List of oboists – Wikipedia

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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An oboist (formerly hautboist) is a musician who plays the oboe or any oboe family instrument, including the oboe d’amore, cor anglais or English horn, bass oboe and piccolo oboe or oboe musette.

The following is a list of notable past and present professional oboists, with indications when they were/are known better for other professions in their own time. Oboists with an asterisk (*) have biographies in the online version of the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians.

Historical oboists[edit]

Baroque period 1600–1760[edit]

  • Francesco Barsanti (1690–1772), Italian * (composer)
  • Alessandro Besozzi (1702–1773), Italian
  • Antonio Besozzi (1714–1781), Italian
  • Cristoforo Besozzi (1661–1725), Italian
  • Giuseppe Besozzi (1686–1760), Italian
  • Paolo Girolamo Besozzi (1713–1778), Italian
  • Mateo Bissoli (Bisioli) (c. 1711–1780), Italian[1]
  • Esprit Philippe Chédeville (1696–1762), French *
  • Nicolas Chédeville (1705–1782), French *
  • Pierre Chédeville (1694–1725), French *
  • André Danican Philidor (c. 1652–1730), French * (music librarian)
  • Anne Danican Philidor (1681–1728), French
  • Jean Danican Philidor (c. 1620–1679), French
  • Michel Danican Philidor [ca; fr; it] (1580–1651), French
  • Pierre Danican Philidor [ca; de; fr; it; no] (1681–1731), French
  • John Ernest Galliard (c. 1675–1747), German *
  • Johann Caspar Gleditsch (1684–1747), German (“Bach’s oboist”)[2]
  • Peter Glösch (c. 1685–1754), German[3]
  • Jean Hotteterre (c. 1610–1691), French * (instrument maker) (one of several oboists in the family)
  • Martin Hotteterre (1635–1712), French * (instrument maker)
  • Nicolas Hotteterre (1637–1694), French *
  • Johann Christian Jacobi (1719–1784), German (oboist at Janitsch’s “Freitags-Akademien”)
  • Jean Christian Kytch (died c. 1738), Dutch (“Handel’s oboist”)
  • François La Riche (1662 – after 1733), Flemish *[4]
  • Jacques Loeillet (1685–1748), Flemish *
  • Jean-Baptiste Loeillet (1680–1730), Flemish *
  • Jacques Paisible (c. 1656–1721), French (oboist in Robert Cambert orchestra which moved to London in 1673)
  • Joan Baptista Pla (c. 1720–1773), Spanish *
  • Josep Pla (1728–1762), Spanish *
  • Manuel Pla (c. 1725–1766), Spanish *
  • Giovanni Benedetto Platti (1697–1763), Italian *[5]
  • Johann Christian Richter (1689–1744), German[4]
  • Jacob Riehman (c. 1680–1729), Dutch *
  • Giuseppe Sammartini (1695–1750), Italian * (son of French oboist Alexis Saint-Martin)
  • Georg Philipp Telemann (1681–1767), German composer (Oboe was one of over 10 instruments he played)
  • Roberto Valentine (1674 – c. 1740), English * (composer)[6]

Classical period 1730–1820[edit]

