Gernot Süßmuth - Violin

As the son of Gunthard Süßmuth (head of the environmental department of Hoyerswerda), Gernot Süßmuth first attended the music school in Hoyerswerda. At the age of nine he was already performing as a soloist with an orchestra. This was followed by prizes at children's and youth competitions. At the age of 16 he studied at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music in Berlin. He completed his violin studies in 1984 with a soloist diploma. In 1985 the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra hired him as concertmaster. From 2000 to 2002 he was concertmaster of the Staatskapelle Berlin. Since August 2002 he has been first concertmaster of the Staatskapelle Weimar. 

 

Süßmuth is also a successful chamber musician. From 1983 to March 2000 he was a member of the Petersen Quartet, performed in major international concert halls and released numerous CDs, which have won awards including the Grand Prix Du Disc, the Echo Music Prize and the German Record Critics' Prize. 

 

At the turn of the millennium he founded the Aperto Piano Quartett with his former quartet colleague Hans-Jakob Eschenburg, and in 2008 the Waldstein Quartet with Mirijam Contzen, Ulrich Eichenauer and Peter Hörr. Süßmuth was artistic director of the European Union Chamber Orchestra until 2011 and concertmaster under Helmuth Rilling at the Bach Academy (Bach-Collegium Stuttgart) in Stuttgart from 2001 to 2014. 

 

Concert tours have taken him as a conductor and soloist through Germany, to various countries in Central and South America and to England. He was concertmaster at the Oregon Bach Festival for many years. In 2012 he became director of the WestfalenClassics festival. In 2023 he was on a guest tour in China as orchestra conductor with the Camerata Salzburg. 

 

In addition to his chamber music activities, he regularly appears as a soloist and with other renowned chamber music partners, including Steven Bishop, Paul Meyer, Daniel Barenboim, Norbert Brainin and Martin Lovett. 

 

In 2018, Süßmuth founded the Thüringer Bach Collegium, with which he developed his own style of Bach interpretation as artistic director. 

 

Süßmuth has devoted himself for many years to the training of young musicians at the music academies in Berlin and Weimar and in 2004 accepted an appointment as honorary professor at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Weimar. 

 

For several decades he has also worked as an orchestra conductor at the summer courses of the Werkgemeinschaft Musik. 

 

Ludger Vollmer wrote a violin concerto for Gernot Süßmuth in 2020.