- Gareth Morris
Infobox musical artist
Name = Gareth Morris
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Background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
Birth_name = Gareth Charles Walter Morris
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Born =May 13 ,1920 Clevedon ,Somerset ,England
Died = Death date and age|2007|2|14|1920|5|13
Origin =London , England
Instrument =Flute
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Genre = Classical
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Years_active = 1939–1971
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Associated_acts =Philharmonia Orchestra
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Notable_instruments = Rudall-Carte fluteGareth Charles Walter Morris (
13 May 1920 -14 February 2007 ) was a Britishflautist . He was the principal flautist of a number ofLondon orchestras including the Boyd Neel Orchestra before joining thePhilharmonia Orchestra . He was the principal flautist of this orchestra for 24 years and Professor of Flute in theRoyal Academy of Music from 1945 to 1985. Morris was known for using a wooden flute, at a time when most other players had switched to using metal flutes.Gareth Morris was born in
Clevedon ,Somerset ,England and was educated atBristol Cathedral School . He began to play the flute when he was aged 12, and subsequently studied privately with Robert Murchie. At 18 he won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music where his main teacher was Charles Stainer. At the Academy he metDennis Brain and became his lifelong friend until Brain's death in a car accident while returning from the Edinburgh Festival in 1957. Morris was best man for Brain's wedding. Morris'sWigmore Hall debut was in 1939 and he played inchamber music groups, including the Dennis Brain Wind Ensemble and the London Wind Quintet. During the Second World War he joined theRoyal Air Force and was principal flute in the RAF Symphony Orchestra.Morris succeeded
Arthur Gleghorn as principal flute in the Philharmonia Orchestra in 1948. He played at Her Majesty's Coronation in 1953. The Philharmonia Orchestra had been founded byWalter Legge in 1945 but in 1964 Legge announced that he intended to disband it. However the members dissented from this and agreed that the orchestra should continue, that it should be self-governing, and that it should be renamed the New Philharmonia Orchestra. In 1966 Morris became chairman of this orchestra withOtto Klemperer as the principal conductor. Morris had a close and deeply respectful relationship with Klemperer, but his relationship with Karajan has been described as "at best cordial, but he respected the conductor's talent". [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2007/03/10/db1002.xml Obituary, "Daily Telegraph", 10 March 2007] ]Klemperer retired in 1971 when he was aged 87, and was succeeded by
Lorin Maazel followed byRiccardo Muti . Morris retired shortly afterwards from the orchestra. The press release at the time spoke of "irreconcilable artistic differences" which had contributed to his resignation. However there was another, possibly more important, factor. While on tour with the orchestra inNew York , Morris was mugged and seriously injured. Amongst these injuries, a nerve in his mouth had been damaged and as a result, he had to completely give up playing the flute. [ [http://www.gramophone.co.uk/newsMainTemplate.asp?storyID=2768&newssectionID=1 James Jolly, "Flautist Gareth Morris has died". "Gramophone", 1 March 2007.] ]Morris's flute was originally a Rudall-Carte with open G-sharp and vented D, and later in his career he performed on an instrument bequeathed to him by Robert Murchie. His style was of the English school, with a tight
embouchure and he produced a very solid and powerful tone which was also capable of incredible delicacy. He eschewed the use of excessivevibrato . He was said to be "at the forefront of English flute playing for more than half a century". Many composers wrote works for him, includingGordon Jacob andAlan Rawsthorne . During his career he gave the first British performance of Poulenc's Flute Sonata in 1958.Morris married first, in 1954, Joy Hazelrigg of
Kentucky and they had an offspring, Emily. Following a divorce, in 1975 he married Patricia Murray, with whom he had offspring, Thomas, Mary and Catharine. [ [http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,,2022771,00.html Sebastian Bell, Obituary for Gareth Morris. "The Guardian", 28 February 2007.] ]Morris retired to Bristol and there continued to teach. In 1991 he published a tutorial entitled "Flute Technique". His other actiovities included being an
adjudicator , an orchestral coach and a lecturer. He frequently taught at the Dartington summer school. His siblings are Christopher, a music publisher at theOxford University Press , andJan Morris , the travel writer. A photographic portrait taken in 1968 byGodfrey Argent is held by the National Portrait Gallery.References
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