- Lionel Bryer
Lionel Bryer (
June 14 ,1928 -November 4 ,2006 ) was aSouth Africa n-British youth arts promoter. He was co-founder of theAberdeen International Youth Festival and theEuropean Union Youth Orchestra .Biography
Born in
Bloemfontein ,South Africa , he studied medicine atWitwatersrand University inJohannesburg . He went toOxford University on winning aRhodes Scholarship , where he was an avid sportsman, playing rugby, cricket, tennis and skiing. He won a Nuffield research scholarship which brought him toHarvard University as a Research Fellow. He won the first Albert Joachim International Research Prize in 1956 from the International Association for Dental Research.Afterward he became a successful
London dentist with a practice onSloane Street and later in Chelsea. As a dentist he was innovative, developing a ceramic process for fillings, and founded the International Dental Foundation, which organizes dentistry conferences at Swiss ski resorts.A
violinist who had played with Johannesburg Symphony Orchestra and the University of Witwatersrand Symphony Orchestra, he also played in the University College string orchestra at Oxford.He is survived by his wife and three daughters, one of whom is the well-known TV presenter,
Tania Bryer .Festival
In 1969, Lionel and his American-born wife Joy Bryer founded the International Youth Foundation of Great Britain, with Blyth Major, then director of the Midland Youth Orchestra, and
Edward Heath as president. The foundation's goal was increasing international understanding through the unifying bond of music. The first project of the foundation was the 1969 International Festival of Youth Orchestras and Performing Arts, held inSt Moritz ,Switzerland , with the duo successfully raising funding for 10 festivals in which leading youth orchestras, ballet, folk, choral, dance, opera and visual arts groups took part. Together they travelled the world to recruit musical groups.The 1969 festival led the
British Tourist Authority to encourage the movement to come to the UK, and in 1973 the festival expanded to Aberdeen and London. The local support and facilities found in Aberdeen led the foundation to make that city the permanent base of the festival. The event expanded to incorporate dance, ballet, jazz and choirs as well as the orchestral mainstay.Today it has become the world's largest festival of youth arts.
Festival Orchestra
The Aberdeen festivals would conclude with a combined Festival Orchestra led by internationally known conductors, over the years including
Claudio Abbado ,Carlo Maria Giulini ,Walter Susskind andLeopold Stokowski , as well as then-youthfulJames Judd andSimon Rattle . The Orchestra went on to appear at theBBC Proms at theRoyal Albert Hall , and as the opening concert of theEdinburgh International Festival in 1978, the first youth orchestra to appear there.The Bryers left the foundation after a dispute with Aberdeen authorities over South African representation at the festival, which continued without them.
European Union Youth Orchestra
On the UK accession to the European Community, the Bryers founded the European Community Youth Orchestra in 1974. The orchestra, later the European Union Youth Orchestra, set out to demonstrate how music could be a symbol of the European ideal of a united community of nations, and is officially sponsored by the
European Parliament . Today the orchestra comprises up to 140 players, who represent all 25 member countries of the European Union, selected each year from over 4,000 candidates aged 14 to 24 by rigorous auditions.References
* [http://music.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,,1963917,00.html Obituary] from "
The Guardian "
* [http://sundial.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,60-2454976,00.html Obituary] from "The Times "
* [http://www.theherald.co.uk/features/76321-print.shtml An Appreciation by Conrad Wilson] from "The Herald"External links
* [http://www.euyo.org.uk/about/history.htm European Union Youth Orchestra history]
* [http://www.aiyf.org/history.htm Aberdeen International Youth Festival history]
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