Professor Jonathan Freeman-Attwood is a performer, writer, educator, recording producer and Principal of the Royal Academy of Music in London [1]. He studied at the University of Toronto and Christ Church, Oxford. Soon after, he became Dean of Undergraduate Studies at the Academy, where he led a pioneering new degree course in performance studies under the aegis of King’s College London. He then became Vice-Principal & Director of Studies, a post he held until 2008. In 1997, he was elected an Honorary Member of the Royal Academy of Music and in 2001 received a personal chair in his conferment as a Professor of the University of London.
As a trumpet player, Jonathan Freeman-Attwood has attracted plaudits from the press for his solo recordings, initially with his debut album in 1993 (Albinoni and Contemporaries) and in 1998, ‘Bach Connections’ – a trumpet and organ recital which threads its way from Bach through to the late 20th century. In 2004, a disc of works by Rheinberger, Strauss and Elgar with John Wallace, entitled ‘The Trumpets that Time Forgot’ (Linn Records), heralded a series of recording projects exploring ways in which the trumpet can, retrospectively, be ‘written into’ established traditions of mainstream solo and chamber music. Both ‘La Trompette Retrouvée’ (including a virtuosic arrangement of Fauré’s Sonata, Op.108) and ‘Trumpet Masque’ in 2007 and 2008 were hailed in the press, the latter receiving High Fidelity’s ‘Recording of the Year 2008’ with Metro describing it as ‘extraordinary playing, switching between fizzy fireworks and tender pathos with ease’. His latest disc, of ‘Romantic Trumpet Sonatas’ by Mendelssohn, Schumann and Grieg, was released in 2011 and has attracted considerable acclaim in the press and on BBC Radio 3.
Jonathan Freeman-Attwood’s career also extends to recording producer of around 150 discs for many independent labels, including BIS, Naxos, Chandos, Hyperion, Simax, ASV, AVIE and Channel Classics. Several of his productions have won major awards, including Diapasons d’Ors, eight Gramophone Awards and many Nominations, with the Clerk’s Group, I Fagiolini, Phantasm, Rachel Podger, Trevor Pinnock, L’Arte di Suonatore and The Cardinall’s Musick. He has recently produced a disc of Mozart and Haydn with The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment using Stradivari instruments, having just finished the complete Mozart Violin Sonatas with Rachel Podger and Gary Cooper, the complete Piano Sonatas with Daniel-Ben Pienaar, as well producing Gramophone’s ‘Record of the Year’ in 2010 with William Byrd’s Latin Church Music performed by The Cardinall’s Musick under Andrew Carwood.
He continues to be active as a critic, lecturer and contributor to journals and books, including The New Grove (2nd edition) and Cambridge University Press’s ‘Companion of Recorded Music’, and he broadcasts regularly for BBC Radio 3. He is an established authority on Bach interpretation, particularly as it challenges and refocuses historical perspectives on ‘performance practices’ and – in more pedagogical contexts – how recordings of the past can influence current priorities and tastes. He writes essays regularly for EMI, Warner, Deutsche Grammophon and other major record labels.
In July 2008, Professor Jonathan Freeman-Attwood became the 14th Principal of the Royal Academy of Music, founded in 1822. He was appointed a Fellow of King’s College London in July 2009. He serves as a trustee for the Countess of Munster Trust, Young Concert Artist Trust, Mendelssohn Scholarship and Boise Foundations, the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music, the Lucille Graham Trust, the Saga Trust and the Harriet Cohen and Winifred Christie Trusts. In 2010 he became a Trustee of the University of London.