Wolfram Lattke
- Music Department
- Actor
The tenor Wolfram Lattke received his first vocal training at the age of seven and was a member of the Dresden Kreuzchor and later the Leipzig St. Thomas Choir.
Taking up this imprint, he then received singing lessons from Bernd-Siegfried Weber and studied singing at the Leipzig Music Academy "Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy" with Prof. Hans-Joachim Beyer, with whom he still has a valuable collaboration today. He was also given significant impulses by masterclasses with Horst Günter and Peter Schreier, among others.
Wolfram Lattke has been a member of the vocal soloist ensemble "amarcord" since 1995, with which he received a scholarship from the German Music Council in 2000 and won the German Music Competition in 2002.
He is a regular guest on major concert stages around the world. Numerous engagements have taken him to over 50 countries in recent years, where he has played with internationally leading ensembles and conductors, including the New York Philharmonic, the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, the Konzerthausorchester Berlin, the Thomanerchor Leipzig, the Bach Collegium Japan, Lawrence Forster, Kurt Masur, Riccardo Chailly, Susanna Mälkki, Masaaki Suzuki, Joshua Rifkin and the "Hilliard Ensemble".
In addition to concert, song and ensemble literature of all stripes, his repertoire includes works from all musical epochs from the Renaissance to the modern era, although the interpretation of early Baroque and Baroque works is a key focus of his work due to the color and style of his voice.
Taking up this imprint, he then received singing lessons from Bernd-Siegfried Weber and studied singing at the Leipzig Music Academy "Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy" with Prof. Hans-Joachim Beyer, with whom he still has a valuable collaboration today. He was also given significant impulses by masterclasses with Horst Günter and Peter Schreier, among others.
Wolfram Lattke has been a member of the vocal soloist ensemble "amarcord" since 1995, with which he received a scholarship from the German Music Council in 2000 and won the German Music Competition in 2002.
He is a regular guest on major concert stages around the world. Numerous engagements have taken him to over 50 countries in recent years, where he has played with internationally leading ensembles and conductors, including the New York Philharmonic, the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, the Konzerthausorchester Berlin, the Thomanerchor Leipzig, the Bach Collegium Japan, Lawrence Forster, Kurt Masur, Riccardo Chailly, Susanna Mälkki, Masaaki Suzuki, Joshua Rifkin and the "Hilliard Ensemble".
In addition to concert, song and ensemble literature of all stripes, his repertoire includes works from all musical epochs from the Renaissance to the modern era, although the interpretation of early Baroque and Baroque works is a key focus of his work due to the color and style of his voice.