John-Edward Kelly

John-Edward Kelly - © John-Edward Kelly

born on 7/10/1958 in San Francisco, CA, United States

died on 12/2/2015

John-Edward Kelly

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
John-Edward Kelly

John-Edward Kelly is an American conductor of classical music and classical saxophonist. He has performed at major concert halls in most European countries, as well as many other parts of the world, and for many years was the only classical saxophone soloist to support himself entirely by performing. He has lectured extensively about aesthetics and contemporary music, and his series of lectures on "The Art of Listening" has been incorporated into a book of the same name (unpublished). He was a professor of chamber music at the Robert Schumann Academy of Music in Duesseldorf and a professor of saxophone and contemporary chamber music at the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo.

After a 30-year international career as a classical saxophonist, he has returned more and more to conducting in recent years.[1]

Ensembles

In 1981, Sigurd Raschèr invited Kelly to take his place as the alto saxophonist in the Raschèr Saxophone Quartet.

He founded the Alloys Ensemble [1] (saxophone, cello, piano & percussion) in 1994.

Kelly founded The Kelly Quartet [2] in 2004. The quartet consisted of Kelly and three former students.

Kelly is artistic director of the Arcos Chamber Orchestra [3] of New York, which he co-founded in 2005 with violinist Elissa Cassini.

Teaching positions

He was professor of contemporary chamber music at the Robert Schumann Academy of Music in Düsseldorf, Germany from 1996-2003.

He was professor of saxophone and contemporary chamber music at the Norwegian Academy of Music in Oslo, Norway from 2000-2005.

He has lectured and served as a guest professor in London, The Hague, Hamburg, Düsseldorf, Helsinki, Rochester, Stuttgart, Lyon, Oslo, York, and other cities, and has published articles concerning aesthetics, contemporary music and the saxophone.

Concert appearances

Kelly has concertized extensively throughout Europe, in North and South America and in the Middle East, and has appeared on radio and television hundreds of times.

Kelly has performed as a soloist with many leading orchestras including the Stockholm Philharmonic, Helsinki Philharmonic, Berliner Staatskapelle, Deutsches Sinfonieorchester, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Munich Philharmonic, Munich Chamber Orchestra, Radio Symphony Orchestra Stuttgart, Gewandhausorchester, Rotterdam Chamber Orchestra, Swedish Radio Orchestra, Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Staatskapelle Dresden, Ostrobothnian Chamber Orchestra, Swedish Chamber Orchestra, Residentie Orkest, Polish Chamber Orchestra, Orchester der Beethoven-Halle Bonn and Radio Filharmonisch Orkest (Holland).

Premieres of works for saxophone

Kelly has given the first performances of more than 200 works for saxophone, including 30 concertos for saxophone and orchestra. His performing repertoire consists primarily of works written expressly for him.

In 1995 he played the world premiere of Dimitri Terzakis's saxophone concerto, which was broadcast live to 27 nations.

Composers who have written works for Kelly include: Samuel Adler, Kalevi Aho, Osvaldas Balakauskas, Jürg Baur, Erik Bergman, David Blake, John Boda, Thomas Böttger, Herbert Callhoff, Michael Denhoff, Violeta Dinescu, Brian Elias, Anders Eliasson, Werner Wolf Glaser, Sampo Haapamäki, Ingvar Karkoff, Maurice Karkoff, Tristan Keuris, Hans Kox, Nicola LeFanu, Otmar Mácha, Tera de Marez-Oyens, Miklós Maros, Gérard Masson, Roland Leistner-Mayer, Krzysztof Meyer, Gráinne Mulvey, Pehr-Henrik Nordgren, Enrique Raxach, Uros Rojko, Jan Sandström, Sven-David Sandström, Leif Segerstam, Manfred Stahnke, Dimitri Terzakis, Stefan Thomas, Friedrich Voss, and Iannis Xenakis.

Recordings

Kelly is featured in 31 commercial recordings. His 1988 recording with the Dutch Pianist Bob Versteegh was possibly the first commercial CD of solo classical saxophone music ever released.

His recordings include:

  • John-Edward Kelly & Bob Versteegh (3 volumes) (1987, 1991, 1994) - Col legno Musikproduktionen AU031805, AU031817, and WWE1CD31885
  • Works for Saxophone & Orchestra by Ibert, Larsson, & Martin, BMG (with the Ostrobothnian Chamber Orchestra) (1991) - Arte Nova 74321277
  • Miklós Maros Saxophone Concerto (with the Symphony Orchestra of Czech State Radio Prague) (1990) - Phono Suecia PS-CD-23
  • Pehr Henrik Nordgren Saxophone Concerto (with the Ostrobothnian Chamber Orchestra) (1995) - Finlandia 3984233922
  • Allan Pettersson Symphony No. 16 (with the Sinfonie-Orchester des Saarländischen Rundfunks) (1995) - CPO 9992842
  • Jan Sandström - My Assam Dragon (with the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra (1995) - Phono Suecia PSCD87
  • John-Edward Kelly Alone (1999) - Emergo Classics EC39322
  • Hans Kox - Concertino (with the Norwegian Winds) (1991) - Attaca-Babel 92621
  • Hans Kox - Through a Glass, Darkly (1992) - Attaca-Babel 9374
  • Viktor Ullmann - Slawische Rhapsodie (with the Deutsche Sinfonieorchester Berlin) (1998) - Orfeo C419981A
  • Tristan Keuris - Laudi (with the Radio Philharmonic Orchestra) (1994) - Emergo Classics EC39332
  • Dimitri Terzakis - Konflikte (1997) - ProViva 7198585 (ISVP185CD)
  • Tristan Keuris - Three Sonnets (2001)
  • Anders Eliasson - Symphony No. 3 (2001)
  • Anders Eliasson - Desert Point / Ostacoli / Sinfonia Per Achi (with Arcos Orchestra, conductor: John-Edward Kelly) (2008) - NEOS SACD 10813
  • Pehr Henrik Nordgren - Phantasme (2001)
  • Hans Kox - Face-to-Face (2001)
  • The Alloys Ensemble (2001)

Other

Kelly was elected to the Royal Swedish Academy of Music in 1999.

He is a licensed commercial airplane pilot and flight instructor.

Kelly authored a pamphlet titled "The Acoustics of the Saxophone from a Phenomenological Perspective".

References

  1. PDF document on Arcos Chamber Orchestra web site. Retrieved on 2007-06-07.

External links

  • John-Edward Kelly
  • Arcos Orchestra
This page was last modified 10.12.2013 23:16:56

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