
Lorin
Hollander is a world-renowned concert pianist with a continuously
acclaimed 50-year international career that began with a Carnegie
Hall debut at the age of 11. Lorin Hollander was an infant
child prodigy who composed music at age three and performed
Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier
at five. Since then, he has appeared as guest soloist with
virtually every major symphony orchestra in the world and
is a veteran of over 2,500 performances: orchestral, recital,
lecture/recital, chamber music - as well as symphony and choral
conductor. Mr. Hollander has collaborated with the leading
conductors of our time, among them: Bernstein, Haitink, Leinsdorf,
Levine, Mehta, Monteux, Ormandy, Ozawa, Previn, Slatkin, Szell
and Tilson Thomas. His multiple repeat engagements include
the orchestras of Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles,
New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Washington’s
National Symphony. International audiences have heard him
in performances with the London Philharmonic, Amsterdam Concertgebouw,
L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, ORTF of Paris, Berlin
Symphony, Warsaw Philharmonic, Jerusalem Symphony, New Tokyo
Philharmonic and Sydney Symphony Orchestra, among dozens of
others. Mr. Hollander was the only soloist on the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra’s ten-week World Tour, sponsored
by the U.S. Department of State. His own recital series was
telecast nationally on PBS, he performed on the soundtrack
of Sophie's Choice and he has recorded for RCA Victor, Columbia,
Angel, Delos and PianoDisc.
For over 35 years, Lorin Hollander has led community outreach
residencies at nearly 350 colleges, universities and conservatories
throughout the world, presenting commencement addresses, giving
master classes, conducting youth orchestras and choirs, holding
interdisciplinary seminars on creativity, transformational
education, the training of mentors and the integration of
the arts, sciences and spirituality. He is the Artistic Advisor
to the New England Conservatory Research Center and Music
in Education National Consortium. With organizations such
as the Young Presidents Organization, Mr. Hollander also works
with corporate leaders on the new paradigms of leadership
and transformation in the institution and explores in depth
a multi-cultural understanding of the nature of being human.
A
nationally and internationally recognized spokesman for the
transformation of education, Mr. Hollander has testified before
the US Congress and various State Legislatures as a visionary
and advocate for the arts in education, served on the Rockefeller
Panel – “Arts, Education and Americans,”
which published Coming to our Senses
and recently presented at the International Music Education
Policy Symposium. He created the prototypes for university
and community outreach residencies for the National Endowment
of the Arts, American Symphony Orchestra League, MENC, the
US Department of Education, among others, created with the
ASOL the first National Festival of Youth Orchestras and was
the first classical musician to perform on the streets of
Harlem in NYC.
Lorin Hollander holds 3 honorary doctorates, received the
2003 “Music Has Power” award from Oliver Sacks'
Institute for Music and Neurologic Function (of which he is
a founding board member) and is a Fellow of the Joseph Campbell
Foundation. Mr. Hollander is an active participant in creating
the new paradigms for medicine and integral healing, he illuminates
a new understanding of “genius and madness” in
the lives of the highly gifted, lectures on music and healing,
and has presented keynotes for the International Federation
of Music Therapy, the American Institute of Medical Education,
the Alternative Therapies National Conference, the Stanford
Medical Center, among others.
With a special interest in the illumination of transformational
education, the creative process, human consciousness and global
futurism, he has served as advisor to the Aspen Institute,
the Kennedy Center Symposium, the World Congress on the Gifted,
the 1984 Winter Olympics, and has worked with the International
Transpersonal Association, the American Psychiatric Association,
Association of Humanistic Psychology, the Social Science Research
Council and the United Nations State of the World Forum. |