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Julia Thornton
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Julia Thornton : ウィキペディア英語版
Julia Thornton

Julia Thornton is a professional harpist, who to date has released two albums: Harpistry (2003) and Eye of the Storm (2004).
== Musical life and career ==
Julia Thornton began to play the harp aged 11. Having wanted to do so since the age of three, her parents initially managed to stave off her persistence, allowing her piano lessons at the age of 9. Eighteen months later, having taken well to the piano, she was allowed to have her first harp lesson.〔(julia thornton )〕
Beginning on an Irish instrument called the clarsach (an instrument that isn't as big as a concert harp and doesn't have the pedal mechanism), she was taught by a local teacher initially who had to return to her native Czechoslovakia after a year. After this she was taught by Daphne Boden (who eventually became Thornton's professor at the Royal Academy of Music).
Within the year, Boden asked Thornton's parents if they would buy her a concert harp – a huge financial investment. Thornton's first harp belonged to Boden – a Japanese instrument called Ahomaya.
Thornton extended her studies by attending the Junior Department of the Royal College of Music on Saturdays, where she began also to learn percussion. At this time she also became a member of the National Youth Orchestra.
Having won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music, she studied there for 5 years (1990 – 1995〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Julia Thornton )〕), winning many prizes for her harp-playing (including the Julia Leney and Renata Schefelstein harp awards, and both the harp prizes at the Royal Overseas League competition). She was also awarded the Mathias Prize for the best performance of his Sante Fe Suite at the International Harp Competition in Cardiff. After finishing at the R.A.M., Thornton's work consisted of a mixture of teaching, orchestral and solo work. She performed with a wide variety of orchestras, opera and ballet companies, and gave recitals including performances at the Cambridge, Beaumaris and Cheltenham music festivals.
She also joined the panel of Yehudi Menuhin's "Live Music Now!", which enables young musicians to perform in various communities around the country, such as in schools, day-care centres, homes for the elderly, homes for those suffering from Alzheimers or dementia, prisons and young offenders' institutes.
Julia's main breakthrough came at a yoga demo in 1999, where she was playing the harp, and was thus spotted by one of the attendees – Clare Davies, wife to Bryan Ferry's producer, Rhett Davies.〔(the-raft.com (local) – first for music, music news, features, competitions and reviews )〕 Following an audition, she began working with Bryan Ferry, performing on the harp and percussion instruments on his "As Time Goes By" tour, which comprised a collection of 1930s standards such as the title track. In 2001 she was asked to join the Roxy Music reunion tour – a tour that would involve 50 days of percussion-playing only, and despite her love for the harp, Thornton took this opportunity. The tour involved visits to Australia and Japan, and playing in some of the world's biggest stadia such as Wembley.
The seeds of "Harpistry" were sown during her involvement with a mediaeval instrumental group, Arcana Mundi, a concept dreamt up by Craig Leon, who would later become her producer. Sure enough, she signed a deal with EMI in 2002, and between trips abroad with Bryan Ferry, she sourced the material for her first album, with help from Leon. She recorded her first album, "Harpistry", in the Netherlands in 2003, before going to Brazil on another Bryan Ferry tour.
On 1 September 2005, www.PlaybillArts.com reported that Harpistry charted no. 13 on the Billboard Classical chart. She released her second album, "Eye of the Storm", on her own label, Crossways Records, due to frustrations with EMI.
In the spring of 2007, Julia became a member of a new band, The Metaphors, started with Roxy Music founding members Andy MacKay and Paul Thompson, on reeds and drums. Filling out the band are Hazel Mills on Keyboards and T J Allen on guitar and effects. That summer they went into the studio to record their first album. The 6 song collection called ''London! Paris! New York! Rome!'' was released to iTunes in March 2009, and became available as a disk from their website a month later. To date The Metaphors have played a limited number of live dates.
In June & July 2009, Julia returned to her percussion and harp duties for the 30th anniversary tour of Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the World for a 21 concert tour of England and Europe.
According to her webpage, Julia has plans to go into the studio and record her own music and record with members of Lunar Dunes, a band that she has sat in with. Julia is also following up on her interest in yoga by taking classes towards becoming a yoga instructor.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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