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Alexej Gerassimez
Alexej Gerassimez
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Alexej Gerassimez (born 1987 in Essen) is a German solo percussion player and composer.

Gerassimez was born in Essen, Germany.[1] His brothers are also musicians: Nicolai Gerassimez is a pianist and Wassily Gerassimez is a cellist.[2] He studied at the Cologne Conservatory of Music, the Berlin Conservatory and the Munich Conservatory of Music.[1]

In 2010 he won the TROMP Percussion Competition for solo percussion[3] as well as the Audience Award and the Press Prize.[4] In 2015 he took up a tutoring position at the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire in England.[3]

He has performed with orchestras in Europe including the Radio Symphony Orchestra Berlin, the Beethoven Orchestra Bonn and the Bochum Philharmonic, as well as internationally in Japan, in the US with the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra, and in New Zealand.[3][5]

In 2022 he performed the New Zealand premiere performance of New Zealand composer John Psathas's work Leviathan for orchestra and solo percussion.[5] The work takes its inspiration from Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony and was commissioned in 2020 by the Tonhall Düsseldorf and dedicated to Gerassimez. The premiere performance took place in 2021 with the Berlin Radio Symphony under Markus Poschner.[6][7]

Gerassimez has made numerous recordings and CDs and is also a composer.[1]

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from Grokipedia
Alexej Gerassimez is a German percussionist known for his extraordinary versatility, virtuosity, and multifaceted approach to music that spans classical, contemporary, and crossover repertoires. Born in Essen, Germany, in 1987, he has established himself as a prominent soloist, chamber musician, composer, and ensemble leader. Gerassimez studied percussion at the Cologne University of Music with Christian Roderburg and continued his training at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music in Berlin. His early career gained momentum through successes in international competitions, including victories at the International Marimba Competition in Nuremberg and the TROMP Percussion Competition in the Netherlands, where he received first prize along with audience and press awards. He later won the ARD International Music Competition, which propelled him to perform extensively in Europe, Asia, and North America. His repertoire bridges traditional percussion literature with innovative contemporary works, and he frequently creates his own solo programs while collaborating with orchestras, chamber groups, and pianists. Gerassimez also engages in creative projects that highlight his compositional skills and enthusiasm for chamber music. He has appeared at major festivals and venues worldwide, earning recognition for his dynamic stage presence and ability to expand the boundaries of percussion performance.

Early life and education

Family background

Alexej Gerassimez was born in 1987 in Essen, Germany. He grew up in a highly musical household where both parents pursued careers as professional musicians. All of his siblings are also active as professional musicians, creating an environment in which music was an integral and natural part of daily life. This family background profoundly shaped his path, as the decision to become a musician was never in question—only the choice of instrument remained open. His brothers, the pianist Nicolai Gerassimez and the cellist Wassily Gerassimez, likewise established themselves as professional performers, reinforcing the pervasive musical influence within the family. This supportive and immersive musical home fostered Gerassimez's early interest in percussion and laid the foundation for his subsequent career.

Education

Alexej Gerassimez pursued his formal percussion training at several prominent German conservatories. He studied with Christian Roderburg and Stefan Hüge at the Hochschule für Musik und Tanz Köln (Cologne Conservatory). He continued his studies at the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler Berlin (Berlin Conservatory). He completed his education with Peter Sadlo at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München (Munich University of Music and Performing Arts). His early musical development laid the groundwork for these studies, as he began piano lessons at age five and percussion at age seven in his hometown of Essen. In 2000, he entered the Cologne Conservatory as a young student under Roderburg. After high school and a year in Berlin, he transferred to Munich to study with Sadlo.

Career

Competition achievements

Alexej Gerassimez rose to prominence as a percussionist through notable successes in international competitions. Earlier in his career, he won first prize at the International Marimba Competition in Nuremberg. In 2010, he secured the first prize at the TROMP International Percussion Competition, along with the Audience Award and the Press Prize. These awards at the renowned Eindhoven-based event marked a major breakthrough, drawing widespread attention to his solo capabilities and interpretive range. In 2014, he earned second prize at the ARD International Music Competition in Munich in the percussion category, additionally receiving a special prize for the best interpretation of the commissioned work. These competition achievements established him as a leading figure in contemporary percussion and paved the way for his subsequent international performance engagements.

