About
Raphaël Merlin has always explored music from different angles and through different lenses: his curiosity for every style and his appetite for every practice have given him a remarkable overall vision and great versatility.
Cellist of the Quatuor Ebène from 2002 to 2023, composer, conductor and teacher, he founded Les Forces Majeures in 2014, was appointed professor of chamber music at the Munich Hochschule in 2020, Artistic and Music Director of the Geneva Chamber Orchestra (OCG) in 2023, and in 2025 became professor at the Haute École de Musique de Lausanne (HEMU) and Artistic Director of the Orchestre de Chambre Nouvelle-Aquitaine (OCNA).
Born in 1982, he began at the age of six at the Clermont-Ferrand Conservatoire (CNR): cello, chamber music, piano, composition, jazz piano. In 1997 he joined the Boulogne-Billancourt Conservatoire (CNR), studying with Xavier Gagnepain, Hortense Cartier-Bresson and Janos Komives, his conducting teacher. Having earned a first prize in each of these disciplines, in 2001 he was admitted as top-ranked candidate into Philippe Muller’s cello class at the Paris Conservatoire (CNSM), from which he graduated four years later with an advanced diploma, unanimous highest distinction.
Chamber music, first practised within the family, became essential when he joined the Quatuor Ebène (today made up of Pierre Colombet, Gabriel Le Magadure, Marie Chilemme and Yuya Okamoto), first prize winner of the 2004 ARD International Music Competition in Munich, and winner of the Victoires de la Musique in 2010 and 2020. With a rich discography for Erato/Warner, invited onto the world’s most prestigious stages (Berlin Philharmonie, London Wigmore Hall, Vienna Konzerthaus, Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Zurich Tonhalle, Washington Library of Congress, New York Carnegie Hall, Tokyo Suntory Hall,e des Champs-Élysées,Philharmonie…), the Quartet — whose regular partners include Nicholas Angelich, ElisabetLeonskaïa, Menahem Pressler, Mitsutthias Goerne, R&G Capuçon, as wellas artists from beyond classical music such as Bernard Lavilliers, Stacey Kent and Micheundertook a world tour, recorded aplete Beethoven quartets in 2019,and gave the full cycle in concert for the composer’s 250th anniversary celebrations. Thwho guided the Quartet’s developmeg, G. Takács-Nagy, and the QuatuorYsaÿe.