Christoph Eschenbach overcame the most difficult of circumstances to become one of the finest pianists and conductors of the 20th and early 21st centuries. He has performed throughout the world, recorded dozens of albums, and has won several awards and prizes.
Eschenbach was born
Christoph Ringmann on February 20, 1940, in Breslau, Germany. He was orphaned at a young age: his mother died in childbirth and his father, musicologist Heribert Ringmann, was killed in battle during World War II. His adoptive grandmother was then killed while trying to extract him and herself from the path of the Allied armies. Fortunately, his mother's cousin, Wallydore Eschenbach, tracked him down after the war and adopted him from the refugee camp that would likely have claimed his life. It is from her side of the family that he eventually took his better-known surname.
Eschenbach began studying piano at the age of eight, taught by his adoptive mother. She quickly realized his talents and enrolled him in the Hamburg Hochschule für Musik, where he studied both piano and conducting. He won first prize in the 1952 Steinway Piano Competition, and in 1962 he took second prize in the Munich International Competition. However, it was with his first prize at the Clara Haskil Competition in Vevey, Switzerland, in 1965, that he finally made his mark. This new acknowledgment led to a London concert debut in 1966 and a prestigious debut with the
Cleveland Orchestra and
George Szell in 1969.
Szell was impressed with his musicianship and gave him lessons in conducting, starting a close relationship that lasted until
Szell's death in 1970.
Eschenbach was soon essaying a wide repertory in concert tours throughout Europe and America. Notable in his programs was a large number of works from 20th century composers, such as
Bartók,
Henze,
Rihm, and Ruzicka. However, his performances of
Mozart,
Beethoven, and
Schubert were considered revelatory.
Eschenbach made his conducting debut in 1972 with a performance of
Bruckner's Symphony No. 3, soon followed by
Verdi's La Traviata at Darmstadt in 1978. In 1979, he was named general music director of the
Rheinland-Pfalz State Philharmonic (through 1981). He was the permanent guest conductor, then chief conductor, of the Zürich Tonhalle Orchestra (1971-1985). In 1988, he began a significant and productive association as music director of the
Houston Symphony Orchestra, where he remained until 1999. Although the orchestra was already established as one of America's finer major symphonies,
Eschenbach improved its standards, heightened its international reputation, and broadened its repertory. He also formed the Houston Symphony Chamber Players from its ranks.
Eschenbach conducted the
Houston Symphony in recordings on the Koch International, Virgin, RCA Red Seal labels, among others. These included standard fare such as some highly regarded
Brahms and
Tchaikovsky recordings and all of the major
Mozart wind concertos. He and the
Houston Symphony also recorded
Kurt Weill's The Rise and Fall of the City Mahagonny Suite,
Tobias Picker's The Encantadas, and the violin concertos of
John Adams and
Philip Glass.
Eschenbach was the co-artistic director of the Pacific Music Festival, along with
Michael Tilson Thomas (1991-1998), and the artistic director of the Schleswig-Holstein Festival (1999-2003). He has served as the music director for the Ravinia Festival, the summer outdoor season of the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, (1994-2005),
Orchestre de Paris (2000-2010), the
Philadelphia Orchestra (2003-2008), and the
National Symphony Orchestra (2010-2017).
Eschenbach was the principal conductor of the
North German Radio Symphony Orchestra of Hamburg (1998-2004). In 2017,
Eschenbach was named the chief conductor of the
Konzerthausorchester Berlin.
Eschenbach has recorded for many major labels, including Deutsche Grammophon, EMI, and Ondine. Highlights of his recording output include
Elgar & Schnittke: Viola Concertos (2009),
The Best of Lang Lang (2010), and
Remembering JFK - 50th Anniversary Concert (2011). In 2019,
Eschenbach conducted the
Konzerthausorchester Berlin with
Cameron Carpenter on a Sony Classical album of music by
Rachmaninoff and Poulenc. Also in 2019, he was featured on a Harmonia Mundi release of music by Prokofiev.