Barry Tuckwell
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Professor Barry Tuckwell, AC, OBE, (born March 5, 1931) is an Australian French horn player who spent much of his working life in the UK.
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[edit] Early life and education
He was born in Melbourne and joined the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra at 15, only a year after starting on the horn. He became a horn player because of a chance conversation he overheard at the age of 13 between his elder sister, Sir Charles Mackerras and a horn-playing colleague in the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. His sister was wondering out loud what to do with him. He was obviously musical; he must be able to play something. The horn player suggested the horn, and so he tried it. "A piece of cake! Only one note at a time!" - drawing a wry smile from players of the notoriously fickle French Horn.
Tuckwell attended St Andrew's Cathedral School, Sydney, where he was a chorister in the cathedral choir, and Sydney Conservatorium of Music.
[edit] Playing career
While playing in Sydney he was encouraged to travel to take advantage of the greater opportunities available outside his native Australia and settled on England as a convenient location, being in Europe but also English-speaking. He arrived on a cold January day and wondered what he had let himself in for.
His rise through the British orchestras was meteoric, moving in rapid succession from the Scottish Symphony to the Hallé and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestras before settling as principal horn player with the London Symphony for 13 years, a position originally vacated as a result of an artistic dispute between players and management. Tuckwell served as musicians representative on the board of the LSO. He resigned that position with some regrets to pursue a solo career; although he never intended to give up orchestral playing he was so much in demand that few opportunities subsequently arose.
Any horn player of the time was inevitably compared to the legendary Dennis Brain, and Tuckwell was close to both Dennis and his father Aubrey, but although his style was influenced by Brain, Tuckwell's own self-criticism led him to develop a different and distinct sound. He has become the most recorded of all horn players and has won three Grammy awards. He has been president of the International Horn Society and is currently honorary president of the British Horn Society and the patron of the Melbourne International Festival of Brass.
[edit] Written works for Tuckwell
A number of composers have written works for him, including Oliver Knussen and Richard Rodney Bennett.
He was founding music director of the Maryland Symphony Orchestra, in 1982. His final solo performance was with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, on January 25, 1996.
He now lives in Australia. A friend has said he wanted to hear Tuckwell's last note as a professional player, but the ever-mischievous Tuckwell decided on the spur of the moment to omit it. He now sums up his career as having "missed my first note, and omitted the last".
[edit] Writings
He wrote a book, The French Horn in the Yehudi Menuhin series, and has also written horn studies and a guide to playing the horn (out of print but much in demand).
[edit] Return
In April 2006, Barry Tuckwell returned to the stage to perform the fourth horn part of Schumann's Konzertstuck for Four Horns in Melbourne at the Methodist Ladies' College and Daylesford, Victoria, Australia, with Melbourne's longest running amateur orchestra, the Zelman Symphony. The other horn players were Geoff Collinson, Roman Ponamariov and Lin Jiang.
[edit] Trivia
Tuckwell's sister is Patricia Lascelles, Countess of Harewood.
[edit] Honours
Tuckwell was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1965 and a Companion of the Order of Australia in 1992.
He was made an honorary Doctor of Music by the University of Sydney and has been awarded distinctions by the Royal Academy of Music, the Royal College of Music and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.