Gardner
John Gardner was born in Manchester in 1917 and spent
his childhood in North Devon, where his
family had practised medicine for three
generations. He was educated at
Wellington College, and was from
1935 to 1939 Sir Hubert Parry Organ
Scholar of Exeter College, Oxford.
After a brief spell as Chief Music
Master at Repton School, he joined the
RAF in 1940, where he served successively as
dance-band pianist, bandmaster, and navigator.
On demobilisation in 1946 he joined the
music staff of the Royal Opera House, leaving
at the end of 1952 to pursue a free-lance
career as composer, teacher, pianist, and
conductor. His first public performances of
note were those of his Second
Piano Sonata (London 1934) and his
Rhapsody for Oboe and String Quartet
(French Radio 1939), and in 1937 he got his
first paid work by writing music for
three television shows. A quiet period
followed until Sir John Barbirolli put on
his First Symphony at the 1951
Cheltenham Festival. This event brought
some commissions in its wake; a ballet for
the 1952 Edinburgh Festival, a choral work
for the 1952 Three Choirs Festival, and the
opera The Moon and Sixpence for the
Sadler's Wells Opera Company (1957).
Since then he has produced two more
symphonies, several large-scale cantatas,
concertos for piano, trumpet, organ, and
oboe, two more string quartets, three more
operas, including The Visitors
(Aldeburgh) and Tobermory
(Royal Academy of Music), another piano
sonata, an organ sonata, and a great
variety of ensemble, solo and choral
music as well as theatre music for the
Old Vic and the Shakespeare Memorial
Theatre, Stratford. One of his most
popular carols, written in the 1960s, is
Tomorrow Shall be my Dancing Day.
The choral anthology, A Cappella, of
which he was the instigator and, with Simon
Harris, co-editor, was published by OUP in
1992. John Gardner has held a number of
part-time teaching posts: at the Royal
Academy of Music (1956-86), Morley
College (1952-76), and St Paul's Girls'
School (1962-75), and was a Director of the
Performing Right Society from 1965 to 1992.
He was made a CBE in 1976.
For more information and full works list please visit John Gardner's website
photograph © McKenzie Clark
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