by Jonathan Luxton, 2022 Punto Award Recipient
I have just returned to Portugal after having been in Ireland for the last 4.5 years. Prior to this, I was first horn in the Gulbenkian Symphony Orchestra, a job I held for 30 years. I moved to Portugal in 1984 from England and delighted in having a permanent job, enjoying the sights, smells, sounds, and warm weather of this beautiful country. As a 24-year-old, I was relieved to have a reliable source of income after the insecurity of freelancing prior to that.
I began life in rural Dorset in Southwest England, surrounded by dairy farms and attending a school of only 30 pupils. When I started with music at the age of 8, I could never have dreamed that I would end up working for an international orchestra and teaching at universities in Portugal. My journey started with my supportive parents who took me to every horn lesson without fail, and encouraged me to play in all the local orchestras. Access to professional music was rare in rural settings, and I was lucky that 30 miles away, we had two wonderful professional orchestras, the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Bournemouth Sinfonietta. I had the good fortune of studying with teachers from both orchestras, Richard Thomas and Peter Kane, both of whom influenced me greatly, and managed to encourage someone who was unpolished and had very little musical education to develop the skill and confidence needed to win an audition at the Royal Academy of Music in London (RAM).
I was 18 when I started at the RAM studying with James Brown. I spent a lot of time teaching and working odd random jobs—waiter, removal company laborer, van driver, gardener, barman, etc. I would do practically anything available to make ends meet.
During my last year at the RAM, I was part of the European Youth Orchestra where I was fortunate to be tutored by two of the USA’s most renowned teachers, Myron Bloom and Dale Clevenger, both of whom really broadened my awareness of what is beyond the European style of playing.
When I think back to the incredible tutors I had in my formative years as a young musician, I remember one teacher in particular who influenced my playing enormously. When I was 22, I had finished at the RAM and had done trials with City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Opera North, and the Royal Ballet, but I had still not landed a job. I went for a lesson with Jeff Bryant as I had heard excellent things about him and felt that I needed to get someone else’s perspective on my playing. Jeff changed my method of practice and made me realize that I had rarely practiced the parts of my technique that I had difficulty with. I am sure other teachers had told me the same, and to some it might sound completely obvious. But I don’t think I had the maturity at the time to take in the message. However, this time, the message went in loud and clear. It is certainly easier and more pleasurable to practice the things we are good at it. It was a real eye-opener for me and changed my approach to playing and teaching.
The Gulbenkian in Portugal was an incredible orchestra of which to be part. As a result of private funding, we had the opportunity to perform with some of the most renowned soloists such as Itzhak Perlman, Nigel Kennedy, and Daniel Barenboim, among others. In addition, I was surprised to be given the chance to perform concertos with the orchestra, an opportunity that in my experience was rarely awarded to in-house players. One performance that really stayed with me was playing the Penderecki Horn Concerto Winterreise, with the composer conducting. It was an amazing and humbling experience.
The orchestra toured Japan, India, China, Thailand, the USA, and all over Europe. With them, I saw the world, and I developed my career further as a teacher, leading masterclasses in Brazil, China, Spain, and Portugal.
I left the Gulbenkian in 2014, and for four years did not touch the horn, due in part to burnout. When I moved to Ireland in 2019, I was encouraged to start playing again by my wife who could see how much I missed it. I subsequently contacted Cormac O’hAodáin from the RTE Concert Orchestra. I realized when I went into rehearsal, chatted with other musicians, performed, and did recordings with them, that I really had missed being in a musical environment. In order to be more proactive in music and work on furthering awareness within schools and through musical projects, I joined the IHS. In 2022, I was humbled to receive the Punto Award in recognition of contribution to the art of horn playing.
For the last three years of my time in Ireland, I continued to play with the RTE and had the opportunity to freelance with the Ulster Orchestra in Belfast and other groups throughout Ireland. I was invited to be the horn tutor for two summer courses with the Ulster Youth Orchestra, a tremendously uplifting and inspiring time of music-making with some wonderful young musicians.
I never reached the playing levels that I had before retirement, but I loved being back in an orchestra and teaching again. A particular highlight was performing the Schumann Konzertstück, this time playing second part. I owe a debt of gratitude to Cormac O’hAodáin and Paul Klein for inviting and welcoming me into their horn sections.
I think it took the 4-year pause for me to realize how much music is part of me and my identity. This is why an organization like the IHS is so important to me, a supportive network of like-minded individuals who are passionate about this wonderful instrument. For the future, I am very much looking forward to attending upcoming IHS events and being active again in the horn world in Portugal.