Portrait of an unknown oboist by anonymous painter, 1st half 18th century
  • Sante Aguilar (c. 1734–1808), Italian[7]
  • Christian Frederik Barth (1787–1861), Danish
  • Christian Samuel Barth (1735–1809), German *
  • Frederik Philip Carl August Barth (1774–1804), Danish *
  • Georg Benda (1722–1795), Czech * (composer)
  • Carlo Besozzi (1738–1791), Italian
  • Francesco Besozzi (1766–1816), Italian
  • Gaetano Besozzi (1725–1794), Italian
  • Girolamo Besozzi (c. 1745–1788), Italian
  • Friedrich Braun (1759–1824), German *
  • Franz Joseph Czerwenka (1759–1835), Czech-Austrian (“Beethoven’s oboist”)[8]
  • Georg Druschetzky (1745–1819), Czech *
  • Giuseppe Ferlendis (1755–1810), Italian *[9]
  • Josef Fiala (1748–1816), Czech * (“Mozart’s oboist 1”)
  • Johann Christian Fischer (1733–1800), German *[10]
  • Joseph François Garnier (1755–1825), French *
  • Michel Joseph Gebauer (1763–1812), French *
  • Gottlieb Graupner (1767–1836), German-American
  • William Herschel (1738–1822), German (astronomer) (before 1765 primarily oboist, only later an astronomer)
  • François Jadin (1731–1790), French *
  • Carl Khym (1770–after 1819), Czech *
  • Ludwig August Lebrun (1746–1790), German *
  • Ignace Malzat (1757–1804), Austrian (probably wrote the “Haydn” oboe concerto) *
  • Domenico Mancinelli [it] (c. 1723–1804), Italian *
  • Carl Ludwig Matthes (1751–?), German
  • John Parke (1745–1829), English *
  • William Thomas Parke (1762–1847), English *
  • Giuseppe Prota (1737–1807), Italian *
  • Friedrich Ramm (1744–1813), German (“Mozart’s oboist 2”)[7]
  • François Alexandre Antoine Sallantin (1755 – c. 1830), French *
  • Johann Friedrich Schröter (1724–1811), German *
  • Charles J. Suck (c. 1760c. 1808), English *
  • Philipp Teimer (Filip Matyas Tajmar) (1767–1817), Bohemian (English horn)[11]
  • Georg Triebensee (1746–1813), Bohemian *
  • Josef Triebensee (1772–1846), Bohemian * (composer)
  • Jan Nepomuk Vent [cs; de; nl] (1745–1801), Bohemian *
  • Thomas Vincent (1720–1783), English *

Romantic period 1815–1910[edit]

  • Apollon Barret (1804–1879), French *[12]
  • Christian Frederik Barth (1787–1861), Danish *
  • Richard Baumgärtel (1858–1941), German[13]
  • Félix-Charles Berthélemy (1829–1868), French[14]
  • Carl A.P. Braun (1788–1835), German *
  • Wilhelm Braun (1796–1867), German *
  • Henri Brod (1799–1839), French *[15]
  • Baldassare Centroni (c. 1784–1860), Italian (“Rossini’s oboist”)[16]
  • Charles Colin [de; es; fr; ru] (1832–1881), French[17]
  • Franz Wilhelm Ferling (1796–1874), German
  • Willi Gerlach [de; ja] (1909–1971), German [18]
  • Georges Gillet (1854–1920), French *[19]
  • Joseph Gungl (1810–1889), Hungarian * (conductor)
  • Johann Peter Heuschkel (1773–1853), German *
  • Ernst Krähmer (1795–1857), German *
  • Olivo Krause (1857–1927), Danish
  • Desiré Alfred Lalande (1866–1904), French *
  • Antoine Joseph Lavigne (1816–1886), French[20]
  • Johann Heinrich Luft (1813–1877), German[21]
  • William Malsch (1855–1924), English *
  • Giovanni Paggi (1806–1887), Italian *
  • Antonio Pasculli (1842–1924), Italian * (the “Paganini of the oboe”)
  • Charles Reynolds (1843–1916), English[22]
  • Friedrich Ruthardt (1800–1862), German
  • Adolf Rzepko (1825–1892), Polish *
  • Joseph Sellner (1787–1843), Austrian[23]
  • Pedro Soler (1810–1850), Spanish[24]
  • Friedrich-Eugen Thurner (1785–1827), German[25]
  • Charles Triébert (1810–1867), French *
  • Frédéric Triébert (1813–1878), French * (instrument maker)[26]
  • Raoul Triébert (1845–c. 1894), French *
  • Stanislas Verroust (1814–1863), French[27]
  • Gustave Vogt (1781–1870), French *
  • Friedrich Westenholz (1778–1840), German *
  • Carlo Yvon (1798–1854), Italian[28]

