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Born in Deal in 1945 Adrian Brett attended South Deal County Primary
School and Simon Langton Grammar School, Canterbury. His early musical
attainments locally were as a boy soprano at St.Leonard1s Parish
Church, Deal. He won the Boys Vocal Solo Class at the Kent Competitive
Music Festival in 1956-57. After joining the Royal Marines as a
musician in 1959, where he learned the flute with Peter Wastall,
he was the first winner of the Houghton Cup for the best woodwind
player of the year. He later studied the flute in London with Albert
Honey and Geoffrey Gilbert and, on leaving the Royal Marines in
1966, studied in Paris with Fernand Caratgé and later attended
masterclasses in Switzerland with the veteran French teacher, the
legendary Marcel Moyse. His playing career has been diverse. Early
engagements in London theatre orchestras led to work with the major
London symphony and chamber orchestras and after a chance encounter
with James Galway, to a two year period playing with the Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra with whom he toured the USA in 1968. In 1974 he was appointed
principal flute with the BBC Radio Orchestra where he gained much
valuable experience playing lighter music, learning studio recording
techniques and solo playing. Adrian left the BBC in 1976 to become
one of Londons busiest studio session musicians, where his versatility
and ability to play many different ethnic flutes from all over the
world made him much in demand as a soloist and backing artist. He
plays panpipes on two of Paul McCartneys albums and for many
other well known singers. Film and TV scores, jingles for TV adverts
and pop music backing tracks all became daily fare and the major
problem of the day was getting from one studio to another. The most
satisfying period of his career was the 15 years from 1976-91 playing
in Londons premier freelance studio symphony orchestra made up of
the leading players in London - The National Philharmonic Orchestra,
recording operas with Pavarotti and Domingo, Joan Sutherland and
other leading international opera stars in addition to other symphonic
and ballet recordings and hundreds of film scores. Adrian Brett
has played on over 2000 film and TV scores working with such composers
as Jerry Goldsmith, Maurice Jarre, Michel Legrand, George Fenton,
John Barry and Henry Mancini. Adrian can be heard on some 12 or
so James Bond movie tracks and the Pink Panther moviesand
the signature tune for the Archers! In 1979 his solo album Echoes
of Gold was the first solo instrumental album to reach the top 20
earning him a gold disc and this was followed by another album in
1980, Stepping Stones. Adrian Brett has given classes and workshops
throughout the UK and in the USA and has contributed to many musical
journals and written CD and programme notes for many leading artists.
He has held professorships at several leading music colleges including
the Guildhall School of Music, London College of Music and Royal
Irish Academy of Music, Dublin and he is regularly invited to adjudicate
competitions and annual examinations at all of the major colleges
in the UK. Currently Adrian is enjoying a period of writing articles,
arranging music for films and TV, and playing 18 different flutes
in the orchestra for The Lion King at the Lyceum Theatre, London.
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