Harrison Slater

Harrison Slater

Harrison Gradwell Slater is an American writer, pianist, and educator. A pianist, he studied with Anthony di Bonaventura and for many years with Paul Doguereau, the noted French pianist who was a pupil of Ravel, Emma Bardac (second wife of Claude Debussy) and Paderewski. In addition to writing and recording, Slater coaches many world-class pianists, and is chairman and Artistic Director of the Peabody Mason International Piano Competition.

Biography

Harrison Gradwell Slater combines the careers of musicologist, pianist and novelist. He has published three books on Mozart, the last of which is the mystery novel NightMusic,[1] which deals with the life and music of Mozart. The sequel, Nocturne,[2] explores Chopin's biography and music within a contemporary narrative.

For his first book, Slater (the author's pen name since 1995) travelled to fifty-five cities in nine European countries and completed his research over three years with correspondence to archives throughout Europe, always posing unresolved questions about Mozart Gedenkstaetten – the palaces, concert halls and salons in which Mozart performed, the houses and taverns in which he lodged, and the churches and public edifices that he visited. The resulting reference book, In Mozart's Footsteps,[3] has been called “an amazing feat of scholarship” by the pianist, Alfred Brendel,[4] while Nicholas Slonimsky described it as "absorbing in its brilliance".[4]

NightMusic was voted "Rising Star of 2003" by nine publishing houses, was on the Barnes & Noble bestseller list for mystery trade paperback for nineteen weeks and was optioned for a film.

Scholarly articles by Slater (a.k.a. Harrison James Wignall) have appeared in the journals Mozart-Jahrbuch,[5] Opera Quarterly[6] and Mozart Studien,[7][8] among others. Some of his recent discoveries include previously unknown Mozart documents and manuscripts that have shed light on issues of recent Mozart research. He has also written entries for the latest editions of The New Grove,[9] Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart,[10] The New Grove Dictionary of Opera[11] and has published articles in Perspectives of New Music,[12] Indiana Theory Review,[13] and the Nuova rivista musicale italiana.[14]

Slater's discovery in 1993 of the vocal nocturne tradition, and its influence on Mozart and Chopin are found in his seminal work Mozart and the Duetto Notturno Tradition,[15] and his entry "Duetto Notturno" in The New Grove.[15] His present musicological work on the influence of the vocal nocturne on Chopin's piano music continues that research.

Slater studied music and languages at Brandeis University, Boston University, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich and Harvard, and speaks, in addition to English, German, French and Italian. He was active as a music instructor in Boston, Munich, Milan, and Tokyo and worked at the National Theatre Munich and La Scala in Milan as a ballet pianist, performing numerous concerts.

In 1995, he was awarded a PhD in musicology from Brandeis University with a dissertation on Mozart's opera Mitridate.[16]

Presently, Slater has finished recordings featuring the music of Mozart[17] and Chopin,[18] and has completed the sequel to NightMusic,[1] entitled Nocturne[2] (based on rediscovered diaries related to Chopin). His research and writing of the unpublished monograph, “Mozart in Milan” continues and includes, "Mozart and Sacred Music in the Ambrosian Capital" and "Mozart's Singers in Ascanio in Alba," articles which incorporate two handwritten diaries from 1771 found by Slater in archives in Milan.

He resides in an historic apartment in Back Bay, Boston, as well as in Milan, Paris and Mount Holly Township, New Jersey.[19]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Slater, Harrison Gradwell (2002). NightMusic. New York: Harcourt. ISBN 0-15-100580-X.
  2. 1 2 Slater, Harrison Gradwell, Nocturne, Editions Peabody Mason, 2010
  3. Wignall, Harrison James, In Mozart's Footsteps, New York: Paragon House, 1991
  4. 1 2 Ibid., Jacket inscription
  5. "Mozart and the 'Duetto Notturno' Tradition", Mozart-Jahrbuch, 1993
  6. "Guglielmo d'Ettore: Mozart's First Mitridate", The Opera Quarterly, 1994
  7. "Mozart in Turin", Mozart Studien, 1997
  8. "The Genesis of 'Se di Lauri'", Mozart Studien, 1994
  9. "Duetto Notturno", The New Grove, 2000
  10. Guglielmo d'Ettore, Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, 2000
  11. Guglielmo d'Ettore, The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 1997
  12. "Current Trends in Italian Opera", Perspectives of New Music, 1991
  13. "Rameau's Treatment of Suspensions", Indiana Theory Review, 1992
  14. "Mozart's Imperial Opponent" (Italian and English), Nuova rivista musicale italiana, 1994
  15. 1 2 Op. Cit.
  16. Mozart, Guglielmo d'Ettore and the Genesis of Mitridate, Brandeis University, 1995
  17. (2003) "NightMusic: Piano Music of Mozart”, Newton Symphony Orchestra, Jeffrey Rink, Conductor
  18. (2010) “Nocturne: Piano Music of Chopin”
  19. Boatman, Gail T. "Mount Holly native makes a little 'NightMusic'", Burlington County Times, April 29, 2003. Accessed March 1, 2011. "A musicologist turned mystery writer, Mount Holly native Harrison Slater feels right at home in the world of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. I am an 18th-century person, he said during a recent telephone interview from Boston, where he lives part of the year."

Works

Books

Articles

Recordings

References

External links

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