Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Coffee & Classical

51.6M streams

51,571,223

Strings (Eternal)

15.5M streams

15,496,089

Anna Clyne: DANCE • Elgar: Cello Con...

12.4M streams

12,367,857

Barber: Adagio for Strings

10.8M streams

10,834,501

Gounod: Ave Maria

9.7M streams

9,677,766

Music To Die For

8.3M streams

8,301,016

The Best of Marin Alsop

5.7M streams

5,721,345

The Essential Baltimore Symphony Orche...

3.3M streams

3,344,574

Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4 & Variatio...

2.8M streams

2,791,220

Glass: Symphony No. 4, 'Heroes' / The ...

2.5M streams

2,547,175

Biography

Marin Alsop became the first woman to hold a major American conducting post when she became the principal conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 2007, and she has also had a significant career abroad. Alsop is one of the few top conductors whose activities have extended into jazz. Alsop was born in New York on October 16, 1956. Her parents were both musicians, and her father performed with the easy listening orchestra Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians. Alsop attended Yale University and also earned a violin performance degree from the Juilliard School. An admirer of Leonard Bernstein, she studied with him at the Tanglewood Music Festival in Massachusetts. Among her other teachers was Boston Symphony conductor Seiji Ozawa. In the 1980s, Alsop founded two jazz orchestras, the swing group String Fever and the Concordia Orchestra, which explored the boundary area between jazz and classical music. Her recording debut came with String Fever on the Naxos label in 1992 on the album Fever Pitch. She became the director of the Cabrillo Music Festival in 1991 and, in 1993, the conductor of the Colorado Symphony. Her committed relationship with hornist Kristin Jurkscheit, a member of the orchestra, raised eyebrows, but Alsop pointed out that it considerably preceded her appointment as conductor. In 2002, Alsop became the conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, remaining there through 2008; she was that orchestra's first female conductor. During that period came banner years for Alsop: in 2003, she won a Royal Philharmonic Society Conductor Award and was Gramophone Magazine's Artist of the Year, and in 2005, she received a MacArthur Foundation "genius grant" fellowship, becoming the first conductor to be so honored. Her selection as conductor of the Baltimore Symphony in 2007 gained wide publicity but was much more than temporary; she finally stepped down in 2021. Her local initiatives in Baltimore included an "OrchKids" program modeled on Venezuela's El Sistema music education program. An artist-in-residence at the Southbank Centre in London for the 2010-2011 season, Alsop then became conductor of the São Paulo State Symphony Orchestra in Brazil beginning in 2012. She has toured widely with that group, bringing it to its first appearance at the BBC Proms in 2012 and remaining in her post until 2019; that year, she became the first female chief conductor of the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra (the ORF Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien), remaining in that post as of the mid-2020s. In Britain, she has served as principal guest conductor with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and the City of London Sinfonia. Alsop became artistic director and chief conductor of the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra in 2023. Alsop has recorded extensively, mostly for the Naxos label, with many of the orchestras she has led and specializing in American music by Bernstein, Barber, and others, but has a very wide and eclectic repertory. In 2015, with the Baltimore Symphony, she recorded the Symphony No. 3 ("Kaddish") of her mentor, Leonard Bernstein. With the São Paulo State Symphony, Alsop issued two albums on Naxos of Bernstein's orchestral works in 2018 to celebrate the centennial anniversary of the composer's birth. In 2020, she was named the first principal conductor at suburban Chicago's Ravinia Festival. She returned in 2021 on the PentaTone Classics label with a recording of highlights from Gershwin's Porgy and Bess with the Philadelphia Orchestra and with a live recording of Bernstein's Candide with the London Symphony Orchestra, released on LSO Live. Alsop remained active through the COVID-19 pandemic, releasing five albums in 2022 (on Naxos, Avie, and Signum Classics) and following with three more in 2023 (on Naxos and Cedille), covering composers as diverse as Kevin Puts, Malek Jandali, and Mahler (completing a series of Schumann's symphonies as re-orchestrated by that composer). In 2024, Alsop made her first recording with the Vienna Radio Symphony, backing violinist Baiba Skride and violist Ivan Vukčević on a recording of music by Britten. By that time, her recording catalog comprised well over 100 releases. ~ James Manheim, Rovi