Videos with Marcus Schinkel Trio

For more than 20 years the Marcus Schinkel Trio has been playing in the unchanged line-up on stages and festivals in Germany, Europe, Russia, in the Caribbean and even for the German embassy in Vietnam.
Just 50 years after the release of “Play Bach“ by Jacques Loussier, Marrcus Schinkel continues the fusion of classical music and jazz with his program “Crossover Beethoven“ asking provocatively “Would Beethoven be a popular jazz musician of the present day?“
Marcus started playing classical piano at the age of 8 and was a fervant fan of Beethoven.
His sculpture was placed in front of a Deep Purple poster.Like Schroeder, the little “Peanuts“comic pianist, he devoured books and biographies of the ingenious eccentric.To this day the crossover-musician opnens all borders and goes beyond all bounds.
Marcus Schinkel, one of German's finest border between classic, jazz, electro and pop, is able to look back on his successful past:he played for Maestro Kurt Masur, with Paul Kuhn, Charlie
Just 50 years after the release of “Play Bach“ by Jacques Loussier, Marrcus Schinkel continues the fusion of classical music and jazz with his program “Crossover Beethoven“ asking provocatively “Would Beethoven be a popular jazz musician of the present day?“
Marcus started playing classical piano at the age of 8 and was a fervant fan of Beethoven.
His sculpture was placed in front of a Deep Purple poster.Like Schroeder, the little “Peanuts“comic pianist, he devoured books and biographies of the ingenious eccentric.To this day the crossover-musician opnens all borders and goes beyond all bounds.
Marcus Schinkel, one of German's finest border between classic, jazz, electro and pop, is able to look back on his successful past:he played for Maestro Kurt Masur, with Paul Kuhn, Charlie
