Nathan Waks
Nathan Waks (born 1951) is an Australian cellist, composer, record producer, arts administrator and wine company owner.
Early years
Waks was born in 1951,[1] into a musical family, his mother being a talented pianist.[2] He showed early musical aptitude, on the piano at age four, and the cello at age seven.[2] He attended North Sydney Boys High School but did not graduate.[2] While there, he showed such talent at soccer that he was offered a scholarship by the visiting Scottish football manager Tommy Docherty, but he declined as he felt that music was his passion.[2]
He studied at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music under Lois Simpson and Robert Pikler.[3][4] He won the 1968 ABC Instrumental and Vocal Competition,[4][5] and then travelled to Moscow (then the Soviet Union) to study with Mstislav Rostropovich. That trip was cut short because of Cold War tensions (there were alleged to be irregularities with Waks's visa).[2][3] He then went to Paris to study under Paul Tortelier, and won a Premier Prix at the Conservatoire de Paris.[2][4][6]
Music career
Having returned to Australia, in 1969, he co-founded the Fidelio Quartet with Brecon Carter and John Harding.[7]
In 1970, at age 19, Waks was appointed Principal Cellist of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, the youngest in the orchestra's history. He left the post after a year.[2] He appeared as a soloist with all the Australian symphony orchestras, the BBC Symphony Orchestra and others.[4]
In 1974, the Sydney String Quartet was re-formed for the third time, with members Harry Curby, Dorel Tincu, Alexandra Todicescu and Waks. Harry Curby left in 1980, and in 1981 after the sudden death of Dorel Tincu, the Quartet continued with John Harding, Laszlo Kiss, Todicescu and Waks.[7] Waks remained with the Sydney String Quartet for ten years.[4]
In 1979, he commissioned and premiered Requiem for solo cello by Peter Sculthorpe.[7][8] He has also given premieres of works by Anne Boyd, Matthew Hindson[9] and Gerald Glynn.[8]
For the broadcaster Andrew Olle's memorial service in the Sydney Town Hall on 22 December 1995, Peter Sculthorpe wrote a special arrangement for cello and piano of his 1947 work Parting, dedicated to Olle, which was played by Nathan Waks and pianist Kathryn Selby.[10]
In 1998, Waks was appointed Chairman of the Australia Council's Music Fund.[2][6] The same year, he reduced his administrative commitments and returned to the Sydney Symphony as Co-Principal Cello.[4]
In 2008, he participated in the Australian premiere of Gianluigi Gelmetti's Cantata della vita, with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and various solo artists, under the composer's baton.[4]
He has organized concerts for singers such as Frank Sinatra, Rod Stewart and Tiny Tim.[3][4] He has also produced recordings for the Australian guitarist John Williams.[2]
He is a founding Director and Artistic Adviser of the Australian Chamber Orchestra,[2][6] founding Director of the Australian Music Centre;[6] has been Director of Music at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation,[2][6] Managing Director of Symphony Australia,[2][4][6] and Board Member of the Australian National Academy of Music.[2][6]
He is an Ambassador of the Melba Foundation.[11]
Compositions
Nathan Waks has written a number of film scores:
- My Brilliant Career (1979)
- Intimate Strangers (1981)
- Hunger (1986)
- For Love Alone (1986; nominated for the AACTA Award for Best Original Music Score)
- Kangaroo (1987; this score was based on the slow movement of Antonín Dvořák's String Quartet No. 12 in F major "American", Op. 96)[12]
He was musical director for The Removalists (1975).[13]
Winery interests
In 2000 he became involved in the Kilikanoon Winery in the Clare Valley of South Australia. Since 2007 he has headed a syndicate that owns Kilikanoon, and also Seppeltsfield in the Barossa Valley. Waks travels widely as an international ambassador for the companies.[2][14] [15]
Family
In the 1970s, Waks' partner was the operatic soprano Eilene Hannan.[16] He later married Candice Williams, daughter of film distribution pioneer David Williams AM (1925-2009) and sister of Kim Williams.[17] They have two children.
References
- ^ Nathan Waks blog; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Tasting notes", Sydney Morning Herald, 21 December 2010; Retrieved 22 August 2013,
- ^ a b c Australian Cello Awards; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Sydney Symphony; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ Symphony Services International; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ a b c d e f g Media Release, Senator Richard Alston, 25 November 1998; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ a b c Stephen Pleskun ed., A Chronological History of Australian Composers and Their Compositions - Vol. 2; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ a b Australian Music Centre; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ ABC Classic FM; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ Australian Music Centre; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ Melba Foundation; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ Louis K Greiff, D. H. Lawrence, Fifty Years on Film, p. 202; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ IMDb; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ Chris Shanahan; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ Glug; Retrieved 22 August 2013
- ^ David Marr, "Soprano loved for ruthless wit and 'God-given' voice". Sydney Morning Herald, 26 July 2014. Retrieved 15 October 2014
- ^ "A passionate supporter of the film industry", Sydney Morning Herald, 15 May 2009; Retrieved 22 August 2013