Frederic Moreau: some photos














































Frédéric Moreau, violon / violin - 프레드릭 모로 (바이올린) -  フレデリック·モロー、バイオリン

Videos

Crazy Encore !
Kreisler: Recitativo & Scherzo-Caprice
Paganini: Concerto n°1 (Adagio)
Sarasate: Carmen Fantasy
Paganini : Caprice n°24
Bazzini: Dance of the Goblins
Vivaldi: Concerto Op. 8, "L'estate" (Summer). Presto
Fauré: Berceuse op.16
Mendelssohn: Trio n°1 op.49 - Scherzo
Massenet: Meditation from "Thais" 
Saint-Saens: Introduction & Rondo Capriccioso
Paganini: "La Campanella" (extracts)
Bach: sonata bwv 1014 (extracts)
Saint-Saens: Fantaisie op.124 (extracts)

Schedule of concerts

Biography


Short biography

Frédéric Moreau started his solo career at a very young age, after studying the violin and chamber music with masters such as Jean Fournier, Michèle Auclair, Régis Pasquier, Yehudi Menuhin, Tibor Varga,...

Captivating audiences with his performances, his charisma and his amazing virtuosity, Frédéric Moreau is regularly invited to many festivals, in prestigious concert halls around the world and has become one of the most prolific French artists of his generation with over one hundred concerts as soloist each year.

Musical director and soloist of the chamber orchestra "Les Violons de France", Frédéric Moreau also devotes part of his time to chamber music and to sharing his passion during master classes.

Frédéric Moreau has the priviledge of playing a 1749 Giovanni Battista Guadagnini violin.


Longer version

Captivating audiences with his performances, his charisma and his amazing virtuosity, Frédéric Moreau is regularly invited to many festivals in prestigious concert halls around the world and has become one of the most prolific French artists of his generation with over one hundred concerts as soloist each year.

Frédéric Moreau is a laureate of numerous international competitions and started his solo career at the age of eighteen. He is a first prize winner of violin and chamber music, and is a “3ème cycle" graduate of the most selective soloist programme at the French National Conservatory of Music in Paris (Master and PhD). He has studied violin with masters such as Jean Fournier, Michèle Auclair, Régis Pasquier, Tibor Varga, Yehudi Menuhin...

He is musical director and soloist of the prestigious chamber orchestra "Les Violons de France" for whom he has arranged numerous works placing the virtuoso violin centre stage.

With his eclectic tastes, Frédéric Moreau has approached all styles of music and brings to life the violin repertoire ranging from baroque to contemporary. In addition, he is a fervent promotor of the music of the most charismatic virtuoso violinist of all time: Niccolò Paganini, whose magic he loves reproduce for the public.

Frédéric Moreau is also passionate about chamber music and is a member of the Perpetuo Duo, the Solstice Trio and the Goldoni Quartet. He has played with partners such as Nicholas Angelich, Francois Leleux, Roland Pidoux...

His teaching expertise and passion for music are demonstrated by the master-classes he holds around the world.

Frédéric Moreau regularly tours in France, the United States, Japan, South Korea, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Spain, Greece, Italy, Kosovo, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Switzerland, Ukraine... and performs as soloist with numerous orchestras including the Munich Symphony Orchestra, the Kiev National Philharmonic Orchestra, the Ile de France Philharmonic Orchestra...

He has made numerous recordings, including: Beethoven's violin concerto with the Munich Symphony Orchestra; a disc entitled "Hommage à l'Europe" which was nominated for best classical music recording at the "Victoires de la Musique" in 2000; a "Virtuosity" disc (including works by Paganini, Sarasate, Bazzini, Saint-Saëns...); a disc of Vivaldi's Four Seasons; a violin & harp disc (Duo Perpetuo) with Béatrice Guillermin; a DVD with the "Solstice Trio" (Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Rachmaninov).

Frédéric Moreau has the privilege of playing a 1749 Giovanni Battista Guadagnini violin.

For more information, see: http://www.fredericmoreau.com 

Frederic Moreau: black and white photos