20th-century oboists[edit]

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Attilio Bianco, English horn, 1917

A-L[edit]

  • Albert J. Andraud (1884–1975), French-American[29]
  • Rhadames Angelucci (1915–1991), American[30]
  • Alfred Barthel (1871–1957), French[31]
  • Evelyn Barbirolli (born Evelyn Rothwell), (1911–2008), English *[32]
  • Louis Bas (1863–1944), French [33]
  • Etienne Baudo (1903–2001), French[34]
  • Louis Bleuzet [es; fr; ru] (1871–1941), French
  • Robert Bloom (1908–1994), American *[35]
  • Joy Boughton (1913–1963), English[36]
  • Leonard Brain (1915–1975), English *
  • Henri de Busscher (1880–1975), Belgian *[37]
  • Natalie Caine (1909–2008), English
  • Jacques Chambon [fr] (1932–1984), French
  • Janet Craxton (1929–1981), English *[38] (Sister of the painter John Craxton)
  • William Criss (1921–1984), American[39]
  • John de Lancie (1921–2002), American *
  • Albert Debondue (1895–1984), French[40]
  • Antonio Estévez (1916–1988), Venezuelan * (composer)
  • Alvin Etler (1913–1973), American * (composer)
  • Svend Christian Felumb (1898–1972), Danish[41]
  • Peter Fischer (1924–2004), German[42]
  • Fritz Flemming (born 1872 or 1873; died 1947), German[43]
  • Réal Gagnier [de; fr] (1905–1984), Canadian
  • Bert Gassman (1911–2004), American[44]
  • Fernand Gillet (1882–1980), French[45]
  • Ruth Gipps (1921–1999), British (composer)
  • Albert Goltzer (1918–2007), American[46][47]
  • Harold Gomberg (1916–1985), American *
  • Ralph Gomberg (1921–2006), American *
  • Leon Goossens (1897–1988), English *
  • Peter Graeme (1921–2012), English
  • Percy Grainger (1882–1961), Australian-American
  • František Hanták [cs; ru] (1910–1990), Czech *
  • Earnest Harrison (1918–2005), American[48]
  • Hans Kamesch (1901–1975), Austrian[49]
  • Rudolf Kempe (1910–1976), German * (conductor)
  • Bruno Labate (1883–1968), Italian[50]
  • Roland Lamorlette (1894–1960), French[40]
  • Alfred Läubin (1906–1976), American (instrument maker)
  • Marc Lifschey (1926–2000), American[51]
  • Georges Longy (1868–1930), French *[52]

M-Z[edit]

  • Terence MacDonagh (1908–1986), British[53]
  • Arno Mariotti (1911–1993), German-born American[54]
  • Josef Marx (1913–1978), German-American *[55]
  • Robert Mayer (1910–1994), American[56]
  • Karl Mayrhofer (1927–1976), Austrian[57]
  • Mitch Miller (1911–2010), American (choir conductor, recording director)
  • Myrtile Morel (1889–1979), French[58]
  • Florian Mueller [de; nl] (1904–1983), American[59]
  • Pierre Pierlot (1921–2007), French[60]
  • Giuseppe Prestini (1877–1930), Italian[61]
  • David Reichenberg (1950–1987), American * (also listed under period instrumentalists below)
  • A. Clyde Roller (1914–2005), American
  • Marcel Saillet (1898–1983), Swiss [62]
  • Jürg Schaeftlein (1929–1986), Austrian *[63]
  • Riccardo Scozzi (1878–1955), Italian[61]
  • Edgar Shann (1919–1984), Swiss[64]
  • Harry Shulman (1916–1971), American[65]
  • Jerry Sirucek (1922–1996), American[66]
  • Koen van Slogteren [nl] (1922–1995), Dutch[67]
  • Václav Smetáček (1906–1986), Czech * (conductor)
  • Robert Sprenkle (1914–1988), American[68]
  • Warren Stannard (1923–1995), American [69][70]
  • William Grant Still (1895–1978), American * (composer)
  • Haakon Stotijn [nl] (1915–1964), Dutch *
  • Jaap Stotijn (1891–1970), Dutch *
  • František Suchý (1902–1977), Czech *
  • Sidney Sutcliffe (1918–2001), Scottish[34]
  • Seizo Suzuki [ja] (1922–2008), Japanese [71]
  • Marcel Tabuteau (1887–1966), French/American *
  • Jiří Tancibudek (1921–2004), Czech-Australian [72]
  • Giuseppe Tomassini (1915–1987), Italian[73]
  • Lois Wann (1912–1999), American[74]
  • Alexander Wunderer (1877–1955), Austrian[75]

