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Denver Oldham

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Denver Oldham (born September 15, 1936) is an American concert pianist and recording artist. A Steinway Artist,[1] he has to his credit twelve European concert tours, two South American concert tours, as well as numerous domestic performances. He has recorded ten albums to date, paying special attention to the works of underrepresented American composers. He was born in Long Island, New York and currently lives in Evans, Georgia.

Early life

Denver Oldham first began formal piano lessons with Edna Dalton at the age of five after his kindergarten teacher discovered him improvising on nursery rhymes. By the age of twelve he was preforming with symphonies in the Long Island area regularly, and he soon held his first public solo recital at the behest of the Music Education League.

Career

Oldham graduated from the Julliard School of Music, where he studied under Joseph Bloch and Leland Thompson. He subsequently studied in London with Dame Myra Hess and Ilona Kabos and at the Aspen Music Festival with Alexander Uninsky. At the age of 24, Oldham went on his first European concert tour, which spanned Copenhagen, Zurich, Oslo, The Hague, and Vienna. In 1961, he made his New York City debut at The Town Hall. He later performed at both Philharmonic Hall (later renamed Avery Fisher Hall) in the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and at Carnegie Hall. Continuing European tours have taken him to Basel, Amsterdam, Berlin, Brussels, Dublin, and London.

Since the 1982, Denver Oldham has built up a library of recordings highlighting the works of varied, often underrepresented or minority American composers. The list includes composers such as Charles Tomlinson Griffes, John Alden Carpenter, R. Nathaniel Dett, William Grant Still, John Knowles Paine, and Angelo Musolino.[2][3][4] He has also recorded the works of European composers Jacques Ibert,[5] Enrique Granados, and Franz Liszt. Oldham's first album, Charles Tomlinson Griffes: Collected Works for Piano, sold more than 80,000 copies, and his recordings have been featured on the National Public Radio show Performance Today.[6][7][8][9]

Honors

The National Guild of Piano Teachers awarded Denver Oldham the Paderewski Gold Medal, and the Music Education League awarded him a Gold Medal on two separate occasions. His albums Charles Tomlinson Griffes: Collected Works for Piano and John Alden Carpenter: Collected Piano Works were each nominated for a Grammy Award. TIME magazine named John Alden Carpenter: Collected Piano Works as one of the top ten best classical recordings of 1986.[10] Equinox Piano Concerto from the album Angelo Musolino: Orchestral Works was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in music.

Discography

  • Charles Tomlinson Griffes: Collected Works for Piano (1982)
  • John Alden Carpenter: Collected Piano Works (1986)
  • R. Nathaniel Dett: Piano Works (1992)
  • John Knowles Paine: Selected Piano Works (1995)
  • William Grant Still, R. Nathaniel Dett: Piano Music (1996)
  • Jacques Ibert: Piano Works (2003)
  • Angelo Musolino: Orchestral Works (2006)

See External links for track listings.

References

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