Pip Eastop is regarded as one of Britain’s finest horn players. His career encompasses the widest possible range of genres and styles of music. At the age of eighteen, after four years of study at the Royal Academy of Music, he joined the Flanders Philharmonic Orchestra and became the youngest ever principal solo horn in a European symphony orchestra. At nineteen he was invited back to London to become principal horn in the London Sinfonietta, with whom he performed all over the world and gave many solo performances including Britten’s Serenade at the Queen Elizabeth Hall conducted by Sir Simon Rattle.
Pip was principal horn in the London Chamber Orchestra and appeared as guest principal with The Hanover Band, Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and all of the major London symphony orchestras. He was also much in demand as a chamber musician. He was very active in the contemporary music scene, previously as a performer and now as a composer, specialising in ‘extended’ techniques.
As a session musician he has been involved in the recording of large numbers of pop and rock tracks and hundreds of film scores. In 2007 Pip returned to the Flanders Philharmonic Orchestra to play ten consecutive performances of Schumann’s Konzertstück in major German concert halls, then later performed the same work at the Aldeburgh Festival with the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Oliver Knussen.
More recently his recording of Mozart’s four Horn Concerti and the Horn Quintet has been released on the Hyperion label, to great international acclaim.
Pip writes and lectures on teaching and learning horn and on the physiology of breathing technique for wind players. He currently holds a professorial position at the Royal College of Music and is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music.