20th-century players of the English horn[edit]

Contemporary classical oboists[edit]

A-B[edit]

  • Janice Applegate (born 1948), American
  • Aurel Marc, Romanian
  • Max Artved (born 1965), Danish[81]
  • Theodore Baskin (born 1950), American
  • Perry Bauman (1918–2004), American-Canadian[82]
  • William Bennett (1956–2013), American[83]
  • Melvin Berman (1929–2008), American-Canadian
  • León Biriotti [es] (1929–2020), Uruguayan *
  • Neil Black (1932–2016), English
  • Maurice Bourgue (born 1939), French
  • Peter Bowman, American[84]
  • Douglas Boyd (born 1960), Scottish[85]
  • Peter Bree (born 1949), Dutch[86]
  • Riccardo Bricchi (born 1959), Italian [87][88][89]

C-E[edit]

  • German Cáceres (born 1954), Salvadoran * (composer)
  • George Caird (born c. 1950), English[90]
  • Sandro Caldini (born 1958), Italian
  • Anthony Camden (1938–2006), English[91]
  • Roy Carter (born 1949), English
  • Joseph Celli (born 1944), American *
  • Nicholas Daniel (born 1962), English
  • Clara Dent (born 1973), German (daughter of Simon Dent) [92]
  • Nick Deutsch [de] (born 1972), Australian [93]
  • Paolo Di Cioccio (born 1963), Italian
  • Jonathan Dlouhy, American[94]
  • Diana Doherty (born 1966), Australian
  • Elaine Douvas (born 1952), American
  • Stuart Edward Dunkel, American
  • Niels Eje (born 1954), Danish[95]
  • Majid Entezami (born 1947), Iranian

F-H[edit]

  • John Ferrillo, American[96]
  • Sarah Francis [fr] (born 1938), English *
  • Thomas Gallant, American
  • Alfred Genovese (1931–2011), American
  • Ariana Ghez (born 1979), American[97]
  • Burkhard Glaetzner (born 1943), German[98]
  • Wynne Godley (1926–2010), English (economist)
  • Henrik Chaim Goldschmidt (born 1959), Danish[99]
  • Ingo Goritzki (born 1939), German[100]
  • Charles Hamann (born 1971), American-Canadian[101]
  • Christoph Hartmann [de] (born 1965), German [102]
  • Jared Hauser (born 1971), American
  • Werner Herbers [de; nl] (born 1940), Dutch [103][104]
  • Brynjar Hoff (born 1940), Norwegian
  • Heinz Holliger (born 1939), Swiss *
  • Bernd Holz (born 1955), German[105][106][107]
  • Christian Hommel (born 1963), German[108]
  • Gordon Hunt (born 1950), English[109]

I-L[edit]

