Russian conductor Kirill Petrenko

The prestigious Berlin Philharmonic, regarded as one of the world's best orchestras, has chosen 43-year-old Russian conductor Kirill Petrenko as its new chief conductor, media reports said Monday.

In a secret vote Sunday, the orchestra's 124 musicians picked Petrenko as a successor to Britain's Sir Simon Rattle, who is stepping down in 2018, the daily Die Welt and regional public broadcaster RBB reported.

Contacted by AFP, the Berlin Philharmonic declined to comment but said that a press conference had been scheduled for 1:00 pm (1100 GMT).

The announcement comes as a surprise after the orchestra had failed to elect their next chief conductor in May, but said they would try again "within a year".

While Petrenko's name had frequently been mentioned as a possible candidate, he had been seen as having more of an outside chance, because he is notoriously media-shy, a trait which would not seem to sit well with such a high-profile appointment as Berlin.
Petrenko was born in Omsk, in south-west Siberia, in 1972.

He was appointed general music director (GMD) in the tiny town of Meiningen in the east German state of Thuringia from 1999 until 2002 where he attracted international attention for his interpretation of Richard Wagner's massive four-opera "Ring" cycle in 2001.

He then moved to Berlin's Komische Oper (Comic Opera) as GMD from 2002 until 2007.

He is currently general music director of the Bavarian State Opera in Munich.

Extremely modest and self-effacing, Petrenko has a reputation for being a perfectionist, a fanatically meticulous "musician's conductor", painstaking in his preparation and rehearsals and who can draw out the very best from his orchestra.

He never gives interviews and has made few recordings.

The Berlin Philharmonic is unique in the world of classical music in that it chooses its chief conductor itself.

On May 11, the 124 voting members failed to agree on Rattle's successor, with insiders saying they were divided between the two favourites, Christian Thielemann, a 56-year-old Berlin native, and Latvian conductor Andris Nelsons, 37.