Antje Weithaas & Camerata Bern
Biography Antje Weithaas & Camerata Bern
                                                                        
 Antje Weithaas
goes all out. She interprets Robert Schumann's  first violin sonata, a work that could previously be understood as  slightly melancholy and a beautiful contribution to domestic music, as  music full of loneliness and forlornness. Her ability to evoke hell with  a single note immerses the music in the highest emotionality. She not  only masters the entire spectrum of creative mastery - she also utilises  it mercilessly (…) Antje Weithaas, and this is certain, is not just a  violinist, she is a musician, and currently one of the best. rbb Kultur, 13/12/2023
With  captivating energy and a fine sense for nuances, Antje Weithaas gives  her audience a "stellar hour of music" (FAZ) time and again. Her wide  stylistic range and unmistakable musical language are fascinating.  Blessed with impressive technical mastery and an enormous gamut of  sound, she manages the feat of finding very individual readings of the  great masterpieces and yet unpretentiously placing herself at the  service of the composer. She has an extensive repertoire that includes  the great concertos by Mozart, Beethoven and Schumann, new works such as  Jörg Widmann’s Violin Concerto, modern classics by Shostakovich,  Prokofiev, Ligeti and Gubaidulina, and lesser performed concertos by  Hartmann and Schoeck.
As a soloist, Antje Weithaas has worked with most of  Germany’s leading orchestras, including the Deutsches  Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Bamberg Symphony and the major German radio  orchestras, numerous major international orchestras such as the Los  Angeles Philharmonic, San Francisco Symphony, Philharmonia Orchestra and  the BBC Symphony, as well as and the leading orchestras of the  Netherlands, Scandinavia, and Asia. She has collaborated with the  illustrious conductors Vladimir Ashkenazy, Dmitri Kitayenko, Sir Neville  Marriner, Marc Albrecht, Yakov Kreizberg, Sakari Oramo and Carlos  Kalmar.
Last season, Antje Weithaas completed the complete  recording of Ludwig van Beethoven's sonatas for violin and piano with Dénes Várjon as  her piano partner on CAvi-music, digitally distributed by Deutsche  Grammophon which was honoured with the German Record Critics' Award  2024. Following her debut recital at the Pierre Boulez Saal, she and  Dénes Várjon will perform the complete cycle there in May 2025. The two  artists will continue to perform the entire cycle next season at the  Casals Forum Kronberg and in Budapest, and will also perform Beethoven  recitals in Italy.
Antje Weithaas is a sought-after conductor for  play-conduct projects with international chamber orchestras. As artistic  director of the Camerata Bern, she was responsible for the musical  profile of the ensemble for almost ten years, with whom she continues to  work regularly and whose next joint recordings on CAvi-music we can  look forward to. From the podium of the concertmaster, she has even  conducted large-scale works such as Beethoven's symphonies and released  recordings of works by Tchaikovsky, Brahms, Mendelssohn and Beethoven.  Her concerts as artiste associé of the Orchestre de Chambre de Paris in  the 2021/22 season led to several new projects.
Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler
Currently, Antje Weithaas does not teach workshops or master classes and doesn’t give private lessons before the auditions. But students with an interest in studying with her are welcome to sit in on her Berlin classes. Further details are available from the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler.
In 2013, Antje Weithaas produced a reference recording of the violin  concertos by Beethoven and Berg with the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra  under Steven Sloane (CAvi-music). The Arcanto Quartet's highly acclaimed  recordings with Daniel Sepec, Tabea Zimmermann and Jean-Guihen Queyras,  released on the Harmonia Mundi label, include works by Bartók, Brahms,  Ravel, Dutilleux, Debussy, Schubert and Mozart. In 2016, her complete  recording of Max Bruch's works for violin and orchestra with the NDR  Radiophilharmonie under Hermann Bäumer was released on cpo. There was  also an enthusiastic response to the complete recording of the solo  sonatas and partitas by Johann Sebastian Bach and the solo sonatas by  Eugène Ysaÿe as well as Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto and his 3rd String  Quartet in an orchestral version with the Camerata Bern (CAvi). Two CDs  were released in 2019: a recording of Robert Schumann's Violin Concerto  and Johannes Brahms' Double Concerto with the NDR Radiophilharmonie,  cellist Maximilian Hornung and conductor Andrew Manze, which won the BBC  Music Magazine's “Concerto” Award, and a recording of Khachaturian's  Violin Concerto and Concerto Rhapsody with the Staatsorchester  Rheinische Philharmonie and conductor Daniel Raiskin.
Antje  Weithaas began playing the violin at the age of four and later studied  at the Hochschule für Musik “Hanns Eisler” Berlin with Professor Werner  Scholz. She won the Kreisler Competition in Graz in 1987 and the Bach  Competition in Leipzig in 1988, as well as the Joseph Joachim  International Violin Competition Hanover in 1991. Together with Oliver  Wille, she has taken over the artistic leadership of the renowned  Joachim competition. She taught as a professor at the Universität der  Künste Berlin for several years before moving to the Hanns Eisler  Academy of Music in 2004. Since then, she has become a world-class  violin teacher. She plays on a 2001 Peter Greiner violin.                                                    

 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
             
            