Orchestre National de Bretagne

Latest Release

About Orchestre National de Bretagne

The Orchestre de Bretagne (now Orchestre National de Bretagne), or Orchestra of Brittany, pursued a diversity of programming unusual among France's regional orchestras. Its repertory extended from traditional classics, to Celtic music of the region, to video game scores. The Orchestre de Bretagne was founded in 1989 in response to a perceived lack of symphonic concerts in France's Brittany region. The group began recording shortly after its formation, issuing albums devoted to composers Paul Le Flem, Thomas Indermühle, and Joseph-Guy Ropartz in 1995 on the Timpani and Camerata labels. The ensemble was renamed the Orchestre symphonique de Bretagne in 2012. It consists of 44 musicians, and since 2015, its music director has been conductor Grant Llewellyn. The orchestra was renamed the Orchestre National de Bretagne in 2019 when it became one of France's regional orchestras that hold the "national" designation.

ORIGIN
Brittany, France
FORMED
1989
GENRE
Classical

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada