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Pablo Heras-Casado
Pablo Heras-Casado
Spanish conductor
1
Tabea Zimmermann
Tabea Zimmermann
German violist
2
Ernest Bour
Ernest Bour
French conductor
3
Alexandre Tharaud
Alexandre Tharaud
French pianist
4
Javier Perianes
Javier Perianes
Spanish musician
5
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Finnish conductor and composer
6
Michel van der Aa
Michel van der Aa
Dutch composer
7
Thomas Adès
Thomas Adès
British composer, pianist and conductor
8
György Ligeti
György Ligeti
Hungarian composer
9
Robert Casadesus
Robert Casadesus
French pianist and composer
10
Graham Waterhouse
Graham Waterhouse
English composer
11
Jean Martinon
Jean Martinon
French conductor and composer
12
Pierre-Laurent Aimard
Pierre-Laurent Aimard
French pianist
13
Jean-Michel Damase
Jean-Michel Damase
French pianist, conductor and composer
14
Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi
Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi
Japanese musician
15
Wolfgang Fortner
Wolfgang Fortner
German composer and conductor
16
Philippe Manoury
Philippe Manoury
French composer
17
Jean Hubeau
Jean Hubeau
French musician
18
Edouard Lalo
Edouard Lalo
French composer
19
Paul Tortelier
Paul Tortelier
French cellist and composer
20
Steven Isserlis
Steven Isserlis
British cellist
21
Georg Friedrich Haas
Georg Friedrich Haas
Austrian composer
22
Toshio Hosokawa
Toshio Hosokawa
Japanese composer of contemporary classical music
23
Vadim Repin
Vadim Repin
Russian violinist
24
Isabelle Faust
Isabelle Faust
German classical violinist
25
Bernard Rands
Bernard Rands
British composer
26
Jean Doyen
Jean Doyen
French pianist
Jean-Guihen Queyras
French cellist

Jean-Guihen Queyras

Intro
French cellist
Jean-Guhien Queyras during la Folle Journée 2009

Jean-Guihen Queyras is a French cellist. He was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on 11 March 1967, and moved with his parents to Algeria when he was 5 years old; the family moved to France 3 years later. He is a professor at the Musikhochschule Freiburg and artistic co-director of the Rencontres Musicales de Haute-Provence. He won the Glenn Gould Protégé Prize in Toronto in 2002.

Queyras records for Harmonia Mundi, including: the cello concertos of Dvorak, Elgar, Ligeti, and others; the complete cello suites of both Johann Sebastian Bach and Benjamin Britten; Beethoven's complete works for cello and piano (with Alexander Melnikov); and many piano trios with Isabelle Faust and Melnikov. He is noted for his exceptionally wide range of repertoire: he has recorded cello concertos by Haydn, Monn, and Vivaldi on a period instrument with the Freiburger Barockorchester and the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, but also champions the music of Dallapiccola, Kurtag, Ligeti, Webern, and others.

He gave the world premieres of Ivan Fedele's cello concerto (Orchestre National de France, Leonard Slatkin) and Gilbert Amy's concerto (Tokyo Symphony Orchestra at Suntory Hall in Tokyo); in September 2005, he premiered Bruno Mantovani's concerto with the Saarbrücken Radio Sinfonie Orchestra and Phillippe Schoeller's Wind's Eyes with the SWR Sinfonieorchester Baden-Baden and Freiburg. He also gave the world premieres of Thomas Larcher's Ouroboros in 2016 and Tristan Murail's De Pays et d'Hommes Étranges (Of Strange Lands and Strange Men) in 2019.

His recordings have won distinctions such as Top CD – BBC Music Magazine, Diapason d'Or, CHOC du Monde de la Musique, 10 de Classica/Répertoire, and Editor's Choice from Gramophone.

Queyras is part of the Arcanto Quartet with Antje Weithaas, Daniel Sepec and Tabea Zimmermann. He plays a cello made in 1696 by Gioffredo Cappa. He uses two bows: a heavier one by Thomas Gerbeth in Vienna, for 20th- and 21st-century repertoire, and a lighter Tourte.