LYNN
HARRELL
Professor of Cello
 |
L.H.D. (Hon) (1994) Cleveland Institute of Music
2271
Alice Pratt Brown Hall
713-348-4854
lharrell@rice.edu |
A consummate soloist, chamber musician, recitalist,
conductor and teacher, LYNN HARRELL's work in America, Europe
and Asia has placed him in the highest echelon
of today's performing artists. A frequent guest of many of the leading orchestras,
in recent seasons Mr. Harrell has performed with the Boston and Chicago symphonies,
Los Angeles Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Dallas Symphony (whom he guest
conducted), the St. Louis Symphony at Royal Festival Hall, the London Philharmonic
with Kurt Masur conducting, and the Israel Philharmonic with Franz Welser-Möst
conducting. Additional highlights include a two week tour to Japan with Vladimir
Ashkenazy and Pinchas Zukerman, a three week "Lynn Harrell Cello Festival" with
the Hong Kong Philharmonic, and a return tour to Australia.
A special part of Mr. Harrell's life is the Aspen Music Festival, where he has
spent his summers performing and teaching for nearly 50 years. In the summer
of 1999 he presented a unique recital program called "Songs My Father Taught
Me", a tribute to his father, Mack Harrell, who was one of the earliest members
of the Aspen family. Mr. Harrell is also a regular participant at the Verbier
Festival in Switzerland. On April 7, 1994, he appeared at the Vatican with the
Royal Philharmonic conducted by Gilbert Levine in a concert dedicated to the
memory of the six million Jews who perished in the Holocaust. The audience for
this historic event, which was the Vatican's first official commemoration of
the Holocaust, included Pope John Paul II and the Chief Rabbi of Rome.
Mr. Harrell has also appeared live on the internationally-televised 1994 Grammy Awards
Show with Itzhak Perlman and Pinchas Zukerman performing an excerpt from their
Grammy-nominated complete Beethoven String Trios recording (Angel/EMI). The trio
was the only classical nominee to perform on the show.
Highlights from an extensive discography of over 30 recordings include the complete
Bach Cello Suites (London/Decca), two recordings of the Dvorak Concerto (RCA
and London/Decca), the world premiere recording of Victor Herbert's Cello Concerto
#1 with the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields led by Sir Neville Marriner (London/Decca),
the Walton Concerto with Simon Rattle and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
(EMI), and the Donald Erb Concerto with Leonard Slatkin and the Saint Louis Symphony
(New World). Together with Perlman and Ashkenazy, Harrell was awarded two Grammy
Awards - in 1981 for the Tchaikovsky Piano Trio and in 1987 for the complete
Beethoven Piano Trios (both Angel/EMI). He recently collaborated with Stephen
Kovacevich in recording the two Brahms cello sonatas and with Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg
on Bella Italia: Chamber Music from Aspen (EMI), which includes a performance
of Tchaikovsky's Souvenir de Florence. A recording of the Schubert Trios with
Ashkenazy and Zukerman (London/Decca) was released in 1998. His recording of
the Rosza Concerto with the Atlanta Symphony (Telarc) was released in February
2000. Most recently, his recording with Kennedy, Duos for Violin & Cello, was
released to great critical acclaim (EMI, May 2000).
Mr. Harrell's experience as an educator is wide and varied. From 1985-1993 he
held the International Chair for Cello Studies at the Royal Academy in London.
Concurrently, from 1988-1992 he was the Artistic Director of the orchestra, chamber
music and conductor training program at the LA Philharmonic Institute. In 1993,
he became head of the Royal Academy in London, a post which he held through 1995.
Additionally, Mr. Harrell has taught at the Juilliard School, Cincinnati Conservatory,
Cleveland Institute of Music, UCLA, and USC, where he held the Piatigorsky Chair
from 1987-1993. Mr. Harrell has also given masterclasses at the Verbier and Aspen
Festivals, and in major metropolitan areas throughout the world as part of his
annual touring.
Lynn Harrell was born in New York to musician
parents. He began his musical studies in Dallas and proceeded to the Juilliard
School and the Curtis Institute.
Mr. Harrell is the recipient of numerous awards including the first Avery Fisher
Award. He plays a 1673 Stradivarius and a 1720 Montagnana. He makes his home in Houston, Texas, where since 2002 he has been Professor of Cello at Rice University's Shepherd School of Music.
|