Performance career

Alexej Gerassimez maintains an active international performance career as a multi-percussion soloist, regularly appearing with prominent orchestras and collaborating with leading conductors on both standard and contemporary repertoire. He has performed as soloist with ensembles including the Rundfunksinfonieorchester Berlin, Münchner Philharmoniker, Konzerthausorchester Berlin, NDR Radiophilharmonie Hannover, SWR Symphonieorchester, Prager Radio Sinfonieorchester, Düsseldorf Symphony Orchestra, and various others across Europe, Asia, and North America. His orchestral collaborations feature conductors such as Tan Dun, Kristjan Järvi, Markus Poschner, Alexander Liebreich, Jonathan Stockhammer, and Alpesh Chauhan. Gerassimez is particularly noted for premiering new works written for or dedicated to him. He gave the world premiere of John Psathas's percussion concerto Leviathan in autumn 2021 at the Berlin Philharmonie with the Rundfunksinfonieorchester Berlin under Markus Poschner, followed by performances at the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg and with the Düsseldorf Symphony Orchestra conducted by Alpesh Chauhan. In spring 2022, he premiered Kalevi Aho’s Double Concerto for Viola and Percussion with the Lahti Symphony Orchestra under Anja Bihlmaier. He also presented the European premiere of Vincent Ho’s The Shaman (Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra) on 8 December 2023 with the Düsseldorf Symphony Orchestra at the Tonhalle Düsseldorf. In chamber music, Gerassimez frequently collaborates with distinguished partners. He has toured with pianists Arthur and Lucas Jussen, including a 2022 series of concerts in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany. He performs jazz-influenced programs with pianist Omer Klein under the title "Firebird," with concerts presented in 2022. His long-term partnership with the SIGNUM saxophone quartet includes the "Starry Night" program—a conceptual journey through the universe—and a related album released by Berlin Classics in spring 2021. Gerassimez has participated in notable interdisciplinary and residency projects that highlight his versatility. He contributed to Sasha Waltz’s choreographic and musical exploration of space during the opening ceremony of the Elbphilharmonie in January 2017. He served as a "Junger Wilder" artist in a multi-season residency at Konzerthaus Dortmund and was sponsored through the three-year stART academy program by Bayer Kultur.

Teaching career

In November 2015, Alexej Gerassimez took up the exclusive position of International Consultant in Solo Percussion at Birmingham Conservatoire (now Royal Birmingham Conservatoire), where he offered extra one-on-one tuition to students in solo percussion. He emphasized guiding students to discover their individual musical paths, stressing the importance of passion, inspiration, and emotions in music. This role provided additional specialist tuition within the conservatoire's percussion department. Since November 2017, Gerassimez has served as Professor of Percussion at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München, where he teaches timpani and percussion within the institute for artistic instrumental degree programs. In this capacity, he shapes a new generation of percussionists.

Compositions

Musical style

Alexej Gerassimez's musical style as a composer spans classical, contemporary, jazz, and minimal music, reflecting his multifaceted repertoire that also incorporates his own works. His compositions are characterized by the exploration of rhythmic and acoustic possibilities, the creation of individual sounds, and the joy of crossing borders between genres. He integrates not only conventional percussion and melodic instruments but also objects from diverse everyday contexts, such as bottles, brake discs, barrels, or ship propellers, to expand sonic possibilities. Gerassimez is regarded as a phenomenal virtuoso whose creative intelligence, incredible energy, and great richness of color define his approach. His versatility as a performer complements this compositional style.

Selected compositions

Alexej Gerassimez's compositions primarily feature percussion instruments and emphasize innovative sound production, extended techniques, and rhythmic complexity. Among his notable works is Piazonore for vibraphone and piano, composed in 2014. Originally conceived as an arrangement of Astor Piazzolla’s Libertango, it developed into an independent jazz-influenced piece through improvisation and restructuring, retaining the spirit of tango while diverging from its original form. The five-and-a-half-minute single-movement work is in A minor with driving syncopated 4/4 rhythms, a contrasting reflective middle section, and a brief 5/8 codetta. An orchestral version for vibraphone and symphony orchestra was completed in 2020. Eravie for solo marimba, published in 2009, lasts five minutes and is marked at an easy level. Inspired by Nikolai Kedrov Sr.’s choral Otche Nash (The Lord’s Prayer), the first six bars use Kedrov’s harmonies, while the overall piece evokes emotional fluctuations of triumph and despair, drawing from a line in Goethe’s Egmont. The composer sought to make the marimba “sing” in this introspective work. Asventuras for solo snare drum, published in 2011, is an advanced seven-minute piece that explores diverse timbres through unconventional playing techniques and implements such as brushes, felt sticks, timpani mallets, wire brushes, fingernails, palms, and knuckles. Structured in three parts around a recurring 3-1-4-1 rhythmic motif, it features driving eighth and sixteenth notes, groove-like syncopations, rudimental rolls, a mixed-mallet section with snares off, and a short improvisation opportunity before ending in intense rolls. Later works include Echtonan for marimba duo, published in 2016 and lasting eight minutes at an advanced level, contributing to the expansion of chamber repertoire for percussion. Cosoni for solo body percussion, published in 2020 at an intermediate level, is a physical and meditative exploration of body-produced sounds where music and dance converge intimately. Bodix for body percussion quartet, also published in 2020, treats the performers’ bodies as instruments to discover and shape a collective soundscape.

Awards

Discography

References

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