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Guy Johnston

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Instruments
  
Cello

Genres
  
Classical music

Name
  
Guy Johnston

Website
  
www.guy-johnston.com


Guy Johnston wwwvivaorchcoukfiles581369128339guyjohnst

Born
  
7 May 1981 (age 43) Harpenden, England (
1981-05-07
)

Role
  
Cellist · guy-johnston.com

Albums
  
Seven Poems of Stillness, Matthews, D.: Music of Dawn / Concerto in Azurro / A Vision and A Journey, Milo

Education
  
Eastman School of Music, Chetham's School of Music

Awards
  
Classic Brit Award for Young British Classical Performer or Group

Similar People
  
JoAnn Falletta, Stephen Cleobury, Rumon Gamba, Karl Jenkins, Michael C Brewer

Associated acts
  
Aronowitz Ensemble


Guy Johnston (born 1981) is a British cellist and the winner of the BBC Young Musician of the Year award in 2000. He has subsequently enjoyed a successful international career as a soloist and chamber musician and currently serves as a Professor of Cello at the Royal Academy of Music in London.

Contents

Guy Johnston Guy Johnston Leicester International Music Festival

Gaia closeups guy johnston cellist j haydn concerto for violoncello and strings in c major


Career

Guy Johnston Guy Johnston and the Sacconi Quartet Guy Johnston and

Johnston came to prominence after winning the BBC Young Musician of the Year competition in 2000, where he notably broke a string playing Shostakovich's Cello Concerto No. 1. In the following year he made his concerto debut at The Proms performing Edward Elgar's Cello Concerto with Leonard Slatkin and the BBC Symphony Orchestra. He was named "Young British Classical Performer" of the year at the 2002 Classic Brit Awards.

Guy Johnston Guy Johnston Future Talent

Johnston has since performed concertos with leading British orchestras including the London Philharmonic, BBC Philharmonic, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Manchester Camerata, the Philharmonia, English Chamber Orchestra, BBC Scottish Symphony, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, BBC Orchestra of Wales and the Northern Sinfonia, and in Europe, the Middle and Far East with the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester, St Petersburg Symphony Orchestra, São Paulo Symphony Orchestra, Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchester der Hessischer Rundfunk and Musikkollegium Winterthur.

Johnston's performances and recordings are regularly broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and Classic FM.

He is a founding member of the Aronowitz Ensemble, which has recently been invited into the BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artists scheme, guaranteeing regular feature presentations on BBC Radio 3 and other media over a two-year period.

His instrument is a 1714 David Tecchler cello.

In August 2016, Johnston performed the world premiere of Charlotte Bray's cello concerto Falling in the Fire at The Proms.

Recording work

Johnston recorded David Matthews' Concerto in Azzurro with Rumon Gamba and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, released on the Chandos label in 2009. The recording was nominated for a Gramophone Award in the Contemporary Music category.

Johnston released his debut recital disc Milo in May 2010 on the Orchid label with the pianist Kathryn Stott. The disc comprises British 20th-century music including the Cello Sonatas by Benjamin Britten and Frank Bridge and works "Sleep On" and "Milo" by Mark-Anthony Turnage. Turnage wrote the latter for the christening of his son, Milo. Johnston premiered the work at Milo's christening and is his godfather.

Johnston recorded the Duruflé Requiem with Christine Rice (mezzo-soprano), Mark Stone (baritone), Tristan Mitchard (organ), The Choir of Somerville College Oxford, and David Crown (conductor), released on the Stone Records label in 2012.

Johnston was awarded a Classical BRIT Award for Young British Classical Performer in 2001.

Personal life

Johnston was born to a musical family. His parents David and Gill run Musicale, a music school and instrument retailer in Harpenden. He has two brothers, Magnus and Rupert, and they have a younger sister Brittany "Izzy". All three brothers were choristers at the King's College Chapel, Cambridge and educated at its affiliated school. Magnus has enjoyed a successful career as a violinist and chamber musician and is married to Dutch violinist Marije Ploemacher. Izzy was a member of the electronic string quartet Escala and is married to McFly drummer Harry Judd. Rupert, who plays the French horn, sustained a serious brain injury in a car accident in 1997, as an eighteen-year-old student at Guildhall. As a result, Johnston, his siblings and Judd have supported the Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust (The Disabilities Trust) through their charity work.

Johnston attended Chetham's School of Music, Manchester from 1996 to 1999 and studied under acclaimed cellist Steven Doane at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, USA.

References

Guy Johnston Wikipedia


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