Daniel Muller-Schott, on tour with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, smiles when I suggest he has achieved veteran status at the age of 37. The German cellist was only 15 when he won the International Tchaikovsky Competition in 1992 and, for his recording debut eight years later, dared to take on Bach's six solo Suites.
"It was a natural choice," he points out. "My mother is a harpsichordist and I started studying the Suites when I was 6. But it's only a start. These pieces are friends for life. You always go back to study them in more depth and some day I'll definitely record them again."
Arts Channel viewers may remember Muller-Schott in a concert of Mozart Trios, playing alongside violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter and pianist Andre Previn. "That was a wonderful project," he exclaims, while admitting that Mozart and his contemporaries did not always write their most enterprising music for his instrument. "Unfortunately, there aren't so many concertos. That's so frustrating in the case of Mozart and Beethoven. I think they were considering writing one but somehow the time wasn't ready."
Muller-Schott credits his teachers, from Heinrich Schiff to Steven Isserlis.
"Schiff was very analytical, encouraging us to look closely into the score," he explains. "But there was also a very extrovert, explosive element that always came through in his playing."