17th January Julian Lloyd Webber with pianist Pam Chowhan
‘Travels with my Cello’ To celebrate his 60th birthday in 2011 Julian takes us on a unique musical
journey through his extraordinary career in words, live performance and video. Not to be missed!
Sponsored byBOYDENS, (Estate
Agent), Frinton-on-Sea and Colchester.
Biography
Widely regarded as one of the most creative musicians of his generation and
now leading England’s In Harmony programme, Julian Lloyd Webber won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music
when he was sixteen and completed his studies in Geneva with the renowned French cellist, Pierre Fournier. Since
then he has collaborated with an extraordinary array of musicians from Yehudi Menuhin, Lorin Maazel, Esa-Pekka
Salonen and Georg Solti to Elton John and Stephane Grappelli.
Julian has won numerous awards for his services to music, including the Crystal
Award (presented at the World Economic Forum in 1998) and the Classic FM Red Award in 2005. In 1994 he was made a
Fellow of the Royal College of Music. As leader of In Harmony, the British Government's new
music programme, Julian is working to promote personal and community development in some
of England's most deprived areas, through orchestral-based learning and musical experiences.
Julian has made many outstanding recordings including his Brit-Award winning Elgar
Concerto conducted by Yehudi Menuhin (chosen as the finest ever version by BBC Music Magazine) the Dvorák
Concerto with Vaclav Neumann and the Czech Philharmonic, Tchaikovsky’s Rococo Variations with the London
Symphony under Maxim Shostakovich and a coupling of Britten’s Cello Symphony and Walton’s Concerto
with Sir Neville Marriner and the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, which was described by Gramophone
magazine as “beyond any rival”. Julian has also recorded several hugely successful CD’s of short pieces for
Universal Classics including Made in England, Cello Moods and Cradle Song: “It would be
difficult to find better performances of this kind of repertoire anywhere on records of today or yesterday” -
Gramophone.
Julian has premiered more than fifty new works for cello and has inspired new
compositions from composers as diverse as Malcolm Arnold and Joaquin Rodrigo to James MacMillan and Philip Glass.
Recent concert performances have included three further works composed for Julian - Michael Nyman’s Double
Concerto for Cello and Saxophone on BBC Television, Gavin Bryars’ Concerto in Suntory Hall, Tokyo and Philip
Glass’s Concerto at the Beijing International Festival. His recording of the Glass concerto was released on
the Orange Mountain label in September 2004. Recent recordings – both on EMI Classics - include Unexpected
Songs and Phantasia, based on Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Phantom of the Opera and featuring violinist
Sarah Chang.
Julian joined the Board of Govenors of London's Southbank Centre in September 2009 and earlier that year
– in recognition of his lifelong devotion to Elgar’s music – he was elected President of the
Elgar Society.
Julian is married to fellow cellist Jiaxin Cheng. He is a passionate supporter of Leyton
Orient football club and was London Underground’s first official busker.
Julian plays the ‘Barjansky’ Stradivarius cello (c. 1690).
For Julian's regular pianist Pam Chowhan's biography please click here.