Dr.Karl
Jenkins OBE
B.Mus., F.R.A.M., A.R.A.M., L.R.A.M.,
F.W.C.M.D., F.T.C.CKarl Jenkins was born in Wales and
educated at Gowerton Grammar School before reading music at the
University of Wales, Cardiff. He then commenced postgraduate studies
at the Royal Academy of Music, London.
It was in jazz that he initially made his mark. In those days of
‘Jazz Polls” he was a prolific poll winner, playing at London’s
famous Ronnie Scott’s club before co-forming Nucleus, which won
first prize at the Montreux jazz festival and appeared at the
Newport Jazz Festival, Rhode Island.
This was followed by a period with Soft Machine, one of the
seminal bands of the 70’s. Through many incarnations, ‘Softs’ defied
categorization playing venues as diverse as Carnegie Hall, the
classical ‘Proms’ at the Royal Albert Hall, the Reading ‘Rock’
Festival.
In the field of advertising music he has won the prestigious D&AD
award for best music [twice], the ‘Creative Circle Gold’ and several
‘Clios’ [New York] and ‘Golden Lions’ [Cannes]. Credits include
Levi’s, British Airways, Renault, Volvos, C&G, Tag Heuer, Pepsi as
well as US/global campaigns for De Beers and Delta Airlines and
Bafta ‘gongs’ for his scores for the documentaries The Celts and
Testament.
After this period as a media composer, his return to the music
mainstream was initially marked by the success of the Adiemus
project. Adiemus, combining a classical base with ethnic vocal
sounds, ethnic percussion and an invented language, topped classical
and ‘pop’ charts around the world, gaining 17 gold or platinum album
awards while performing in Tokyo, Madrid, London, Helsinki, Munich
etc.
The Armed Man; A Mass For Peace, commissioned by the Royal
Armouries for the millennium and premiered at the Royal Albert Hall,
London has had over four hundred performances recent years while the
CD, featuring the National Youth Choir of Great Britain and the
London Philharmonic Orchestra, has gained “Gold Disc” status in the
UK.
Works include the harp concerto ‘Over The Stone’ commissioned by
HRH the Prince of Wales for the Royal Harpist, Catrin Finch, the
concertante, ‘Quirk’, commissioned by the London Symphony Orchestra
and conducted by Sir Colin Davies as part of its 2005 centenary
season, Tlep written for virtuoso violinist Marat Bisengaliev and
based on Kazak themes and In These Stones Horizons Sing, featuring
Bryn Terfel, Catrin Finch with the WNO Orchestra & Chorus which was
premiered at the Royal Gala opening of the Welsh Millennium Centre
in the presence of Her Majesty The Queen.
In the summer of 2005 he scored the feature film, River Queen
starring Kiefer Sutherland & Samantha Morton, the soundtrack of
which won the Golden Goblet award for best score at the Shanghai
Film Festival
Recent CD releases include Requiem, which went to No1 in the UK
classical charts, “Kiri Sings Karl” with Dame Kiri Te Kanawa. and
This Land Of Ours, a musical celebration of Welsh culture featuring
the Cory Band [winners of the 2007 British Open Championship] and
the male choir, Only Men Aloud. Stabat Mater was released by EMI
Classics on March 9th prior to the premier at Liverpool Cathedral on
March 15th, while Quirk, a collection of concertos, will be released
on Oct 4th 2008.
Karl has been subject of the ITV South Bank Shows by Lord
[Melvyn] Bragg as well as being a ‘castaway’ on ‘Desert Island
Discs’.
In 2004 he entered Classic FM’s ‘Hall of Fame” at no 8., the
highest position for a living composer and has been the highest
placed living composer since, as well as, in 2006, no. 4 amongst
British composers.
Karl holds a D.Mus [Doctor of Music] degree from the University
of Wales, has been made both a Fellow and an Associate of the Royal
Academy of Music, where a room has been named in his honour, and has
fellowships at Cardiff University, the Royal Welsh College of Music
& Drama, Trinity College Carmarthen, Swansea Institute and was
presented by Classic FM with the ‘Red f ‘award for ‘outstanding
service to classical music’
He was recently awarded an honorary doctorate [music] from the
University of Leicester, the Chancellors Medal from the University
of Glamorgan and two Honorary visiting Professorships, one at Thames
Valley University/London College of Music and the other at the
ATriUM, Cardiff.
He was awarded an OBE, by Her Majesty The Queen, in the 2005 New
Years Honours List “for services to music”. |