Anne Luisa Kramb studied in the violin class of Prof. Antje Weithaas at the Hanns Eisler Academy of Music in Berlin until 2024. Previously, she studied at the Kronberg Academy and the Würzburg University of Music, among others. Since fall 2024, she has continued her studies in the violin class of Prof. Tobias Feldmann at the Leipzig University of Music and Performing Arts. In the 2023/24 season, she was a member of the renowned Karajan Academy of the Berlin Philharmonic. Since the 2024/25 season, she has been both leader of the second violins in the Deutsches Symphonieorchester Berlin (DSO) and concertmaster of the Kammerakademie Potsdam. In the summer of 2022, Anne Luisa won the main prize at the German Music Competition (DMW) in Bonn. She has also won first prizes at the Telemann Competition in Poznan (Poland), the Mendelssohn Competition in Kronberg, and the Bacewicz Competition in Lodz (Poland). In 2016, Anne Luisa won the prestigious International Menuhin Competition in London and first prize at the International Spohr Competition in Weimar, where she also won two special prizes. In September 2017, she received the Manhattan Music Competition Prize. Anne Luisa has performed with the Ukrainian State Orchestra, the MDR Symphony Orchestra, the Sopot Chamber Philharmonic, the Göttingen Symphony Orchestra, the Weimar State Orchestra, and at international festivals, including the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festival, the Rheingau Music Festival, the Weilburg Palace Concerts, and the Emancipation Festival in Krakow. She has performed as a soloist and in a chamber music ensemble, particularly in duos with pianist Julius Asal, at the Konzerthaus Berlin, the Philharmonie Berlin, the Kyiv Philharmonie, the Elbphilharmonie, Carnegie Hall New York, and the Laeiszhalle Hamburg. Encounters with great musicians such as Sir András Schiff, Sir Simon Rattle, Tabea Zimmermann, Christoph Eschenbach, and Gidon Kremer, among others, enriched her training both as a soloist and in chamber music. The young violinist plays a violin by Antonio Stradivari (1724), which was made available to her from the private collection of the Wiegand family.