RICHARD HOENICH
Assistant Conductor
Ever since he “served notice
of a major talent” in his 1983 debut at the Hollywood Bowl, Canadian
Richard Hoenich has garnered critical acclaim and widespread recognition
as one of his country’s most sought-after conductors. While principal
bassoon with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra (MSO) his conducting
gifts caught the attention of Charles Dutoit. In 1985, after being
named finalist at the Geneva International Conducting Competition,
Mr Hoenich became Assistant Conductor of the MSO.
Richard Hoenich guest conducts
every major Canadian orchestra, and makes frequent appearances
in the United States, most notably as a guest of the New World
Symphony Orchestra in Miami. In September 1996, as a tribute to
his ongoing association with the orchestra, he was the first guest
in the orchestra’s history to be invited to conduct a foreign
tour (to Costa Rica). Overseas, he has conducted at the Salle
Pleyel and Chatelet Theatre in Paris, and at the historic Zarzuela
Theatre in Madrid directing the Madrid Symphony Orchestra. In
the early nineties, following a triumphant debut appearance at
the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires leading the Jeunesses Musicales
World Youth Orchestra, he began a regular association with several
south American orchestras, including the national orchestras of
Argentina and Venezuela.
Mr Hoenich’s energies extend
to education, with his acclaimed series of school/youth concerts
in the US and Canada, and a pre-concert lecture series he helped
found at the MSO in 1989. His youth concert audiences for the
MSO grew to “sold-out” capacity shortly after he took over its
educational program. Mr Hoenich is also deeply committed to moulding
the next generation of musicians. From 1992 to 2002 he was Director
of Orchestras at the New England Conservatory in Boston, and in
2002 became music director of the Community Music Centre of Boston
Chamber Orchestra. He continues to serve as a clinican/conductor
for high school and youth orchestra festivals, and frequently
appears as a speaker on musical topics for radio, TV, and at fundraising
events.
From 1982 to 1986, Mr Hoenich
was Conductor and Artistic Director of the McGill University Symphony
Orchestra. During his tenure the orchestra produced a critically
acclaimed recording featuring Canadian contralto, Maureen Forrester,
as soloist. This recording received a Special Mention for “Best
Orchestral Recording”, as well as for “Best Recording of Canadian
Music” by the Canadian Music Council.
A native of Montreal, Mr Hoenich
began his music studies with the piano at the age eight and made
his concerto debut with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra at the
age of fourteen. He took up bassoon at the age eleven, eventually
graduating from the Curtis Institute of Music. He joined the Montreal
Symphony as principal bassoon in 1979 after serving in the same
capacity in the Jerusalem Symphony.
Richard Hoenich studied conducting
with Charles Dutoit, Gustav Meier and Charles Bruck, and was the
recipient of conducting fellowships from the Tanglewood Music
Center and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute, where he worked
with such musicians as Leonard Bernstein, Kurt Masur, Seiji Ozawa,
André Previn and Michael Tilson Thomas.
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