Frédéric Chaslin, conductor/piano


Frédéric Chaslin, the Santa Fe Opera’s Chief Conductor, made his company debut in 2009 leading the highly acclaimed production of Verdi’s La Traviata.  Conductor, pianist, composer and author, Maestro Chaslin was born in Paris and educated at the Paris Conservatoire and the Salzburg Mozarteum. 

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Be sure to hear Frédéric Chaslin’s 2012 Festival performance listed below

Wednesday, August 15, 2012, 12:00 noon at St. Francis Auditorium
Strauss / Stravinsky / Mendelssohn

Frédéric Chaslin, the Santa Fe Opera’s Chief Conductor, made his company debut in 2009 leading the highly acclaimed production of Verdi’s La Traviata.  Conductor, pianist, composer and author, Maestro Chaslin was born in Paris and educated at the Paris Conservatoire and the Salzburg Mozarteum.  With an operatic and symphonic repertory that ranges from Bach to contemporary music, he has appeared with major opera companies and at international festivals in New York, Berlin, Munich, Leipzig, Madrid, Barcelona, Rome and Venice and with all the major Parisian orchestras.  He served as music director of the Rouen Opera, general music director of Germany’s Nationaltheater Mannheim, chief conductor of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra and a resident conductor at the Vienna Staatsoper.  Maestro Chaslin made his Metropolitan Opera debut in 2002, conducting Il Trovatore and, subsequently, The Tales of Hoffmann, Sicilian Vespers, The Barber of Seville and La Bohème.  In 2005, he led the Los Angeles Opera production of Romeo and Juliet starring Rolando Villazon and Anna Netrebko.

As pianist, Maestro Chaslin has appeared with major orchestras in Austria, Japan, Italy and Israel.  As composer, he has written orchestral pieces, movie soundtracks and operas.  His opera, Wuthering Heights, has been recorded by the London Philharmonic and London Symphony Chorus.  His latest book, Music in Every Sense, is an in-depth look at aspects of modern music and its relationship with the audience.  It ha been published in French and German and will soon appear in English.