The Dutch recorder player, Lucie Horsh, was norn into a family of professional musicians. She began to study the recorder with Rob Beek at the Muziekschool van Amsterdam at the age of 5. Only 4 years later, her televised performance of Johannes Brahmss' Hungarian Dance No. 5 at a popular concert on the Prinsengracht canal caused a national sensation. In 2011, after winning many competitions, she moved to the prestigious Sweelinck Academie at the Amsterdam Conservatorium, where she is now a student with Walter van Hauwe. Also a talented pianist, she first studied with Marjés Benoist and is now in Jan Wijn's class at the Amsterdam Conservatorium. She was a member of the National Children’s Choir for 7 years, performing with conductors such as Sir Simon Rattle, Mariss Jansons and Jaap van Zweden. In 2014, she was chosen to represent The Netherlands in the Eurovision Young Musician contest and in 2016 she was awarded the prestigious Concertgebouw Young Talent Award, in the presence of Sir John Eliot Gardiner.
Nineteen year old Lucie Horsch is one of the most remarkable musical talents of her generation, and already in great demand as a solo recorder player both in her native Netherlands and internationally. She is performing with Baroque ensembles as well as with modern orchestras.
The 2018-2019 season sees Lucie Horsch giving her debut with the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra and Macedonian Philharmonic Orchestra. She embarks on a tour with the Academy of Ancient Music including appearances at the Barbican London, Muziekgebouw Amsterdam and De Doelen Rotterdam. Other orchestras she works with are the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and Manitoba Chamber Orchestra, Ensemble LUDWIG, B'Rock Orchestra, Residentie Orkest Den Haag, Arnhem Philharmonic Orchestra as well as Staatsorchester Kassel.
In recital Lucie formed a new duo with French lute player Thomas Dunford, an up-coming highlight is their debut at Philharmonie Essen. Another key duo partner is harpsichordist Alexandra Nepomnyashchaya. Festival appearances include Budapest Spring Festival, Festspiele Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, MDR Musiksommer, Hindsgavl Festival and Musiksommer am Zürichsee in Switzerland. Furthermore, she appears with Richard Egarr, Lucas and Arthur Jussen, Harriet Krijgh, Benjamin Bayl, Andreas Spering, Stephen Stubbs and Rolando Villazón.
Lucie Horsch records exclusively for Decca Classics. Her debut CD features concertos and other works by Antonio Vivaldi, for which she received the prestigious Edison Klassiek Award 2018. Her second disc, which she recorded with the Academy of Ancient Music and Thomas Dunford, features works by Sammartini, J.S. Bach and George Frideric Handel among others (release in February 2019). She also mastered the premiere recording of a Leonard Bernstein’s Variations on an Octatonic Scale F with Kian Soltani for Deutsche Grammophon.
Lucie Horsh plays on recorders by Frederick Morgan, Seiji Hirao, Stephan Blezinger and Friedrich von Huene. |