BIOGRAPHY
Since its success at the ARD International Competition in 2012, at which the Armida Quartet took First Prize, the Audience Prize and six other special awards, the career of the young Berlin string quartet has developed sensationally.
Founded in Berlin in 2006, the quartet took its name from an opera by Haydn, the “father of the string quartet”. Still receiving the tutelage of Rainer Schmidt (Hagen Quartet) and Reinhard Goebel, the ensemble has also studied with members of the Artemis Quartet for several years.
The Armida Quartet won first prize at the Geneva Competition in 2011 and received several scholarships, including those of the Irene Steels-Wilsing Foundation and the Schierse Foundation in Berlin. The Armida Quartet is also taking part in the BBC New Generation Artists’ scheme between 2014 and 2016.
The ensemble’s debut CD, featuring works by Béla Bartók, György Ligeti and György Kurtág, was released in 2013 and selected by the German Record Critics’ Award for its critics’ choice list. Their second CD with music by Mozart was released in 2016.
During the summer of 2016 the Armida Quartet returns to the Wigmore Hall in London and gives their debut at the world famous BBC Proms. They are also appearing at the Cheltenham Festival, the Danish Hindsgavl Festival and at the Mozartfest in Augsburg. In addition to the Rising Stars concerts, the Armida Quartet will also play in Basel, Berlin and Madrid.
Frequent collaboration with others is a priority for the Armida Quartet – the ensemble has also worked with Anna Prohaska, Thomas Hampson, Ewa Kupiec, Max Hornung, Daniel Müller-Schott, Jörg Widmann and Tabea Zimmermann. The four musicians of the Armida Quartet have taught chamber music at the Berlin University of the Arts since October 2012.
Nominated as ECHO Rising Stars by the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, Festspielhaus Baden-Baden, Konzerthaus Dortmund and the Kölner Philharmonie
Performance dates
19.10.2016 – 7 pm
Barbican Centre London
19.11.2016 – 9 pm
Müpa Budapest
15.01.2017 – 11 am
Cité de la musique – Philharmonie de Paris
30.01.2017 – 7:30 pm
Wiener Konzerthaus
04.02.2017 – 8 pm
Elbphilharmonie Hamburg
08.02.2017 – 8 pm
Philharmonie Luxembourg
19.02.2017 – 11 am
Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Lisbon
11.03.2017
Konzerthaus Dortmund
18.03.2017 – 3 pm
Stockholms Konserthus
27.03.2017 – 6 pm
Town Hall Symphony Hall Birmingham
20.04.2017 – 8:30 pm
L’Auditori Barcelona
14.05.2017 – 6 pm
Casa da Música Porto
17.05.2017 – 8:15 pm
Het Concertgebouw Amsterdam
05.06.2017 – 9 am
Festspielhaus Baden-Baden
06.06.2017 – 7 pm
Bozar Brussels
18.06.2017 – 4 pm
Kölner Philharmonie