Biography of John W. Duarte

Born 02 October 1919 in Sheffield. 100% English despite name. Father was Scottish, mother English - born in Philadelphia!

Educated at Manchester Central High School (1931-35) and Manchester University Faculty of Technology (1936-40). Worked as a professional chemist until 1969, then abandoned chemistry in favour of full-time music. Only formal musical eduction was lessons with Terence Usher (1934-36) in jazz-guitar playing; the rest was by self-instruction. Has worked professionally also as a player of the trumpet and double-bass in music of many kinds, and regularly as a jazz musician until 1953. His many friendships with great artists have included one of 39 years with Andrès Segovia and an enforcedly shorter one with Ida Presti, who died at the age of 42.

 Composer of over 130 works for the guitar and lute (many commissioned with funds provided by the Arts Council of Great Britain and other sources, official and private, both domestic and overseas. Most have been published and 57 have been commercially recorded by 58 artists and/or ensembles in 24 countries, some several times. Author of very many arrangements (several also recorded) and didactic works.

 Writer of countless articles: Currently as a regular contributor to Soundboard, interviewer and reviewer of books, music, concerts and recordings of many kinds (specializing in Baroque music) with Gramophone, Music Teacher and Classical Guitar, and author of numerous concert-program notes and about 250 liner notes for records of various kinds, including those for the complete reissue of Julian Bream's recordings for RCA (28 compact discs). Received a Grammy Award for his annotation to the reissue of Segovia's recordings of 1927-39. In the past, has contributed regularly to Music in Education, Guitar Review, Guitar International, Music & Musicians, Records and Recording, and Performance. Contributor to the revised edition of The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians.

 As a teacher he has prepared many international students for successful careers, and he was Director of the Cannington International Guitar Summer School and Festival (1974-93), Course Director of the Bath International Guitar Festival (1994-95) and now teaches at the Oatridge International Guitar Summer School and Festival (near Edinburgh). Has worked as a teacher, lecturer and adjudicator in 29 countries outside the United Kingdom**.

 His 60th and 70th birthdays were celebrated with concerts of his music in the Wigmore Hall (London), played by artists from Britain, the USA, Czechoslovakia, Venezuela, Germany and Croatia. His 80th birthday is to be marked by a similar concert in the Bolivar Hall (London) with artists from England, Scotland, Brazil, Greece and Italy. In 1990 he received a Silver Medal from the Czech Ambassador in London, for his "services to Anglo-Czech and Slovak cultural relations". At the Convention of the Guitar Foundation of America in October 1999 he is to received an Award for Lifetime Achievement.

John Duarte died in 2004.

University of Newark, Princeton Choir College.

 Philadelphia Music Academy. Charlie Byrd's 'House of Music' (DC), Charleston Music College, University of North Carolina (Winston Salem).

 University of Arizona: Tucson, Tempe. Lamont School of Music (Denver),

 San Diego: Catholic University, Grossmont College. S.D.Guitar Society. Chapman College (Orange City). California State University campuses: Long Beach, Fullerton, Thousand Oaks, Northridge. University of Southern California (LA). Peninsula Guitar Society (Los Gatos). Bay Area: Bay Area Guitar Society, Del Oro Conservatory (Oakland), San Francisco Conservatory, Dominican College (San Rafael).

 

Musicians interviewed by John Duarte

 

Bowed-string players: John Holloway, Gidon Kremer, Viktoria Mullova, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Derek Solomon, Simon Standage, Paul Tortelier. Composers: Geoffrey Burgon. John Corigliano. Conductors: John Eliot Gardiner, James Judd, Joshua Rifkin, Bruno Turner. Guitarists: Julian Bream, Ian Davies, David Starobin. Harpsichordists: Valda Aveling, Kenneth Gilbert, Christopher Hogwood, Igor Kipnis, Ton Koopman, Trevor Pinnock, Gilbert Rowland, Blandine Verlet. Lutenists: Konrad Junghänel, Jakob Lindberg. Pianists and organists: Jennifer Bate, Malcolm Bilson, Alicia de Larrocha, Simon Preston, Murray Perahia. Recorder players: Michala Petri, Philip Pickett. Various: Catherine Bott (soprano), Christian Lindberg (trombonist), Ravi Shankar, Nicanor Zabaleta (harpist).

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** Argentina, Australia, Austria, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, Czechoslovakia (CFR, Slovakia), Denmark, Eire, Finland, France, Greece, Germany, Holland, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Romania, Russia, Spain, Sweden, USA, Venezuela, Yugoslavia (Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Kosovo).

 (Those in bold type. supported by the British Council)

 


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