Conductor
Sir Mark Elder has achieved wide acclaim in the realm of opera, but he has also generally devoted an equal share of his career to orchestral work. He has worked with opera companies and orchestras throughout the world and has recorded major works from both realms to great success.
Elder is a principal artist of the
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and the music director of the
Hallé Orchestra, leading the latter group on a recording of Vaughan Williams' symphonies in 2022. That year, he was named the principal guest conductor of the
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra.
Elder was born in Hexham, England, on June 2, 1947. As a youth, he showed talent both as a singer and instrumentalist, serving as a chorister at Canterbury Cathedral and as the first-chair bassoonist in the National Youth Orchestra. He studied music at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and was later mentored by renowned conductor and musicologist
Edward Downes.
Elder worked briefly in minor capacities at Glyndebourne and Covent Garden before serving as the conductor of Opera Australia from 1972 to 1974. He returned to England in 1974 to serve as a regular conductor at the English National Opera. In 1979, he was appointed the music director of the
English National Opera; he remained in this position until 1993. During his years as
English National Opera director,
Elder conducted the company in numerous highly acclaimed productions and led successful tours to the U.S., Russia, and other parts of Europe. In addition, he has conducted the Chicago Lyric Opera and the
Metropolitan Opera, among other important opera companies.
Elder has also been active in the orchestral world. He was music director of the
Rochester Philharmonic from 1989 until 1994. In 2000, he was appointed music director of the
Hallé Orchestra. He served as principal guest conductor for the
London Mozart Players (1980-1983), the
BBC Symphony Orchestra (1982-1985), and the
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (1992-1995). He conducts yearly at the Proms; since 2003, he has conducted the
Hallé Orchestra in these performances.
Elder has also had the honor of conducting the "Last Night of the Proms" on two occasions, both times leading the
BBC Symphony. He has conducted many of the world's leading orchestras, including the
Vienna Symphony Orchestra and the
London and
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestras.
Elder's repertory is broad in both the operatic and orchestral realms: though he has favored
Verdi in the opera house, he has led performances of
Wagner (Die Meistersinger; Parsifal),
Busoni (Doktor Faust),
Stravinsky (The Rake's Progress), and contemporary composers like
David Blake (Toussaint).
Elder's orchestral choices include many standards while taking in works by contemporary British composers like
George Benjamin,
Nicholas Maw, and
Jonathan Harvey.
He has made numerous recordings for a variety of labels, including Chandos, EMI, and Hyperion. Since 2003, he has also recorded with
Hallé Orchestra on the
Hallé label. Among
Elder's more successful recordings are his English-language version of Verdi's Rigoletto on Chandos (2000) and Elgar's Symphony No. 2 on the
Hallé label (2004). The
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment named
Elder a principal artist in 2011. That year, Opera Rara, the label committed to forgotten or neglected 19th century operas, named
Elder as artistic director to help guide its endeavors; he remained in this role until 2019. That year, he released several albums, including the final opera of his Ring des Nibelungen cycle with the
Hallé Orchestra,
Wagner's Siegfried, on the
Hallé label. A busy 2022 schedule saw
Elder return to Covent Garden to lead a production of
Britten's Peter Grimes, the release of his complete survey of Vaughan Williams' symphonies with the
Hallé Orchestra, and he was named the principal guest conductor of the
Bergen Philharmonic.
Elder was awarded the Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1989, was knighted in 2008, and was appointed a Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour in 2017. ~ Robert Cummings & Keith Finke