Valerie Tryon

Valerie Tryon (born 5 September 1934)[1] is a British-born classical pianist. Since 1971 she has resided in Canada, but continues to pursue an international performing and recording career, and spends a part of each year in her native Britain. Among her specialisms is the music of Franz Liszt, of which she has made a number of celebrated recordings. Currently 'Artist-in-Residence' at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Valerie Tryon is active as a concerto soloist, recitalist, chamber musician, accompanist and adjudicator.

Early life

Born in Portsmouth, England, Valerie Tryon was performing regularly in public while still a child. She toured with the Northern Youth Orchestra of Great Britain at the age of nine, and had broadcast for the BBC before she was 12. Having received the ARCM and LRAM diplomas in 1948, she then became one of the youngest students ever to be admitted to the Royal Academy of Music, where from 1950-55 she studied with Eric Grant. She made her London début in 1953.

While a student Valerie Tryon received the RAM's highest award in piano playing; she also won the coveted Boise Scholarship, which enabled her to study with Jacques Février in Paris (1955-6). In 1956 she was a prize winner at the Liszt Competition in Budapest. A recital at the 1959 Cheltenham Festival was acclaimed by some of the UK's foremost critics, and helped launch her adult concert career.

Career

Since 1959 Valerie Tryon has appeared as soloist and recitalist in major British concert halls and in Europe, South Africa, Canada, and the United States. She has performed piano concertos with the Hallé Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic, London Philharmonic, London Symphony Orchestra, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, and other major orchestras. The list of conductors with whom she has worked includes Sir Colin Davis, Sir Adrian Boult, Charles Dutoit, Pierre Monteux and Simon Streatfeild.

As a soloist, Valerie Tryon is especially noted for her performances of the works of Chopin, Liszt and Rachmaninoff.

In 1976 Valerie Tryon became Associate Professor of Music at McMaster University; in 1980, the post of Artist-in-Residence at McMaster was created for her. Within North America, Valerie Tryon has appeared in such cities as Toronto, Montreal, Boston, Washington, Pittsburgh, Minneapolis, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. She became a naturalised Canadian citizen in 1986.

Valerie Tryon was among the first concert and recording artists of the front rank to recognise the significance of the new music technologies and the internet, and is unique in having created a large number of MIDI sequences for web-based distribution. To prepare her 'live' sequences she uses a Roland FP8-88 weighted MIDI keyboard controller with 'real time' recording techniques; as of 2009 her recordings in this medium number almost 900, most of them produced in collaboration with PG Music, Inc. In 1993 she released with PG the computer based learning programm "Pianist" with 215 MIDI-Sequences of classical pieces. On the PC-screen you could see a piano keyboard and the notes she played when recording each piece.

One of Ms. Tryon’s chief enthusiasms is chamber music. Two of her best-known duo partners in England were Alfredo Campoli (violin) and George Isaac (cello), with both of whom she made a number of significant recordings. In 1981, she entered into a duo partnership with cellist Coenraad Bloemendal that resulted in 6 recording on the Dorian label from 1989-94.[2][3] Her 1971 performance with Isaac of Rachmaninov’s Cello Sonata is now considered to be a collector's item. In 1986 she was a co-founder (with Gerard Kantarjian) of the Rembrandt Trio, and frequently appears with Camerata and Trio Canada.

Repertoire

Valerie Tryon's repertoire is large, ranging from Bach and Scarlatti to contemporary composers; it also includes more than sixty concertos and a significant amount of chamber music. Among modern British composers, both Alun Hoddinott and John McCabe have dedicated works to her, and she has been active in promoting such Canadian composers as Srul Irving Glick, Murray Adaskin, Milton Barnes and Claude Champagne.

She is well known for her interpretations of the romantics; when the BBC launched its Radio Enterprises record label, some years ago, Valerie Tryon's performance of Rachmaninov's 'Etudes Tableaux', op. 39, was the first classical disc to be released.

More recently she has recorded the complete Ballades and Scherzos of Chopin for the CBC's "Musica Viva" label, a disc which Harold Schonberg of the New York Times described as "the best Chopin recording of the past decade."

Notwithstanding her involvement in the music of the nineteenth century, she retains a deep love of Scarlatti, whose keyboard sonatas she has delighted in playing in public since her childhood and early youth, and to which she remains deeply committed.

Likewise, her ongoing series of the complete piano music of Claude Debussy, represents a special passion: she has twice performed this important repertoire in a demanding cycle of five successive recitals.

Ms. Tryon now broadcasts frequently for the BBC as well as for Canadian and American broadcasting networks. Her solo performances and appearances with the Rembrandt Trio have been recorded on the Omnibus, Pye, Argo, Lyrita, Educo and CBC labels. Currently, Valerie Tryon is involved with several other world-class pianists in recording the complete works of Franz Liszt for Naxos.

In early 2009, Valerie Tryon was in London to record an all-Mozart disc with the LSO (for release on the APR label). The works recorded were the Piano Concerto in C minor, K.491 (cadenza by Godowsky), Piano Concerto in C major, K.503 (cadenza by Hummel), and the Concert Rondo in A major, K.386.

Honours and awards

Valerie Tryon was an early recipient of the Harriet Cohen Medal. In 1986 the Hungarian Minister of Culture awarded her the Ferenc Liszt Medal of Honour for "outstanding achievement" in the interpretation of Liszt's music. In 1987 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music, and in 1991 was granted an Honorary Licentiate Diploma (LWCM) from the Western Ontario Conservatory of Music (now Conservatory Canada).

Valerie Tryon's recording Debussy Songs, performed with soprano Claudette LeBlanc, won a Canadian Juno Award for "best classical album" in 1994. Her album "The Joy of Piano" brought a second Juno nomination in the same category the following year.

An honorary D. LITT was granted to Valerie Tryon in 2000 by McMaster University.

Partial List of Recordings

No complete listing of Valerie Tryon's recordings currently exists. In the early stages of her career she made a number of records for Saga, Lyrita and Educo, but full details of these remain to be compiled.

Solo Recordings:

Chamber Music & Songs:

Footnotes

Citations

References

  • Entry: 'Tryon, Valerie', in the Naxos 'A to Z of Pianists', pp. 790–792 (Naxos Educational, Hong Kong, 2007)
  • Barclay McMillan, Betty Nygaard King: The Canadian Encyclopedia, copyright 2007 Historica Foundation of Canada
  • Jacques Lesier: Artists' Management, The Del Prado, San Diego, CA
  • Howard Greenwood: Concert Management, London, UK
  • Hammond, Antony: 'McMaster appoints first artist-in-residence', Hamilton Spectator, 19 Jan 1980
  • Fraser, Hugh: 'Reflections on a piano,' Hamilton Spectator, 3 Oct 1989
  • Duff, Michael: 'The world at her fingertips', Stoney Creek News, 25 Oct 1989
  • Fraser, Hugh: 'Modest Tryon can't explain her popularity', Hamilton Spectator, 29 Jul 1996
  • 'World-class Tryon to play at Mac', Hamilton Spectator, 14 Mar 2001

External links

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