Steven Mead

Steven Mead (born 1962 in Bournemouth, England) is an English virtuoso euphonium soloist and teacher who has played an important role in achieving worldwide recognition of the instrument.[1][2][3] He has played solo concerti with many symphony orchestras, including: the Stuttgart Philharmonic Orchestra, the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra, Lahti Symphony Orchestra and Helsinki Philharmonic, Capella Cracoviensis, the Minneapolis Pops Orchestra and the Japan Chamber Orchestra. He has premiered works by Martin Ellerby, Torstein Aagaard-Nilsen, Vladimir Cosma, Goff Richards, John Reeman, Rolf Rudin and Philip Sparke, amongst others. Goff Richards' Pilatus, Aagaard-Nilsen's Concerto for Euphonium and Orchestra, Reeman's Sonata for Euphonium and Ellerby's Euphonium Concerto were all written expressly for Mead.[4][5][6]

Steven Mead
Background information
Born (1962-02-26) 26 February 1962
Bournemouth, England
GenresClassical
Occupation(s)Soloist, virtuoso, teacher
InstrumentsEuphonium
Associated actsStuttgart Philharmonic Orchestra
Trondheim Symphony Orchestra
Helsinki Philharmonic
Capella Cracoviensis
Minneapolis Pops Orchestra
Japan Chamber Orchestra

Selected recordings

Ensemble: Royal Ballet Sinfonia; Soloists: Andrew Haveron (violin), Steven Mead (euphonium), David Owen Norris (piano); Conductor Joseph Horovitz; Label: Dutton Epoch.
  • Concertino
Ensemble: The Lillestrøm Musikkorps; Soloist: Steven Mead (euphonium); Conductor Gert Buitenhuis; Label: Polyphonic.
  • Euphonium Virtuoso
Ensemble: Brass Band Buizingen; Soloist: Steven Mead (euphonium); Conductor: Luc Vertommen; Label: Bocchino.
Ensemble: Royal Northern College of Music Wind Orchestra; Soloist: Steven Mead (euphonium); Conductor: James Gourlay; Label: Polyphonic.
  • Audacious
Soloist: Steven Mead; Accompanied by Tomoko Sawano, piano; Label: Bocchino.
  • Fandango, released 1 June 2011; Accompanied by Tomoko Sawano, piano; Label: Bocchino.
gollark: OKAY THEN
gollark: Hexadecimal can handle basically what binary can, I'm fairly sure.
gollark: 0.1 -> infinitely long base 2.
gollark: Some stuff works in base 10 but not binary.
gollark: [0101011101, 101010101, 10101010101011, 01010101010]

References

  1. Roy Newsome, The Modern Brass Band: From the 1930s to the New Millennium, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2006, p. 252. ISBN 0-7546-0717-8.
  2. Peter Spaull, "Blowing in the wind my friends", Liverpool Daily Post, March 28, 2003. Accessed 10 September 2008.
  3. Martin Stote, "Euphonium euphoria as BBC makes ban U-turn", Birmingham Post, March 25, 1999. Accessed via subscription 10 September 2008.
  4. Notes on Concerto for Euphonium and Orchestra on the official web site of Torstein Aagaard-Nilsen.
  5. Lloyd Bone, Eric Paull, R. Winston Morris, Guide to the Euphonium Repertoire: The Euphonium Source Book, Indiana University Press, 2007, pp. 60 and 132. ISBN 0-253-34811-0
  6. Roy Newsome, The Modern Brass Band: From the 1930s to the New Millennium, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2006, p. 367.
  • Steven Mead's official website
  • Video of a live unedited performance, most of the third movement of the Hallows Concerto (Rolf Rudin) in a performance given by Steven at The Capitol Theatre, Offenbach, Germany on Sunday 15 March 2009, with the Neue Philharmonie Orchestra, conductor Roland Boer
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.