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Hampton Roads Flute Faire 2020! |
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Flutists helping flutists...for 27 years! |
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Jim Walker: Renaissance Man of the Flute
Few other flutists in history have
made such indelible marks in so many musical
circles. From jazz to pop to classical, television
to film to the concert hall, Jim Walker has never
met a crowd that didn’t love his powerful, “stand
and deliver” performances.
His star began to rise
when Jim was named Associate Principal Flute in the
Pittsburgh Symphony after a stint playing in the US
Military Academy Band at West Point. He quickly
gained the admiration of colleagues and audiences in
Pittsburgh and set his sights on Principal Flute
jobs. After eight years he won the Principal Flute
position in the Los Angeles Philharmonic and never
looked back.
To be Principal Flute of a major orchestra is to sit
at the pinnacle of the profession. Most flutists
who reach that height are content to spend the rest
of their careers there, but Jim but Jim felt an
eagerness and aspiration to move his music-making
forward yet again. After seven successful seasons
of performing, recording, and touring with the Los
Angeles Philharmonic—during which time the New York
Philharmonic briefly borrowed him as Principal Flute
for their 1982 South American tour—Jim left the
orchestra, diving off the mountaintop into the world
of jazz, studio recording and a commitment to
teaching.
Jazz had been Jim’s earliest musical loves, and he
was inspired to get back to it by LA’s lively club
scene. After a few years of avid listening in
dives, gaining confidence undercover in the practice
room, he organized his jazz quartet Free
Flight. Flute, piano, bass, and drums
playing a unique fusion of jazz and classical music,
propelled Free Flight to take the music world by
storm. Jim’s unique combination of vision and
determination pushed the group to multiple
appearances on The Tonight Show and The Today Show
and brought them a number one record (Slice of
Life). By the time Jean-Pierre Rampal—the
granddaddy of modern classical flutists—called
“Jimmy” his “favorite jazz flute player” in the
1990’s, Jim was a bona fide “jazz flute man”.
Life has been equally good for Jim Walker in LA’s
famed studio scene. Until June of 2010, he was a
first-call studio flutist for the better part of two
decades; his bold, expressive playing can be heard
on hundreds of soundtracks and commercial
recordings. His playing became the gold standard
from Hollywood to Carnegie Hall and unlocked the
door to studio and concert collaborations with
everyone from John Williams and Paul McCartney—“the
thrill of a lifetime,” says Jim—to Leonard
Bernstein, James Galway, and the LA Guitar Quartet.
After all the reviews have been written and the
stage and studio lights dim, however, Jim has said
that the one aspect of his career he could maintain
to the grave is teaching. He has been filling his
students’ lives with music for more than four
decades, just as his own parents—Bob, a jazz
clarinetist and public school band director, and
Barbara, a church organist—filled his upbringing in
Greenville, Kentucky, with piano and flute lessons.
He went on to become a graduate and “Distinguished
Alumnus” of the University of Louisville as well as
the University’s first “Alumni Fellow” from the
School of Music. To this day Jim credits a parade
of flute teachers with helping him rise through the
ranks, from Sarah Fouse and Francis Fuge in Kentucky
to the Metropolitan Opera’s Harold Bennett, the
Philadelphia Orchestra’s James Pellerite, and
internationally renowned flutist and conductor
Claude Monteux.
Jim’s gratitude to his teachers is returned to him
by his students. As Professor of Practice and
Coordinator of Flute Studies at the University of
Southern California’s Thornton School of Music and
Instructor of Flute, Chamber Music and Music
Technology, at The Colburn Conservatory of Music,
Jim devotes at least twenty hours a week to steering
the careers of young flutists. Before coming to Los
Angeles, Jim’s teaching career included positions at
Duquesne University, Carnegie-Mellon, and the
University of Pittsburgh, and since arriving in
Southern California he has been invited to be
visiting professor at the University of North Texas,
the University of Texas-Austin, and Arizona State
University.
This summer (2014) he has been asked
to be visiting professor at The Music Academy of The
West in Santa Barbara, CA.
Jim has taught hundreds of flutists both privately
and at these renowned institutions. Many of them
have gone on to successful orchestral careers,
holding Principal Flute chairs in major symphonies
from Phoenix to Boston to Beijing. Still others
have careers in fields as varied as gospel music and
arts administration. Jim is not interested in
simply training musicians; he inspires each pupil as
a whole person, and students leave his tutelage
feeling empowered, reaching for the stars. With
such a legacy, it is no wonder that students on four
continents have flocked to hear his recitals and
master classes. Jim’s creativity allows him to
reach not only these students but also others he
never sees with his editions of flute masterworks on
the Alfred Music Publications Young Artist Series.
He is also completing a set of flute method books
filled with unique, fun, highly instructional
exercises so that future generations can continue to
benefit from his wealth of knowledge and
generosity.
Dynamic soloist, legendary orchestral and studio
musician, celebrated jazz flutist, and an
inspiration to countless students worldwide; Jim
Walker is living proof that with enough creativity
and determination, one can reach the stars. He is a
living legend, and a true Renaissance Man of the
Flute.
Jim
Walker is a Performing Artist for Burkart & Resona
Flutes and Piccolos
sourece:
http://www.jimwalkerflute.com/biography.html
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