John Harle

John Harle

Harle in 2001
Background information
Born (1956-09-20) 20 September 1956
Origin Newcastle upon Tyne, England
Genres Hybrid, Pop, Classical
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Saxophone
Years active 1973–present
Labels Universal, EMI Classics, Decca, Argo, Unicorn-Kanchana, Hannibal, Sospiro
Notable instruments
Soprano Saxophone

John Harle (born 20 September 1956, Newcastle upon Tyne, England) is an English saxophonist, composer, educator and record producer.[1] He is an Ivor Novello Award winner and has been the recipient of two Royal Television Society awards.

Biography

Following his education at the Royal College of Music in London and in Paris with Daniel Deffayet as a French Government Music Scholar, he won the Amcon Award of The American Concert Artists Guild. In his early years, he was a member of the band of composer Michael Nyman and orchestrator for film composer Stanley Myers. expanding from there into scoring for film and television. In the 1990s, he began a career as saxophonist and composer, both artistically and commercially.

He composed the theme tune and music of six series for the BBC TV series Silent Witness[2] and in May 1998 was the castaway on BBC Radio 4's long-running Desert Island Discs programme, with the BBC describing him as "the most-recorded saxophonist in the world".[3]

He was artistic advisor to Sir Paul McCartney for six years, and has been collaborator with Elvis Costello, Herbie Hancock and Elmer Bernstein.

In addition to his own prolific recording, Harle has contributed directly or indirectly to a number of charting songs and albums by others.[4] A jingle he wrote for Nissan in 1993 became the basis of a charting pop single by Jazzie B. He contributed to the charting albums Terror and Magnificence (1996) by Elvis Costello and Sarah Leonard, and Standing Stone (1997) by Paul McCartney.

Harle has also been an educator, serving at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London in the late 1980s as a professor of Saxophone and Chamber Music.[4] He is currently Visiting Professor of Saxophone at the Guildhall School.

In 2012 the Royal Television Society awarded Harle its 'Music: Original Score' award for his composition for BBC 2's programme Lucien Freud – Painted Life, describing it as "An excellent, challenging and original score that perfectly complements Freud's powerful imagery".[5] It also won the 2013 British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors (BASCA) Ivor Novello Award for 'Best Television Soundtrack'.[6]

In October 2013 Harle talked on BBC Radio 3's In Tune programme about his recently-released album Art Music, the composition of which was inspired by his favourite paintings.[7]

Harle appeared with Marc Almond on the BBC's Front Row radio programme in February 2014 to discuss their collaborative work about Gothic London, The Tyburn Tree (Dark London).[8] Harle was a guest on the same programme in November of that year, to mark the bicentenary of the birth of Adolphe Sax by assessing the contribution of Sax's invention, the saxophone.[9]

Harle has written a reference book on the saxophone, published by Faber Music (The Saxophone - The Art and Science of Playing and Performing) which is to be released in February 2017.

Harle has two sons, writer/curator Dr. Matthew Harle and Columbia Records composer/producer Danny L Harle.[1]

References

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