Oliver Drechsel


Oliver Drechsel is a German concert pianist and composer.

Life

Drechsel was born in Langenfeld (Rheinland). After initial lessons with his mother, the concert pianist Ruth Drechsel-Püster, he studied at the Hochschule für Musik Köln with Roswitha Gediga-Glombitza and Pavel Gililov. Master classes with, among others, Peter Feuchtwanger, Karl-Heinz Kämmerling and the Alban Berg Quartet complemented this education, which he completed in 1998 with the Konzertexamen. In the same year he released his debut CD "Jürg Baur - Das Klavierwerk" and received the . For his compositions he received, among others, the 1st prize of the 2007.
Drechsel is dedicated to the performance of 18th and 19th century piano music on original historical instruments from the Dohr Collection. This includes piano works by the composers Ferdinand Hiller, Friedrich Kiel, Christian Gottlob Neefe, Christian Heinrich Rinck and Johann Wilhelm Wilms, most of which are world premiere recordings.
In addition to solo performances at home and abroad as well as radio recordings and CD productions, a further focus of his pianistic work lies in the field of chamber music, in which he performs with Christoph Lahme as a "liaison extraordinaire" as well as with Gernot Süßmuth and Dagmar Spengler as the "Piano Trio Cologne-Weimar". In 2003, Drechsel was artist in residence at the Rinck Festival Cologne.
Drechsel teaches music and mathematics at the Otto-Hahn-Gymnasium in his home town Monheim am Rhein as well as piano at the Hochschule für Musik Köln.
Most of his work is published by Verlag Dohr.

Recordings

Publications

  • as author:
  • * Jürg Baur: Das Klavierwerk. Verlag Dohr 1998
  • as editor:
  • * Jürg Baur: Drei frühe Klavierstücke. Verlag Dohr 1998
  • * Jürg Baur: Werkverzeichnis. Verlag Dohr 2000
  • * Jürg Baur: Annotationen zur Musik. Ausgewählte Schriften, Aufsätze und Vorträge. Verlag Dohr 2003
  • * Johann Wilhelm Wilms: Klavierwerke Vol. 1. Denkmäler Rheinischer Musik Vol. 25, Verlag Dohr 2005
  • * Daniel Friedrich Eduard Wilsing: Sonate für Pianoforte und Violine. First edition. Verlag Dohr 2005