolcom's opera A View From the Bridge, and Fidelio and Otello. During his remarkable career, Davies has appeared at the Bonn Opera, the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Avery Fisher Hall, Boston Symphony Hall, the Lincoln Center, and Carnegie Hall.
Wikipedia:
Dennis Russell Davies (born 16 April 1944, Toledo, Ohio, U.S.) is an American conductor and pianist. He studied piano and conducting at the Juilliard School where he received his doctorate. He is a noted champion of living composers and modern music including Hans Werner Henze, William Bolcom, Lou Harrison, Alan Hovhaness, John Cage, Philip Glass, Giya Kancheli, Arvo Pärt, Virgil Thomson, and Aaron Copland. He has commissioned, premiered and recorded numerous pieces by living composers, along with the standard classical works. Of note are the recordings of Copland's Appalachian Spring with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra in 1979 for which he won a Grammy Award; Arvo Pärt Fratres and Miserere; and many of Philip Glass's operas and symphonies including his 5th symphony which is dedicated to Davies. He premiered Philip Glass' newest symphony at the New Year's concert 2012 in Anton Bruckner Concert Hall in Linz to a standing ovation. Lou Harrison's 3rd Symphony is also dedicated to Davies.
Davies served as Music Director of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra (1972-80). Together with the composer Francis Thorne he founded the American Composers Orchestra, New York in 1977 and conducted that orchestra until 2002. Davies served as music director of the Brooklyn Philharmonic from 1990 to 1996.
In 1980, he moved to Stuttgart, Germany when he became the General Music Director of the Baden-Württemberg State Opera House (1980-1987). There he premiered two Philip Glass operas along with many standard operas, often in productions with innovative and unusual staging. He has worked with many directors, including Robert Altman in a collaboration on Salome in Hamburg. He has also held permanent posts with the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra, the Orchestra of the Beethovenhalle Bonn (1987-1995), and the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra. He is currently chief conductor of the Bruckner Orchestra Linz and Linz Opera since 2002, and his current contract in Linz is through 2014.
Davies has also led many festival orchestras including the Aspen Music Festival, the Cabrillo Music Festival, the Saratoga Music Festival and he conducted The Flying Dutchman at the Bayreuth Festival as the second American to ever conduct there and one of the youngest (1978-80). Davies is a Professor of Orchestral Conducting at the Salzburg Mozarteum.
Davies has had a long-standing association with the jazz pianist Keith Jarrett. He has conducted Jarrett in classical concerto repertoire (including Mozart and Lou Harrison) as well as himself performing some of Jarrett's own composed music for piano, Ritual (ECM Records, 1977), and conducting some of Jarrett's orchestral music (featuring Jarrett as soloist as well as saxophonist Jan Garbarek).
In March 2008, Davies was named the third music director of the Sinfonieorchester Basel, effective with the 2009-2010 season, for an initial contract of five years.