About TPO

Resident conductors

Gudni A. Emilsson

Gudni A. Emilson

Chief Conductor

Emilsson has won numerous national and international prizes including 1st Prize in Biel / Bienne Switzerland 1992, 2nd Prize by “Masterplayers” - Competition Lugano 1994. In this year he received the special Award from the Foundation LIND in Iceland. At the same time he was awarded by the Richard Wagner Foundation Bayreuth and the Herbert von Karajan Foundation Salzburg.

The Masaryk University of Prague awarded him the Artist Prize 2002.

He gave guest performances all over Europe with great acclaim, with Orchestras such as Stuttgart Philharmonic, Göttinger Symphony Orchestra, Nürnberg Symphony Orchestra, Radio Symphony Orchestra of Prague, Iceland Symphony Orchestra, Bankja Chamber Orchestra of Sofia, Plovdiv Philharmonic Orchestra Bulgaria, State Symphony Orchestra of Thessaloniki, Arctic Chamber Orchestra USA, Czech Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra Prague and North West Germany Philharmonic.

2005 Emilsson begins a new role as Chief Conductor of the Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra which is under the patronage of the Royal Thai Government and Mahidol University College of Music in Bangkok.

Capt. Prateep Suphanrojn MA BA LRSM

Capt. Prateep Suphanrojn MA BA LRSM

Conductor in Residence

Capt. Prateep Suphanrojn MA BA LRSM was born in Suphanburi, Thailand. In 1988, he joined in the Royal Thai Army School of Music as the Oboist and the Tubaist. Then 1966, he was awarded a scholarship to study the Band Master Course at the Royal Military School of Music, Kneller Hall and Kingston University. He received the Bandmastership from the Associated Board of the Royal School of Music (LRSM) in 1997 and a Bachelor of Arts from the Kingston University in 1998. In the final year competition, he won prizes for arrangement, composition and conducting. He also was the Best All – Round and Best Oversea Student Bandmaster in 1998.

At present, he works in the Royal Thai Army Band in the Bandmaster Position and also as an officer of the Education Department and working his master degree program on composition at the College of Music, Mahidol University. He has also been the resident conductor of Dr. Sax Chamber Orchestra since June 2002.

Guest conductors

Claude Villaret

Copyright by
Thomas Entzeroth, Zurich

Claude Villaret

Principal Guest Conductor

Claude Villaret’s baton leading the Berliner Symphoniker caused the euphoria of thousands spectators ... Because of the magic he created beetween music and public, Claude Villaret, was the unquestionable protagonist of the IIIrd edition of the International Festival of Ushuaia. 4th May 2007 www.swissinfo.org

Born in Lausanne, Switzerland, Claude Villaret studied piano and conducting. He was then invited by the celebrated conductor, Bernard Haitink to follow his work at the Euyo and the Berliner Philharmoniker.

In 1990 whilst living in Argentina, he founded the Youth Orchestra of Latin America and conducted them at the famous Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires.

On returning to Europe, in 1994 he won the much prized conducting competition of the music academy in Biel, following which he was invited to be guest conductor of the South Bohemian Chamber Philharmonic. His career as a conductor has since taken him to leading music centres such as Milan, Zurich, Salzburg, Buenos Aires, Prague, Berlin, Rio de Janeiro and Geneva in famous concert halls like Buenos Aires Teatro Colon, Tonhalle Zürich, Megaron Athen and other international venues with orchestras such as:

  • Berliner Symphoniker (Germany)
  • Symphony Orchestra Zurich (Switzerland)
  • Musikkollegium Winterthur (Switzerland)
  • TKO- Chamber Orchestra Thurgau (Switzerland)
  • The New Orchestra of Geneva (Switzerland)
  • Sinfônica Nacional (Brasil)
  • Plovdiv State Philharmonic Orchestra (Bulgaria)
  • Camerata Boemica Prague (Czech Republic)
  • Dvorak Prague Symphony Orchestra (Czech Republic)
  • South Bohemian Chamber Orchestra (Czech Republic)
  • Chamber Orchestra of Tübingen (Germany)
  • State Philharmonic Orchestra of Arad (Romania)
  • State Philharmonic Orchestra of Sibiu (Romania)
  • Orquesta Sinfónica Uncuyo (Argentina)
  • Orquesta Sinfónica de Bahia Blanca (Argentina)
  • Orquesta Sinfónica de la UNT (Argentina)
  • Orquesta Sinfónica de Matanzas (Cuba)
  • Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra (Bangkok)
  • Athen State Symphony Orchestra (Greece)
  • A.S.O.

