Alissa Rossius Dausgaard & Gerhard Vielhaber


Biography Alissa Rossius Dausgaard & Gerhard Vielhaber

Alissa Rossius Dausgaard & Gerhard Vielhaber Alissa Rossius Dausgaard & Gerhard Vielhaber

Alissa Rossius Dausgaard
flutist and composer, is one of the most interesting artists of her generation. She has performed frequently as a soloist, with the Swedish Chamber Orchestra, the Dresdner Kapellsolisten, the Haydn Orchestra of Bolzano and Trento, the Georgian Chamber Orchestra, the Prague Chamber Orchestra, the Southwest German Chamber Orchestra, and the Budapest Strings.

Born in Munich, Alissa Rossius Dausgaard began playing the flute at the age of four and went on to balance an unusually broad musical education with performances, recordings, and competitions from a young age. At ten she was accepted to study at the University of Music and Performing Arts Munich; her teachers included Marianne Henkel-Adorján, Philippe Boucly, Andrea Lieberknecht, and Wolfram Graul, and she soon became a featured artist with the Bavarian Radio as a soloist with orchestra, in chamber music, and with piano, including recordings as soloist with the Bamberg Symphony.

Alissa Rossius Dausgaard subsequently took up the position of Principal Flutist of the Swedish Chamber Orchestra and has performed as Guest Principal Flutist with the Konzerthausorchester Berlin, the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig, and the Bavarian State Opera. She has been a scholarship holder of the Mozart Gesellschaft Dortmund and is an alumna of the German Academic Scholarship Foundation.

One of her further interests is finding connections between the arts through her blog.

Gerhard Vielhaber
was twelve when he became a private pupil of Karl-Heinz Kämmerling, under whose tutelage he was awarded his diploma at the Hanover University of Music, Drama and Media in 2006. He later studied in Jacques Rouvier’s class at the University of the Arts in Berlin until his concert exam.

In addition to numerous first prizes at the national competition “Jugend musiziert”, he won the first prize in the Concertino Praga Radio Competition in 1997. Further awards followed, such as the 2003 GWK Young Artist Award by the Gesellschaft für Westfälische Kulturarbeit, Münster (Westphalia). As a finalist in the 2005 German Music Competition in Berlin he joined the list of artists supported by the German Music Council.

Among the leading festivals where he has appeared are the Festspiele Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, while his concert work has taken him to the Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg, Philharmonie in Berlin, Liederhalle Stuttgart, and Wiener Konzerthaus as well as to North and Latin America and Japan. As a soloist he has performed with the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, the Venezuelan National Youth Orchestra, and the Warsaw Radio Symphony Orchestra. His Mariani Piano Quartet’s recordings of Brahms/Gernsheim Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 were awarded a Diapason d’Or in 2021 and 2022.

He holds a scholarship from the German Foundation for Musical Life and has also received support from the Jürgen Ponto Foundation and the German Academic Scholarship Foundation. From 2014 to 2024 he has taught as a professor for piano and chamber music at the Stella Vorarlberg Private University College for Music in Feldkirch, Austria. Since 2024 he is a professor for piano chamber music at the Cologne University of Music and Dance.

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