Over a career including extended tenures with the
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and the
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, British conductor
Simon Rattle has become recognized as one of the world's top conductors. Mostly focusing on symphonic music, he has also conducted major operatic productions.
A native of Liverpool,
Rattle was born January 19, 1955. He studied piano, violin, and percussion as a youngster, joining the Merseyside Youth Orchestra on the latter instruction and later playing with Britain's National Youth Orchestra. But he gravitated naturally toward conducting, taking up the baton in his early teens and founding his own orchestra, the Liverpool Sinfonia, when he was just 15. He entered the Royal Academy of Music and graduated in 1974 at age 19, taking first prize in the John Player International Conductors' Competition that year. That was enough to land
Rattle an assistant conductor post with the
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra as well as guest appearances in the U.S., including one with the
Los Angeles Philharmonic in 1979.
Rattle's tenure with the
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra began with his appointment as principal conductor and artistic advisor in 1980; he added the title of music director in 1990. He raised the orchestra's profile substantially, leading the group on European, American, and Far Eastern tours, and beginning a long recording association with the EMI label.
Rattle also made many appearances at Britain's Glyndebourne Festival as an opera conductor, beginning in 1977. He served as principal guest conductor of the
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment beginning in 1992. Disillusioned by arts funding cuts in Britain,
Rattle often appeared as a guest conductor in the late 1990s with the
Berlin Philharmonic before the orchestra's members named him the successor to
Claudio Abbado; he began his tenure in 2002. His time in Berlin was controversial among critics, but the orchestra members, whose salaries he had successfully fought to increase, renewed his contract through 2018, when he finally stepped down and was succeeded by
Kirill Petrenko.
Rattle continued to record prolifically (as many as five albums a year) for EMI with the
Berlin Philharmonic, issuing a wide variety of music including a complete cycle of
Beethoven's symphonies. He led a major new production of
Wagner's Tristan und Isolde in 2016 at New York's
Metropolitan Opera. In 2017,
Rattle returned to Britain as conductor of the
London Symphony Orchestra, where his recording career resumed with the orchestra's own LSO Live label; his recording of
Berlioz's La damnation de Faust appeared in 2019. He has won three Grammy awards, including one for Best Choral Performance for his 2008 recording of
Brahms' Ein deutsches Requiem.
Rattle has been married three times, most recently to Czech mezzo soprano
Magdalena Kožená; the couple have three children.