He has maintained his interests in South America and in 2000 he was appointed principal guest conductor of the Orquestra Sinfonica Nacional (Brazil). 2002 saw him appointed as permanent guest conductor of the Orquesta Sinfonica UNT de Tucuman (Argentina).

In 2004 he was appointed chief conductor/artistic director of the TKO Chamber Orchestra Thurgau (Switzerland), in 2005 he was also appointed a permanent guest conductor of the Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra.

His success has led to invitations to give conducting masterclasses in Germany and South America and also to be guest conductor at several music festivals.

His recent conducting repertoire includes the operas, La Boheme, Cosi fan tutte, Don Giovanni, Il Trovatore. In addition he enjoys being innovative in conducting many first performances of both Swiss and foreign composers. He also realized projects combining video installations with contemporany music.

Christopher Hughes

Christopher Hughes

Conductor

Dr. Christopher Hughes is Professor of Conducting, Chair of the Conducting Faculty and Director of Bands for the College of Music at Mahidol University. In this capacity, Hughes conducts the Mahidol Wind Symphony and Chamber Winds, guides the masters and doctoral programs in conducting, and administers all aspects of the university ensemble program. Prior to this position, Hughes served on the faculties at Lander University and the University of Colorado.

Born in Aspen and raised in the scenic beauty of the Rocky Mountains, Hughes’s interest in the power of music began early. He decided to pursue conducting as a profession after watching many of the great conductors who were in residence at the Aspen Music School. In 2005, Hughes was awarded the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in instrumental conducting and literature at the University of Colorado where he was a student of world-renowned conductor Allan McMurray.

Hughes served as Director of Bands at Lander University from 2005-2008. There, his duties included conducting the Lander Chamber Strings and Lander Wind Ensemble. In addition, he founded the Chamber Winds program while teaching courses in conducting. From 2002-2005 Hughes filled dual roles as an instructor and doctoral teaching fellow in the College of Music at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He served as guest conductor of the Symphony Orchestra, Wind Symphony and Symphonic Band. Many of Dr. Hughes’s university students have gone on to earn prominent conducting positions while others have been awarded graduate assistantships at several universities.

Prior to his doctoral work, Hughes spent nearly a decade as a high school conductor. Ensembles under his direction grew in both size and quality earning numerous honors and awards. Receiving international recognition, Hughes’s ensembles were invited on a ground breaking, multinational tour that included the first performance of an American high school ensemble at Her Majesty's Royal Military Band Festival in Birmingham, England. The trip also included a performance in Ireland as an invited guest of the Lord Mayor of Dublin. Graduates of Dr. Hughes’s high school programs earned positions in college and university ensembles at twenty-seven separate institutions across the United States and many now hold degrees in music.

Dr. Hughes is in constant demand as a clinician and engagements have taken him to twelve US states and eight foreign countries. In addition, he has guest conducted the ensembles at several colleges and universities. Known for his sensitive interpretation of music for large and small instrumental ensembles, Hughes’s conducting has drawn praise in clinic situations from conductors in positions all over the United States. Dr. Hughes’s research interests include conductor preparation and effectiveness, the application of the Alexander Technique to instrumental conducting, and contemporary literature for instrumental ensembles. Dr. Hughes has, on several occasions, been included in the Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers publication and, since 2003, has been listed in Who’s Who in America. He was recently honored by being selected for the 2009 Who’s Who In The World.

Dariusz Mikulski

Dariusz Mikulski

Conductor

Dariusz Mikulski, the bugler and conductor was born 1973 in Zelow, Poland.

Darius Mikulski works regularly with chamber orchestras and famous musician, such as for example Valery Oistrakh, Radovan Vlatkovic, Ingo Goritzki, and Sergio Azzolini.

As a soloist he played together with orchestras like the Symphony Orchestra of the Northern German Radio, the chamber orchestras from Munich, Warsaw, Stuttgart and Vienna, the Philharmony of Nations, as well as the German Opera in Berlin.

As a conductor Dr. Mikulski has worked together with the Berlin Symphonics, the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra, the Arthur Rubinstein Philharmony Lodz, and the Silesian Philharmonics from Kattowitz.

Since 2000, Dr. Dariusz Mikulski is known as the founder and leader of the Symphonic Orchestra of the Great Philharmonics Poland.