Horn Discoveries Sarah Willis

Cover Horn Discoveries

Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
05.02.2021

Label: Alpha

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Sarah Willis

Composer: David Riniker, Richard Bissill, Mason Bates, Klaus Wallendorf

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • David Riniker (b. 1970): Riniker: Velvet Valves (Six Romantic Trio Arrangements):
  • 1 Riniker: Velvet Valves (Six Romantic Trio Arrangements): Melodia (After Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky) 03:26
  • 2 Riniker: Velvet Valves (Six Romantic Trio Arrangements): Nocturne (After Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky) 04:00
  • 3 Riniker: Velvet Valves (Six Romantic Trio Arrangements): Humoreske (After (Antonín Dvorák) 03:00
  • 4 Riniker: Velvet Valves (Six Romantic Trio Arrangements): Romance (After Georges Bizet) 03:17
  • 5 Riniker: Velvet Valves (Six Romantic Trio Arrangements): Clair de lune (After Claude Debussy) 04:14
  • 6 Riniker: Velvet Valves (Six Romantic Trio Arrangements): L'Abeille (After François Schubert) 01:27
  • Richard Bissill (b. 1959):
  • 7 Bissill: Song of a New World 09:32
  • Mason Bates (b. 1977): Bates: Mainframe Tropics:
  • 8 Bates: Mainframe Tropics: Silicon Blues 04:07
  • 9 Bates: Mainframe Tropics: Marine Snow 03:33
  • 10 Bates: Mainframe Tropics: Greyhound 04:20
  • Klaus Wallendorf (b. 1948): Wallendorf: Willisabethan Sarahnade:
  • 11 Wallendorf: Willisabethan Sarahnade: The "P" Duet 01:21
  • 12 Wallendorf: Willisabethan Sarahnade: Gozo fan tutte 01:59
  • 13 Wallendorf: Willisabethan Sarahnade: Xlendrian 01:38
  • 14 Wallendorf: Willisabethan Sarahnade: Agia Galini 01:45
  • 15 Wallendorf: Willisabethan Sarahnade: My Yorker 01:40
  • Total Runtime 49:19

Info for Horn Discoveries



For this album I am proud to present new pieces for the horn repertoire, all of which have been either composed or arranged by musicians whom I am privileged to count as my friends. (Sarah Willis) The horn is for boys , Sarah Willis' schoolteacher told her, and pointed her in the direction of the flute or the oboe. That remark served as a challenge and Sarah has been challenging herself on the horn ever since, becoming the first and only female brass player in the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. Sarah is not only a world-class musician but also passionate about harnessing the power of digital technology and social media to bring classical music to a wide audience. She is a well-known broadcaster and interviewer from her own classical music programme Sarah s Music on Deutsche Welle TV to regularly fronting the Berlin Philharmonic s ground-breaking Digital Concert Hall. Sarah has a large following on social media and has her own Google Hangout channel for master-classes and interviews with conductors and soloists. Sarah is also involved in many of Berlin Philharmonic education projects and especially enjoys creating and presenting their children s concerts. Horn Discoveries reflects the boldness and curiosity which drives Sarah to explore unknown territory. It is a very personal recording including pieces especially written for her by friends and colleagues to match her skill as a master of the low horn. The repertoire is a mixture of Romantic, Blues and contemporary; as she particularly asked the composers to add some low horn acrobatics , this new recording is bound to surprise and excite in true Sarah-style.

Sarah Willis, horn
Kotowa Machida, violin
Philip Mayers, piano
Klaus Wallendorf, horn



Sarah Willis
Sarah Willis was born in Maryland, USA, and grew up in Tokyo, Boston, Moscow, and then in England. She started taking French horn lessons at age 14. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, she became Second Horn in the Berlin State Opera under Daniel Barenboim. In 2001, she became the first female player in the brass section of the Berlin Philharmonic. She also worked with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the London Symphony Orchestra and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra.

It’s absolutely true that I decided I wanted to be a horn player at my very first horn lesson. Really! My first teacher was a trombone player and I adored him and the horn, so much so that I practiced as much as I could. I’d played the piano from a young age and so was used to doing practice. My parents were quite strict about it, something I’m very grateful for.

Because I was spending all my time in a practice room with my horn, school became quite a lonely place as my fellow classmates didn’t really understand my passion. So I lived for Sunday evenings when I rehearsed with a youth orchestra. I have to say that being a member of various youth orchestras was one of the most important and enjoyable parts of my musical training. Here, I found other young people who did not think it weird to spend lots of time alone practicing and listening to classical music. And nothing beat the fun we had on our tours!

After 3 years at music college in London, I ‘discovered’ Berlin. The city was incredibly vibrant and exciting, and the first time that I heard the Berlin Philharmonic live, I decided that I just had to be as close to this orchestra as possible and so I moved to Berlin. My first job was with the Berlin State Opera under Daniel Barenboim in 1991,just after the fall of the Berlin Wall so it was a very exciting time to be in the city. Before I started at the Staatsoper, I was worried that I would not enjoy playing opera, but I ended up adoring it.

In 2001, I won the job in the Berlin Philharmonic – something I had dreamed about ever since I first heard them play. It’s the truth when I say that I am proud and grateful every day to play in this incredible orchestra.

I started playing on an Alexander horn when I was 16. My teacher at the time told me that the sound I made on the horn suited an Alexander. This was very unusual at the time in England! I fell totally in love with the sound of this horn and wouldn´t play anything else. The Alex I play on now is a hand-hammered 103 Model with a yellow brass mouthpipe. It is a luxury for us in the Berlin Phil that we all play on 103s, it makes blending as a section a lot easier and we enjoy the close collaboration we have with Gebr. Alexander

My ‘day job’ takes up most of my time and head space, but since I began doing interviews with soloists and conductors for the BPh´s Digital Concert Hall, and also being involved as a mentor and a presenter for the You Tube Symphony Orchestra 2011 in Sydney, I have become very passionate about online music communication. I started the Horn Hangouts in 2013 and have been presenting the TV progamme “Sarah´s Music” for Deutsche Welle TV since 2014. I love doing both with a passion and I enjoy connecting with musicians all over the world, reaching people who may not have easy access to live concerts or teachers, and also to trying to encourage the younger generation to realize how great classical music is.

Booklet for Horn Discoveries

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