Artistic Director: Quintin Ballardie
Principal Conductor: Ralf GothÙni
Principal Guest Conductor: Roy Goodman
Associate Conductor: Paul Watkins
Orchestra Leader: Stephanie Gonley

The
English Chamber Orchestra is one of the world’s
leading chamber orchestras, having performed in more countries
than any other orchestra, recorded over 1,200 works and played
with the world’s greatest musicians. Last year the American
radio network CPRN selected the
English Chamber Orchestra
as one of the world’s greatest ‘living’ orchestras.
The ECO aims to celebrate and build upon its traditions of maintaining
the highest international musical standards and nurturing new
talent, as well as being the chamber orchestra of choice for many
of the world’s greatest soloists.
The orchestra receives no public funding in support of its activities.The
illustrious history of the orchestra features many major musical
figures. Benjamin Britten was the orchestra’s first Patron
and a significant musical influence. The
English Chamber
Orchestra’s long relationship with Daniel Barenboim
led to an acclaimed complete cycle of Mozart piano concertos as
live performances and recordings, followed later by two further
recordings of the complete cycle, with Murray Perahia and Mitsuko
Uchida. Jeffrey Tate was appointed as the first Principal Conductor
in 1985, and was succeeded by Ralf Gothóni in 2000. The
orchestra continues to attract musicians of the stature few chamber
orchestras can match.
After a successful first summer in 2007, the
English Chamber
Orchestra is now resident at
Grange Park Opera
in Hampshire. In the summer of 2007 the ECO gave a tour in Spain,
and its smaller incarnation, the
English Chamber Orchestra
Ensemble, was resident at the Blair Atholl festival. The 2007
Mediterranean Music Cruise featured guest artists Maxim Vengerov,
Paul Watkins, Alison Balsom, Lisa Batiashvili and François
Leleux. Throughout the autumn and winter the
English Chamber
Orchestra will tour Europe with violinist Sarah Chang,
and South Korea with Ralf Gothóni.
In the autumn and winter of 2007 the
English Chamber Orchestra
co-presented the festival
Sibelius & Beyond
with The Finnish Institute in London. The festival commemorated
the 50th anniversary of the death of Sibelius and celebrated the
strength of Finnish music today through 20-odd concerts, two lecture
series and a film series.
Since its inception the
English Chamber Orchestra
has regularly commissioned new works, most recently
Sheer
by Anthony Gilbert (premiered in Prague, May 2006), the Concertino
for Bassoon by Simon Proctor (premiered in Bristol, November 2005)
and
Pratirupa by Sir John Tavener (premiered in London,
November 2004 when the ECO performed the composer’s 60th
birthday concert).
The
English Chamber Orchestra has been chosen
to record many successful film soundtracks (including several
scores by John Barry and Dario Marinelli’s
Pride and
Prejudice and
Atonement) and has taken part in a
variety of film and television projects.
The
English Chamber Orchestra is proud of its
outreach programme,
Close Encounters, which takes music
into communities and schools around the UK and overseas.