  • Thomas Indermühle [de; es; ru] (born 1951), Swiss[110][111]
  • Eugene Izotov (born 1973), Russian-American
  • Florin Ionoaia (born 1956), Romanian
  • Jean-Claude Jaboulay, French[112]
  • Helen Jahren (born 1959), Swedish[113]
  • Kamil Jalilov (1938–2022), Azerbaijani
  • Arthur Jensen (1925–2018), American[114]
  • Giorgi Kalandarishvili (born 1983) Georgian-German. Muenster Symphony, University of Music in Muenster “Musikhochschule Münster”
  • Michael Kamen (1948–2003), American (film score composer)
  • Melvin Kaplan (born 1929), American
  • Jonathan Kelly (born 1969), British
  • Dimitris Kitsos (born 1971), Greek[115]
  • Alex Klein (born 1964), Brazilian
  • Elizabeth Koch (born 1986), American
  • Lothar Koch (1935–2003), German *
  • Kalev Kuljus [de] (born c. 1975), Estonian[116]
  • Yeon-Hee Kwak (born c. 1969), Korean[117]
  • François Leleux (born 1971), French
  • Lajos Lencsés [ca; fr; ru] (born 1943), Hungarian[118]
  • Jay Light (born 1940s), American
  • Michael Lisicky (born 1964), American

M-Q[edit]

  • John Mack (1927–2006), American
  • Charles Mackerras (1925–2010), Australian (conductor) *
  • Jean-Claude Malgoire (1940–2018), French
  • Joel Marangella (born 1940s), American
  • Eldevina Materula (born 1982), Mozambican
  • Albrecht Mayer (born 1965), German
  • Malcolm Messiter, English
  • Fumiaki Miyamoto (born 1949) 宮本文昭, Japanese
  • Lucas Macías Navarro (born 1978), Spanish
  • Katherine Needleman (born 1978), American
  • Alexei Ogrintchouk [de; nl; ru] (born 1978), Russian [119][120]
  • Christopher O’Neal (born 1953), British [121]
  • Pauline Oostenrijk [nl] (born 1967), Dutch [122]
  • Ivan Podyomov, (born 1986), Russian
  • Ivan Pushetchnikov [ru] (1918–2010), Russian [123]

R-S[edit]

  • Wayne Rapier (1930–2005), American [124]
  • Elizabeth Raum (born 1945), Canadian * [125]
  • Sally Sarah Johnston Reid (born 1948), American *
  • Juozas Rimas (born 1942), Lithuanian
  • Roger Roe (born 1968), American, assistant principal oboist/English horn player of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra
  • Carlo Romano (born 1954), Italian [126]
  • Joseph Robinson (born 1940), American *
  • Pierre Rolland (1931–2011), Canadian
  • Ronald Roseman (1933–2000), American [127]
  • Edwin Roxburgh (born 1937), English *
  • Telena Ruth (born 1957), Australian [128]
  • Graham Salter, English [129]
  • Hansjorg Schellenberger (born 1948), German [130]
  • Bernard Schenkel (born 1941), Swiss [131]
  • Bart Schneemann (born 1954), Dutch
  • Stefan Schilli [ca; de; es; ja] (born 1970), German [132]
  • Martin Schuring (American) [133]
  • Jonathan Small (born 1956), English [134]
  • Peter Smith, American
  • Jan Spronk (born c. 1940), Dutch [135]
  • Eva Steinaa (born 1993), Danish[136]
  • Ray Still (1920–2014), American
  • Cynthia Steljes (1960–2006), Canadian [137]
  • Daniel Stolper (1935–2020), American
  • Laila Storch (1921–2022), American [138][139]
  • Linda Strommen (born 1957), American

T-Z[edit]

Contemporary oboists best known for playing English horn (cor anglais) or oboe d’amore[edit]

Contemporary oboists best known for playing period instruments[edit]

