Richard Lester (harpsichordist)
Richard Lester (born 1945) is an English harpsichordist, organist, fortepianist and musicologist.
Early life and education
Lester was born in Twickenham, Middlesex, the only son of Elsie Violet Evelyn and Sydney Arthur Lester, both of whom were amateur musicians. He attended Whitton Secondary School in Middlesex, and the London College of Music, where he graduated as a Fellow. He studied piano with Bernard Roberts, organ with David Lang, and harpsichord with George Malcolm.[1]
Career
Lester made his London debut (sponsored by George Malcolm) in 1973 at London's Wigmore Hall and two years later, following a Purcell Room recital, he was described by the Daily Telegraph critic, David Money as "one of our leading players."[2] Since then he has given harpsichord and organ recitals in the UK and abroad and performed on BBC Radio and television. Dame Janet Baker selected his recording of Scarlatti sonatas as her "favourite" on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs in 1982.[3] He has given master classes at Dartington Summer School, and was Director of music at the Mall School in Twickenham from 1986 – 1992 before taking up the position as head of music at Oakley Hall School in Cirencester, a town where he has lived with his wife, Jackie since 1989. As Master of the Choristers at Cirencester Parish Church in 1994, he directed courses there and at Bristol Cathedral for the Royal School of Church Music.
His meeting with the Spanish/American harpsichordist, Fernando Valenti at the Dartington Summer School sparked Lester's interest in the sonatas of Domenico Scarlatti,[4] and in 2004, he began recording the complete keyboard works of Scarlatti, subsequently released by Nimbus Records. The series, recorded with his friend and engineer, Raymond Fenton was described in The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music as "an exceptional issue on every count."[5] The Scarlatti series was followed by recordings of Haydn and Mozart piano works on fortepiano, harpsichord works by Soler and Seixas, and a five disc set of harpsichord and organ music by Girolamo Frescobaldi, the latter included in the 2012 Penguin Guide to the 1000 Finest Classical Recordings.[6] The Frescobaldi recording also received the "outstanding" accolade in International Record Review.[7]
Lester is the author of several articles including sixteenth century Italian fingering methods, and another on Frescobaldi for Harpsichord and Fortepiano magazine. In 2013 he participated in International Piano Magazine's Scarlatti symposium with Peter Katin, Nikolai Demidenko, Yevgeny Sudbyn, and Andreas Staier [8] Since 2009, Lester has devoted his attention to recording 16th century Italian keyboard music for Nimbus.
Recordings
- Scarlatti sonatas (complete) NI 1725 - 1731
- Soler and Seixas sonatas NI 5836
- Soler sonatas and Boccherini Fandango NI 5906
- Frescobaldi Keyboard works NI 5850
- Mozart sonatas NI 5867
- Haydn sonatas NI 5847
- Sixteenth century Italian organ masses by Cavazzoni, Andrea Gabrieli and Claudio Merulo. Vol 1 NI 5909/11
Personal life
Richard Lester married Jacqueline Susanna Woolford in 1981. The couple have two children, Christian (a personal trainer) and Elizabeth, a recorder player, flautist, and graduate BA (Hons) in music from York University,[1] with whom he has made recordings with Nimbus. He also has a son, Dominic, from his first marriage.[9]
References
- Bath Chronicle (21 June 2012). "Father and daughter pairing celebrates the Renaissance period"
- Money, David (December 1973). Daily Telegraph
- BBC Radio 4. Desert Island Discs: Dame Janet Baker, first broadcast 7 August 1982
- Liner notes: Dominco Scarlatti: Highlights from the Complete Sonatas (NI 5882)
- March, Ivan (ed.) (2009). The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music p. 920. Penguin. ISBN 0141041625
- March, Greenfield, Layton, and Czajkowski (eds.) (2012). The Penguin Guide to the 100 finest classical recordings, p. 171. Penguin. ISBN 0141399759
- International Record Review archives. "Outstanding in the September 2011 edition"
- International Piano Magazine, Issue 23 Jan/Feb 2014
- RichardLester.org.uk. Biography