Guitar standard remains high for classical legend
GUITAR legend John Williams doesn't often perform concerts so his arrival at the Victoria Hall is bound to cause a stir.
The 68-year-old Australian is recognised as one of, if not the greatest, classical guitarists of his time, and on Friday he's appearing alongside the English Chamber Orchestra as part of this season's Stoke-on-Trent Festival.
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Catch John Williams in action at the Victoria Hall on February 26. Picture: Kathy Panama
"I first came to the Victoria Hall way back in the 1960s and I've been once since then," says John, who now lives in London, "but this will be my first time in a long while.
"Not many places have orchestral concerts with a guitar soloist so it's great that Stoke is embracing it."
For someone who first started playing the guitar at the age of four, John has certainly come a long way. And while those expecting a performance of Rodrigo's infamous guitar concerto might be disappointed, the virtuoso is adamant the programme he's chosen will impress.
"The Rodrigo Concerto is so popular I'm always asked to play it, just as a pianist is always asked to play Beethoven's Emperor Piano Concerto, but there are so many others that people would be very happy to hear if they had the opportunity."
One of those pieces is Leo Brouwer's Guitar Concerto: Concierto de Volos No.6, which John is performing for the first time next week.
He says: "Leo Brouwer is a wonderful Cuban composer and one of the great guitarists who was born in the late '30s. He has written a concerto for me before, but I must stress this one isn't it. In fact, I haven't played this piece before but I've been working on it for the past six months and I'm really enjoying playing it. I'll be performing it for the very first time at a concert on Thursday, so by Friday I should have it just right."
Full of East Mediterranean themes, virtuosic melodies and ranging rhythms, Brouwer's work offers listeners the perfect chance to see Williams at his best.
"Parts of it are really, really, fast, so it's quite a great showoff piece that's very accessible," admits John, who was first taught guitar by his father, a well-known session guitarist for dance bands, who taught jazz and classical guitar in Melbourne before opening a school in London.
"The work won't be too well known to the general public, but the main theme is very haunting and I'm sure the audience will enjoy listening to it."
Also on the programme is Myers's Cavatina – the unforgettable theme from the 1978 war film The Deer Hunter – and Albeniz's Asturias.
"Everyone will know Cavatina, it's a guitar standard, and the Albeniz is a piece people will know as soon as they hear it," he concludes. "It's a typical Spanish guitar piece and both of them are always well received when I play them."
John Williams and the English Chamber Orchestra will be performing at the Victoria Hall, Hanley, on Friday, February 26. It starts at 8pm. Call 01782 206000.











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