  • Katharina Arfken, German [154]
  • Paul Dombrecht (born 1948), Belgian [155]
  • Ku Ebbinge (born 1948), Dutch *
  • Paul Goodwin (born 1956), English * [156]
  • Bruce Haynes (1942–2011), American-Canadian *
  • Takeharu Nobuhara [ja] (born 1943), Japanese (conductor) [157]
  • Christopher Palameta (born 1979), Canadian
  • Michel Piguet (1932–2004), Swiss *
  • Marcel Ponseele (born 1957), Belgian [158]
  • Susanne Regel (born 1974), German
  • David Reichenberg (1950–1987), American * [159]
  • Hugo Reyne (born 1961), French [160]
  • Anthony Robson (born 1955), English [161]
  • Marc Schachman, American [162][163]

Oboists performing primarily outside classical genres[edit]

As primary instrument[edit]

  • Kyle Bruckmann (born 1971), American – free improvisation
  • Lindsay Cooper (1951–2013), English – art rock
  • Jean-Luc Fillon (born 1960s), French – jazz
  • Karl Jenkins (born 1944), Welsh * – jazz
  • Colin Maier (born 1976), Canadian – new classical, celtic
  • Paul McCandless (born 1947), American * – jazz
  • Nancy Rumbel (born 1951), American – new age
  • Sonny Simmons (1933–2021), American – jazz
  • Frank Socolow (1923–1981), American – jazz
  • Kate St John (born 1957), English – art rock, pop
  • Libby Van Cleve (born 1958), American – avant garde
  • Russel Walder (born 1959), American – new age

As secondary instrument[edit]

  • Ahmad Alaadeen (1934–2010), American – jazz (saxophonist)
  • Marshall Allen (born 1924), American – jazz (saxophonist)
  • Derek Bell (1935–2002), Irish – folk (harpist)
  • Amanda Brown (born 1965), Australian – indie rock (violinist, guitarist)
  • Garvin Bushell (1902–1991), American – jazz (all reeds)
  • Bob Cooper (1925–1993), American – jazz (saxophone)
  • Julie Fowlis (born 1979), Scottish – Celtic (vocalist)
  • Vinny Golia (born 1946), American – jazz (all woodwinds)
  • Joseph Jarman (1937–2019), American – jazz (clarinetist, saxophonist)
  • Mick Karn (1958–2011), British – rock (multi-instrumentalist)
  • Rahsaan Roland Kirk (1936–1977), American – jazz (multi-instrumentalist)
  • Yusef Lateef (1920–2013), American – jazz (saxophonist, flutist)
  • Giuseppi Logan (1935–2020), American – jazz (multi-instrumentalist)
  • Andy Mackay (born 1946), English – art rock (saxophonist)
  • Charlie Mariano (1923–2009), American – jazz (saxophonist)
  • Makanda Ken McIntyre (1931–2001), American – jazz (saxophonist)
  • Roscoe Mitchell (born 1940), American – jazz (saxophonist)
  • Dewey Redman (1931–2006), American – jazz (saxophonist, suona)
  • Don Redman (1900–1964), American – jazz (clarinetist, saxophonist)
  • Sufjan Stevens (born 1975), American – indie rock (multi-instrumentalist)
  • Kjartan Sveinsson (born 1978), Icelandic – post-rock (keyboardist)

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Further reading[edit]

  • David Lasocki “The French Hautboy in England, 1673–1730” Early Music 16(3) 339–357
  • Alfredo Bernardini “The Oboe in the Venetian Republic, 1692–1797” Early Music 16(3) 372–387
  • Janet K. Page “The Hautboy in London’s Musical Life, 1730–1770” Early Music 16(3) 358–371
  • Bruce Haynes “Mozart and the Oboe” Early Music 20(1) 43–63
  • Burgess, Geoffrey; Haynes, Bruce (2004). The Oboe. Yale Musical Instrument Series. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10053-2.
  • Ryoichi Narusawa (ed. Marc Fink) “A History of Oboe Playing in Japan” (The Double Reed, Vol.27 No.4, International Double Reed Society) 2004

External links[edit]


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