Julian Bream life and biography

Julian Bream picture, image, poster

Julian Bream biography

Date of birth : 1933-07-15
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Battersea, England
Nationality : English
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2011-10-31
Credited as : Singer, guitarist and lutenist , Guitarra!

0 votes so far

Julian Bream is an English classical guitarist and lutenist and is one of the most distinguished classical guitarists of the 20th century. He has also been successful in renewing popular interest in the Renaissance lute.

For Bream, playing music is not a show of technique but a passionate attempt to reveal to an audience a piece's spiritual and mystical qualities. "Ideally the performer has a special function," he theorized in A Life on the Road, "which is to bring the listener to the edge of that experience and to open the doors of this perception in such a way that those who wish to enter can."

Bream's first exposure to musical performance came from his father, Henry Bream, a commercial artist and amateur guitarist who taught his young son the basics of the instrument. But inspiration for Bream's future course came from recordings by the great Spanish classical guitarist Andres Segovia. Segovia was considered an aberration, as solo guitar was not commonly a choice for classical performance at the time, but Bream was determined to follow a similar musical life. Though his father urged jazz studies, Bream chose to enroll in the Royal College of Music in London with an emphasis on piano, composition, and cello, while doggedly focusing on the classical guitar. Unable to reconcile the conservative faculty to his pursuit, Bream left the college in 1952. He was subsequently drafted by the British Army where he played electric jazz guitar in the Royal Artillery's dance band for three years.

Bream earned money in college by playing incidental music for dramas--usually sixteenth- and seventeenth-century historical plays--broadcast by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). He had always been interested in the Elizabethan period of English history; in researching music for the plays, he was further drawn to the era's music and its popular instrument, the lute. "I felt instinctively that this was a musical period in these islands rich in beauty, inventiveness, and vitality," he recounted in his book. "And it seemed to me I had a possibility to help revitalize some of this music. I had a mission almost: to present this music in a way that was not of the museum, but of now, although still retaining the music's essential spirit."

In the early 1950s very few lute players or instructors existed. In lieu of training, Bream improvised by adapting his guitar technique to the lute. Traditionally the lute was played or plucked with the fingertips near the bridge, yielding the soft, intimate tone characteristic of a courtly instrument. Bream, however, played with his fingernails, plucking the strings between the fingerboard and the bridge, producing considerable differences in tone and dynamics--important aspects of any solo concert instrument.

Bream's first efforts in the mid-1950s captured both the public's ear and imagination. But his growing recognition, along with that of the lute, also brought out traditional lute devotees who were exceedingly critical of his guitar-based style. Bream was unmoved, confirming that his approach to music has always been to champion expression over technique. "It's the sincerity and the heart behind the friggery that is for me the vital clue," he has written. "I like to play the lute full-bloodedly, with passion, as well as with delicacy and, I hope, refinement." Almost 30 years later, William Ellis agreed. Reviewing a reissue of Bream's early works, Ellis opined in American Record Guide that the recordings still had "much to teach younger players of the instrument. Inherent in his occasional vibrato and wide dynamics (for a lute, that is) is an abundant musicality that more historically (or should I say 'politically') correct players would do well to study."

In 1960 Bream formed the Julian Bream Consort, an instrumental group based on Elizabethan models, largely because he wanted to experience the repertoire available to this setting of instruments. But he was not content to explore only the lute and its ancient music. "One thing you learn very rapidly in this business is that you are part of a continuing tradition," Bream noted, adding "that the future of the guitar, for instance, is every bit as important as its past." This insight prompted Bream to commission guitar pieces from such eminent modern classical composers as Benjamin Britten, Malcolm Arnold, and William Walton. All the works have greatly impacted the classical guitar community and one, Britten's Nocturnal, has since become a standard piece in the repertoire for modern guitar.

