Peter Bree is a Dutch oboist and radio presenter. He received his first oboe lessons from John Schreuder. At the University of Groningen he studied English Language and Literature. Subsequently from 1973 he studied oboe at the Amsterdams Muzieklyceum with Han de Vries and later in London with Neil Black. Peter Bree initially worked for some years as a teacher of English, before being appointed oboist with Dutch radio, where he played in the Metropole Orkest. He later concentrated mostly on concert and chamber music, making many radio and CD recordings: compositions dedicated to him of, among others, Edmund Rubbra, Jan Koetsier and Ruud Bos, and the complete oboe sonatas of François Devienne that he edited and published together with Dr Bernard Rose . UK debut: May 1976 at Pembroke College chapel, Oxford. He was invited in 1981 to present his LP with works by Rubbra, Britten and others to H.M. Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother at Royal Lodge, Windsor Great Park. Also in 1981 he received the Silver 'Vriendenkrans' award of the Friends of the Concertgebouw and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. In 1988 the Marquis Giuseppe Scicluna International University Foundation in Malta and Delaware awarded him an honorary doctorate in music "for services to music". In 1994 he stopped playing the oboe professionnally. He suffered a stroke in mid-2017, and since the sudden death of his best friend and companion Jur Zandbergen on Christmas Eve 2017 he has more or less retired from public and musical life. From 1980 to 1983, Peter Bree worked as a radio producer with Dutch broadcasting company AVRO, and later as radio presenter and producer with Veronica broadcasting company from 1984 to 1992, from 1994 to 1998 with Concert Radio, and from 1998 again with AVRO. From 1984 till the end of 2010 he could be heard as presenter of classical music programmes and concert broadcasts on the Dutch classical music channelRadio 4. In 2011 he compiled a CD box to mark the 70th birthday of Han de Vries, entitled "Han de Vries – The Radio Recordings". This was followed in 2017 by a second CD box to mark Han de Vries's 75th birthday, with the title "Han de Vries – The almost last recordings". In 1980, he founded together with Yehudi Menuhin the Live Music Now foundation in the Netherlands, of which he was vice president till 1985. From 1987 he has been chairman of The Academy of the Begijnhof, Amsterdam. From 2001 till 2009 he was a member of the board and chairman of the artistic committee of the Netherlands Bach Society. On his initiative a new bridge in the Amsterdam Zuidas quarter was named after the composer Lex van Delden; the bridge was officially opened on October 15th, 2013.