“Emil Rovner is a kind of polymath of music” (WDR3)
Born in Gorky, Russia, the cellist, singer and conductor Emil Rovner has established himself as a compelling musician, commanding “flawless technical mastery” (FonoForum) and expressive depth, as well as being a sought-after teacher and festival leader.
Emil Rovner´s most recent projects include solo perfomances with the Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra (Dvorak concerto), the Corean Chamber Orchestra in Seoul, the Sinfonietta Cracovia, the Presidential Symphony Orchestrea of Ankara, a Debut at the Shostakovich Festival in Gohrisch with a world premiere of a new piece by Sofia Gubaidulina, a World Premiere of the “Kyrie in memory of Boris Nemtsov”; by Evgeny Shcherbakov as well as concert performances in Prades (Casals Festival), Bonn (Beethoven Fest), Hamburg (Elbphilharmonie), Luzern (KKL), Gstaad (Menuhin Festival), Copenhagen (Tivoli Concert Hall) etc.. .
Emil Rovner was born in Gorky, Russia in a family of musicians, where he began taking cello lessons with Anatoly Lukianenko at the Glinka Conservatory. By the age of ten he had already given his solo début with the Gorky City Symphony.
He continued his studies with Ivan Monighetti in Madrid and Basle and completed them with Boris Pergamenschikow at the Hanns Eisler School of Music in Berlin, where he took his performance degree.
He also received lessons from Mstislav Rostropovich who has had a strong impact on his artistic development. He studied Singing with U. Messthaler at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis and took lessons in conducting from M. Samorukova.
He has worked closely with such leading contemporary composers as Sofia Gubaidulina, Valentin Silvestrov, Heinz Holliger, Per Nørgård, Bernd Franke,Tigran Mansurian, Elena Firsova a.o.
Emil Rovner has won many prizes at international cello competitions, including a First prize at the Johannes Brahms Competition in Austria and a First prize at the Lausanne Competition under the patronage of Lord Menuhin.
In 1998 he won the First prize and two special awards at the J. S. Bach Competition in Leipzig, marking the onset of his international concert career.
At the recommendation of Vladimir Ashkenazy, Emil Rovner gave his solo début with the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra under Gary Bertini.
Since then he has frequently appeared as a soloist with orchestras of the stature of the St Petersburg Philharmonic, the Berlin Symphony, the Bern Camerata, the Moscow Symphony, the Basle Symphony, and the renowned chamber orchestras of Stuttgart, Basel and Munich among others.
He has played in such renowned venues as the Berlin Philharmonie, the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the Berlin Konzerthaus, the Bonn Beethovenhaus, Queen Elizabeth Hall (London), the St Petersburg Philharmonic and the Zurich Tonhalle and at such festivals as the Berlin Festival, the Leipzig Bach Festival, the Schleswig-Holstein Festival, Gidon Kremer’s Les muséiques and the Viva Cello Festival in Basle.
Emil Rovner played the German première of Boris Tchaikovsky Cello Concerto in the Great Hall of the Berlin Philharmonie and gave his début at Lucerne Festival.
He is co-founder and artistic director of the Resonanzen Festival in St Moritz and the Mieczyslaw Weinberg Festival in Dresden.
Emil Rovner is a passionate chamber musician. He performs with artist like Pavel Gililov, Itamar Golan, Martin Helmchen, Alla Ivanzhina, Ana Chumachenko, Vaclav Hudecek, Patrick Gallois, Michel Lethiec and Sol Gabetta.
In October 2007 he became one of the youngest professors at the Carl Maria von Weber University of Music in Dresden.
Emil Rovner holds international master-classes and is Jury member at international cello competitions like Prague Spring competition and Janacek competition.
Many of his students have won prizes at international cello and chamber music competitions. His CD release of the solo works by Mieczyslaw Weinberg in 2010 (a première recording) was awarded five stars by the trade journal FonoForum and nominated for the Echo Classic Prize.
Emil Rovner plays a cello built by the Franco-Israeli violin maker Yair Hod Fainas (Paris, 2012) and a cello made by Thorsten Theis (Germany, 2014)