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In 1997, while still in her twenties,
Anu Tali became a pioneering figure among young conductors when she co-founded, with her identical twin sister Kadri, the
Nordic Symphony Orchestra. As principal conductor,
Anu Tali leads the 90-member
NSO in about a dozen concerts per year and has appeared on three recordings with them, one each for the Warner Classics,
ECM, and Finlandia labels.
Tali has also been busy as a guest-conductor, making appearances at major festivals, including at the Salzburg and Savonlinna (Finland) festivals and has led performances of the
Estonian National Symphony Orchestra and at the Theatre Vanemuine (Tartu, Estonia). Although
Tali is associated with the music of contemporary Estonian composers like
Arvo Pärt, Veljo Tormis, and
Erkki-Sven Tüür, she has conducted a fairly broad range of works by
Berlioz,
Tchaikovsky,
Grieg,
Sibelius,
Debussy,
Rachmaninov, and many others.
Anu Tali was born in Tallinn, Estonia, on June 18, 1972. In her childhood and teens she studied piano. After graduation from the Tallinn Conservatory in 1991, she enrolled at the Estonian Music Academy, where her teachers in conducting included Kuno Areng and Toomas Kapten. From 1995, she took master classes in conducting from
Jorma Panula at the Helsinki-based
Sibelius Academy.
The 1997 founding of the
Nordic Symphony Orchestra (originally named Estonian-Finnish Symphony Orchestra) did not sidetrack
Tali from further training: she studied conducting from 1998-2000 at the St. Petersburg Conservatory under Ilya Mussin and Leonid Korchmar.
Tali's first recording with the
NSO, Swan Flight, a collection of works by Tormis,
Debussy, and
Sibelius, was issued in 2002 on the Finlandia label and received generally favorable reviews.
2005 was a breakthrough year for
Tali: she debuted in the U.S. with the
New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and saw the release of her first recording for the Warner Classics label, a CD of works by
Sibelius,
Rachmaninov, and
Tüür, performed by the
NSO.
Tali debuted the following year both at the Savonlinna Opera Festival, leading a performance of Carmen, and at the Salzburg Festival, conducting the
Mozarteum Orchestra in the world premiere of an orchestral work by Reinhard Fuchs.
In 2007
Tali took the
NSO on its first European tour. That same year, with her international reputation clearly on the ascent, she was offered, but ultimately turned down, music directorship of the
Manitoba Chamber Orchestra. Among
Tali's recordings is the 2011 CD of works by
Erkki-Sven Tüür, with the
NSO, on the
ECM label.