Kronberg Academy
The Kronberg Academy is a private music school for string instrumentalists based in Kronberg im Taunus, Germany. Founded in 1993 by Raimund Trenkler, the academy trains a select group of young musicians who have the potential to build international careers as soloists and chamber musicians.
Initially, the focus of the Kronberg Academy was to train and support young cellists, but has since branched out into the piano, violin and viola disciplines. It also organizes a diverse range of projects, competitions, masterclasses and concerts. Kronberg Academy was granted charitable status in 2004.
Programmes
The Kronberg Academy offers study programmes that are unique within Europe. These include a Bachelor and Master programme for outstanding young musicians who have the potential to build international careers as soloists. The Bachelor and Master courses are offered in collaboration with the Frankfurt [University of Music and Performing Arts]. The school also offers a Professional Studies programme which is a two-year course focusing on concert performance.Since Autumn 2018, the Sir András Schiff Performance Programme for Young Pianists has offered a programme to select young pianists who wish to focus on chamber music.
Artistic council
Kronberg Academy receives active support from many well-known artists. The members of the Artistic Council are Marta Casals Istomin, Christoph Eschenbach, Gidon Kremer and Sir András Schiff. The cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, member of the Artistic Council until his death in 2007, declared Kronberg to be the “world capital of the cello” as early as 1997, and founded the Rostropovich Cello Foundation in Kronberg to support young cellists.Since 2012, the director of Kronberg Academy's study programmes is Friedemann Eichhorn, who is Co-Artistic Director with Raimund Trenkler.
Facilities
In September 2022, the Kronberg Academy opened a new concert hall, the Casals Forum. Designed by Volker Staab from Berlin with acoustic supervision by Martijn Vercammen, building started in 2017 and was completed in 2022. It is named in honour of the cellist Pablo Casals, whose values of humanity and human dignity Kronberg Academy has adopted.The venue houses two concert halls; the main hall which has a capacity of 550 persons, and the Carl Bechstein Saal, a smaller hall with a capacity of 150 seats. The complex also includes rooms for lessons and practicing for academy students, as well as the administration rooms of Kronberg Academy.
Projects
Numerous renowned events are organised by the Kronberg Academy; all designed to inspire, train and shape young musicians, making Kronberg a meeting place for artists from across the globe:- Kronberg Festival
- Cello Masterclasses & Concerts
- Violin and Viola Masterclasses & Concerts
- 'Viola-Fest'
- “Chamber Music Connects the World”
- Kronberg Academy on Tour
- Projects for children and teenagers: “Kids@Casals”, “Mit Musik – Miteinander” and various youth concerts
- Grand Prix Emanuel Feuermann, organised in collaboration with the Berlin University of the Arts
- International Pablo Casals Cello Competition
- Rostropovich Cello Foundation
- Gidon Kremer Stiftung
Many of Kronberg's residents – who make up most of the 2000 or so members of the Friends of Kronberg Academy – act as hosts for the numerous young string players from around the world who come to Kronberg for its workshops, concerts and festivals.
Pablo Casals Award
As part of the Kronberg Festival, the Kronberg Academy presents the Pablo Casals Award – For A Better World.- 2022 Martin Helmchen and Marie-Elisabeth Hecker for their project "Music Road Rwanda"
- 2023 Lars Vogt for the project "Rhapsody in School"
- 2024 Jennifer Stumm for her artist collective "Ilumina"
- 2025 Midori for her commitment to social and educational projects, including "Midori & Friends" and "Music Sharing"
Notable alumni
- Nikita Boriso-Glebsky – violin
- Andreas Brantelid – cello
- Stella Chen – violin
- Timothy Chooi – violin
- Pablo Ferrández – cello
- Vilde Frang – violin
- William Hagen – violin
- Marie-Elisabeth Hecker – cello
- Alina Ibragimova – violin
- Ivan Karizna – cello
- Anastasia Kobekina – cello
- Harriet Krijgh – cello
- Anna Lee – violin
- Christel Lee – violin
- Niklas Liepe – violin
- Ji Young Lim – violin
- Edgar Moreau – cello
- Timothy Ridout – viola
- Alexander Sitkovetsky – violin
- Kian Soltani – cello
- Julian Steckel – cello
- Ella van Poucke – cello
- Stephen Waarts – violin
- Itamar Zorman – violin
Notable faculty
- Ana Chumachenco – violin
- Kirill Gerstein – piano
- Martin Helmchen – piano
- Frans Helmerson – cello
- Nobuko Imai – viola
- Janine Jansen – violin
- Ferenc Rados – piano
- Sir András Schiff – piano
- Christian Tetzlaff – violin
- Antje Weithaas – violin
- Tabea Zimmermann – viola