- Patrick Thomas (conductor)
Patrick Thomas (born 1 June 1932) is an
Australia n conductor.For a period of almost 35 years he conducted hundreds of performances across Australia in just about every centre where the various state symphony orchestras ventured, and introduced music to virtually a whole generation of young Australians through his popular and distinctive schools concerts. He held a succession of important posts with four of Australia's major ABC orchestras and the specially created position of ABC Federal Conductor-in-Residence as well as conducting the Australian Opera and the Australian Ballet. He also conducted the ABC's radio chorus, the
Adelaide Singers .Overseas, he appeared in 12 countries as Guest Conductor of such orchestras as the
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra , the Hallé Orchestra,Bavarian Radio Orchestra ,Polish National Radio and Television Orchestra ,Munich Philharmonic ,BBC Symphony Orchestra , CBC Symphony Orchestra,Prague Radio Orchestra , and many others inNew Zealand , theCzech Republic ,Bulgaria andSouth Africa . Other facets of his diverse career included those of concert, radio and television presenter and interviewer.Biography
Patrick Thomas was born in
Brisbane , and attended Eagle Junction State School in Clayfield. In August 1944, at age 12, he attended his first major evening orchestral concert, whenEugene Ormandy conducted atBrisbane City Hall in four concerts designed to boost the war effort. Thomas requested, and a few days later received, Ormandy’s autograph, and from then on set his sights on becoming a conductor. As a 14-year-old, he played thirdflute at the first Queensland Symphony Orchestra (QSO) performance, on 26 March 1947, when the new 45-member ensemble under guest conductorPercy Code introduced Queenslanders to their own professional symphony orchestra.In 1963, the ABC's acting federal director of music,
Joseph Post , gave him a conducting audition and less than two years later Thomas became director of the ABC'sAdelaide Singers . From there he had a brief stint with theTasmanian Symphony Orchestra before returning to his home state.In 1973 he became the QSO’s first – and to date only – homegrown chief conductor. He stayed in that post until 1977. He decided to increasingly offer 20th-century composers as a way of developing a broadened approach on the part of the audiences to diverse modern repertoire, plus a more responsive and capable facility from the orchestra. Patrick Thomas co-established a successful Modern Music Forum in Brisbane.
Regularly conducting the
Sydney Symphony andMelbourne Symphony Orchestra , including on the Sydney Symphony's international tours, Thomas's glamorous concert engagements outside Queensland were in stark contrast to the harsh performance conditions which he and his 65-piece orchestra endured at home.Able to fill in at short notice when a scheduled conductor cancelled, Thomas became the ABC's Sydney-based conductor-in-residence. Thomas established an international reputation, especially in Europe where he was offered coveted return engagements by several leading ensembles. But his dedication to family and his home country meant that his career remained based in Australia. As the final director of theABC Sinfonia , he became a casualty of the structural reforms of the mid-1980s that led eventually to the complete divestment of the orchestras from the ABC.As a writer, his later work has included an autobiography, several hundred poems, a booklet of career anecdotes, a published reference text ("Overture to Conducting"), as well as articles and scripts for radio stations 2MBS FM and
ABC Classic FM .He was made a Life Member of the
Fellowship of Australian Composers in 1998, a first for an Australian conductor, and is also a Patron of the Music Teachers' Association of New South Wales.ources
* [http://www.abc.net.au/classic/daily/stories/s612535.htm ‘’24 Hours’’, ABC, 4 August 2002]
* [http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,21427528-5003421,00.html Martin Buzacott, ‘’Proud history lives on’’,The Courier-Mail , 24 March 2007]
* [http://www.kpo.org.au/people/guests.html Ku-Ring-Gai Philharmonoic Orchestra]
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