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・ Oliver Wendell
・ Oliver Wendell Douglas
・ Oliver Wendell Holmes
・ Oliver Wendell Holmes High School
・ Oliver Wendell Holmes House
・ Oliver Wendell Holmes Junior High School
・ Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
・ Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
・ Oliver Wendell Jones
・ Oliver Westerbeek
・ Oliver Whateley
・ Oliver Wheeler
・ Oliver Whiddon
・ Oliver White
・ Oliver White Tavern
Oliver Whitehead
・ Oliver Whiting Homestead
・ Oliver Widmer
・ Oliver Wight House
・ Oliver Wilde (musician)
・ Oliver Wilkes
・ Oliver Wilkin
・ Oliver Williams
・ Oliver Wilson
・ Oliver Winchester
・ Oliver Winery
・ Oliver Winfield Killam
・ Oliver Winston Wanger
・ Oliver Winterbottom
・ Oliver Wiswall House


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Oliver Whitehead : ウィキペディア英語版
Oliver Whitehead

Oliver Whitehead is a guitarist and composer, originally from England, who has worked mostly in Canada. He is an Associate Composer at the Canadian Music Centre. His orchestral works include the oratorio ''We Shall be Changed'' (1993), ''Concerto For Oboe'' (1996) and ''Pissarro Landscapes'' (2000). His jazz album ''Free For Now'' was nominated for a Juno Award as Best Jazz Album of 1985. He has composed for, and played with, many individual musicians and groups over the years, most recently world music/jazz group The Antler River Project, the singer Linda Hoyle and the music producer and songwriter/composer Mo Foster. ''The Fetch'', a new album of original songs by Linda Hoyle, Mo Foster and Whitehead, was released in August 2015.
== Early life and influences ==

Oliver's father Henry Whitehead was a mathematician at Balliol College, Oxford, and a codebreaker at Bletchley Park during World War II. His son knew almost nothing of the latter fact until 1995, three decades after his father's death, when the Official Secrets Act on WWII service expired. His mother Barbara began a career as a concert pianist (under her maiden name Smyth), but spent most of the 1950s and 60s running a farm that the family bought in the tiny village of Noke, near Oxford. Barbara's first cousin was the operatic tenor Peter Pears, partner of composer Benjamin Britten. Pears and Britten were close with the Whiteheads, often exchanging visits.
Oliver grew up in a home where classical music was highly valued—and jazz was little understood and rarely played. His parents tried to give him formal piano lessons. Instead, Oliver taught himself guitar and, by means of the radio and his wind-up 78 rpm gramophone, soon discovered all the British chart-toppers of the day, such as Tommy Steele, Lonnie Donegan and Cliff Richard, later finding more advanced models in Andres Segovia and Django Reinhardt.
After his father's early death in 1959, when Oliver was 11, his mother increasingly spent time in Donegal, Ireland, where she had holidayed as a child, eventually moving there permanently in 1970. Traditional Irish tunes became another ingredient in Oliver's mental music box.
The only guitar lesson Oliver ever took was from Julian Bream, who showed him a few blues and jazz licks, during a Christmas party with Britten and Pears in 1962.
At school, Oliver and his friends (including blues singer-guitarist Giles Hedley) shared a passionate love of blues and folk, mostly American. He came to the US at age 17, to study literature at Princeton University, where his father had worked for many years at the Institute For Advanced Study. In 1970 he moved to Canada to pursue post-graduate studies at the University of Toronto.

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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