Roy
Goodman is Principal Guest Conductor of the Auckland
Philharmonia, New Zealand, the English Chamber Orchestra, and
(since taking over in December 2003 from Charles de Wolff) Conductor
of the Bachkoor Holland accompanied by the Royal Concertgebouw
Kamerorkest. He is well known for his work as director and founder
of the Brandenburg Consort (1975-2001), as co-director/founder
(with Peter Holman) of The Parley of Instruments (1978-1986),
co-founder (with Denys Darlow) of the London Handel Orchestra
(in 1981), Principal Conductor of the Hanover Band (1986-1994),
Music Director for fifteen years of the European Union Baroque
Orchestra (1989-2004), the first Principal Conductor of Umeå
Symphony Orchestra & Norrlands Opera Sweden (1995-2001), Music
Director of the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra in Winnipeg (1999-2005)
and as the first Principal Conductor of Holland Symfonia (2003-2006).
Roy Goodman is very much a disciple and colleague
of Sir Charles Mackerras and Sir Roger Norrington - and in just
a couple of years he will be 60. In 2006 he made his debut with
the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Amsterdam. Concerts in 2007/8
include the Hallé in Manchester, RSNO in Glasgow and Residentie
Orchestra in the Hague, NDR Hannover and SWR Stuttgart Radio Symphony
Orchestras, Recreation Graz and Kristiansand Symphony, Tampere
and Bergen Philharmonics, the Geneva, Manitoba, Uppsala and Swedish
Chamber Orchestras, and Auckland Philharmonia in New Zealand.
In 1959 (at the age of eight)
Goodman made his
first recording for Decca as boy-treble with the choir of Kings
College Cambridge under Sir David Willcocks, in Bach's St.
John Passion (with Peter Pears as Evangelist). A few years later
he achieved international fame as the soloist in Allegri's
Miserere (now reissued, from 1963, on Decca Legends). His mother's
godfather was Sir Malcolm Sargent whom he observed conducting
at the Proms in the mid 1960's. When Goodman completed his
studies at the Royal College of Music in London in 1970 he was
already well qualified as a conductor, teacher, organist, violinist
and musicologist. He is an honorary Doctor of Music (University
of Hull), Fellow of the Royal College of Organists and Fellow
of the Royal College of Music (London). From 1971 he spent several
years as a High School music teacher, eventually as Director of
Music at the University of Kent in Canterbury and as Director
of Early Music Studies at the Royal Academy of Music in London.
From 1975-1986 much of Goodman's career was spent as a violinist
- Goodman worked in Europe as a principal violinist - playing
as concertmaster or soloist with Ashkenazy, Brüggen, Ivan
Fischer, Gardiner, Herreweghe, Hickox, Hogwood, Jacobs, King,
Koopman, Mackerras, Marriner, McCreesh, Norrington, Pinnock, Rattle
and Schreier. He was the first concertmaster of the Orchestra
of the Age of Enlightenment, and during the 1980's he conducted
for CD with the Hanover Band the first ever performances on historic
instruments of the complete symphonies by Beethoven, Schubert,
Schumann and Weber, as well as 14 symphonies by Mendelssohn and
60 symphonies by Haydn. He has conducted over 120 CDs - several
receiving rosettes in the
Penguin CD Guide - ranging
from Monteverdi's sacred vocal music to Holst's Planets (played
on historical instruments!), including further orchestral and
choral works by Mozart, Mendelssohn and Berwald and important
baroque works by Purcell, Corelli, Handel and Bach. His CD recordings
of the complete Schumann symphonies for RCA have received outstanding
critical praise worldwide.
An invitation to conduct a televised Haydn & Sibelius programme
with the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra in 1993 was the catalyst
for
Roy Goodman's flourishing career as
a serious international conductor. Recent CD releases include
recordings of Mozart's basset clarinet concerto with Nicholas
Cox and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic for 'RLPO Live',
a CD for Naxos of classical trumpet concertos including Haydn
and Hummel (with Niklas Eklund and the Swedish Chamber Orchestra),
and recordings of Walton, Grace Williams, Gareth Walters &
Warlock with the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra for CBC Records. Also
further CDs for Naxos (orchestral suites by Rameau with the European
Union Baroque Orchestra), CBC Records (Barber
Knoxville, Summer
of 1915, Copland
Eight Songs of Emily Dickinson
and songs by Gershwin with Measha Brüggergosman) and Northwest
Classics (Willem Jeths' Cello Concerto
Falsa/Ficta with
Frances-Marie Uitti and the Arnhem Philharmonic)
Goodman has worked as guest conductor with 120
orchestras and opera companies worldwide.
Opera work has included repertoire by Händel (
Agrippina,
Alcina, Amadigi, Ezio, Giulio Cesare, Orlando, Rodelinda, Scipione,
Tamerlano), Mozart (
Bastien et Bastienne, Don Giovanni,
La Clemenza di Tito, Le nozze di Figaro) and Beethoven (
Leonore)
in Lisbon, at the Britten-Pears School in Snape, Fondation Royaumont
in Paris and at Opera North in Leeds, Opera Northern Ireland in
Belfast, Flanders Opera in Gent and Antwerp, Staatstheater Mainz
and as an annual guest from 1990-1998 at the Badisches Staatstheater
Händel Festspiele in Karlsruhe. In 1999 he made his debut
at the English National Opera with Gluck's Orpheus and at
the Drottningholm Theatre Stockholm with the world première
of a new Swedish opera
Trädgården by Jonas
Forssell. In 2001 he returned to Drottningholm for a new production
of Handel's
Giulio Cesare, and in 2002 conducted
Alcina
for Stuttgart, Budapest and San Francisco Opera. He returned to
Stuttgart in 2004 (
Figaro) and also to San Francisco
in 2005 & 2006 (
Rodelinda & Figaro).
Some of Goodman's more unusual engagements include making
a documentary film about Mozart's Prague Symphony for Dutch
television with members of the Prague Chamber Orchestra; a 12
CD recording contract with BMG Classics/RCA Victor after a concert
cycle of the complete symphonies of Beethoven in the Schleswig
Holstein Festival and Missa Solemnis in the Alte Oper, Frankfurt;
conducting the world-premiere of Philip Glass' Concerto for Saxophone
Quartet with the Rascher Quartet and Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra
and a televised Sibelius 'birthday' programme with the Finnish
Radio Symphony Orchestra; an invitation by the Netherlands Wind
Ensemble to conduct the Symphony for Winds by Richard Strauss
and Schönberg Chamber Symphony 1 for Dutch Radio; a prestigious
live televised New Year's Day concert (1998) with the augmented
Netherlands Wind Ensemble from the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam;
concerts including Schumann Symphony 4 at the Carnegie Hall in
New York and Beethoven's Symphony Eroica at the BBC Proms
in the Royal Albert Hall, London; an invitation in 2003 to direct
a Mozart Festival in the Concertgebouw Amsterdam; the creation
of over forty world-première commissions of contemporary
music from Sweden, Iceland, America, Canada & the Netherlands;
being the first conductor to conduct the Huddersfield Choral Society
(and BBC Philharmonic) in a complete Messiah from memory; playing
as soloist in Mozart's G major Violin Concerto at Chicago Symphony
Hall; playing the organ at the Royal Festival Hall, London for
several Christmas concerts; and playing light piano jazz on national
radio from the Aix-en-Provence Festival, Concertgebouw Amsterdam
and Freiburg Concert Hall. Roy Goodman has three children and
four grandchildren.