This vital propensity for change was no more evident than in the late 1970s and 1980s when Bream set his lute aside to once more concentrate on the guitar. He again commissioned new works, sought out standard pieces in the Spanish guitar literature he had overlooked, and filmed a video series, Guitarra!, which explored the development of the Spanish guitar and the repertoire.

Bream returned to the lute in the early 1990s, playing a slightly different, more historically correct form. But his approach to music hasn't changed; he still "believes that interpretive values are more important than authentic timbres," acknowledged Kozinn. Perhaps more than anything, it is Bream's lack of zealous devotion to the technical aspects of the guitar repertoire that truly allows him to express its intangible qualities. "There is no piece of guitar music that has the formal beauty of a piano sonata by Mozart, or the richly worked out ideas and passion of a late Beethoven string quartet, or for that matter the beautiful mellifluous poetry of a Chopin Ballade," he opined."But I know that I can invest unsophisticated, naive, even corny guitar music with a poetry which can entice the ear, and with it create an experience that is perfectly valid for present-day musical circumstances. I only need a handful of notes, nothing special, and I'm away."

During the 1992-1993 season he performed on two separate occasions at the Wigmore Hall - at their Gala Re-opening Festival, and at a special concert celebrating his 60th birthday. In the same period, he toured the Far East, visiting Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea and Japan, and performed the premiere of Leo Brouwer's arrangement for guitar and orchestra of Albéniz's Iberia at the Proms. In 1994 he made debuts in both Turkey and Israel to great acclaim, and the following year played for the soundtrack to the Hollywood film Don Juan de Marcos.

In 1997, in celebration if the 50th anniversary of his debut, he performed a recital at Cheltenham Town Hall. A few weeks later the BBC dedicated a special television tribute "This Is Your Life" programme to Julian Bream, filmed after a commemorative concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London.

In recent years, his engagements have included a Gala solo performance at the Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool, a Kosovo Aid concert at St. John's Smith Square, London, with the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields recitals at the Snape Proms, Aldeburgh, and at the Norfolk and Norwich Festival and a tour of UK National Trust properties in summer and autumn 2000.
In November 2001 he gave an anniversary recital at Wigmore Hall, celebrating 50 years since his debut there in 1951.

The 2003 DVD video profile Julian Bream: My Life In Music contains three hours of interview and performance. It has been declared by Graham Wade "the finest film contribution ever to the classic guitar." His series Guitarra! was made for British television and charts a journey across Spain.

Selective Works:
-An Anthology of English Song Decca, 1955.
-A Bach Recital for the Guitar Westminster, 1957.
-The Art of Julian Bream RCA, 1959.
-(With the Julian Bream Consort) An Evening of Elizabethan Music RCA, 1962.
-Baroque Guitar RCA, 1965.
-Lute Music From the Royal Courts of Europe RCA, 1966.
-20th Century Guitar RCA, 1966.
-Classic Guitar RCA, 1968.
-Elizabethan Lute Songs RCA, 1970.
-Romantic Guitar RCA, 1970.
-Julian Bream Plays Villa-Lobos RCA, 1971.
-(With John Williams) Together RCA, 1971.
-The Woods So Wild RCA, 1972.
-Julian Bream '70s RCA, 1973.
-The Lute Music of John Dowland RCA, 1976.
-The Music of Spain, Vol. 1 RCA, 1979.
-Dedication RCA, 1981.
-The Music of Spain, Vol. 5: The Poetic Nationalists RCA, 1982.
-Guitarra: The Guitar in Spain RCA, 1985.
-Bach: Suites for Lute RCA, 1986.
-(With the Julian Bream Consort) Fantasies, Ayres, and Dances RCA, 1988.
-Two Loves RCA, 1989.
-La Guitarra Romantica RCA, 1991.
-Also released Guitarra!: The Guitar in Spain With Julian Bream, Vols. 1-4 (video series), Home Vision, 1984.

Read more


 
Please read our privacy policy. Page generated in 0.119s