John Turner (recorder player)

{{Short description|English recorder player and former lawyer}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2023}}

John Turner (born 1943) is an English recorder player and a former lawyer. He has done much to encourage the development of contemporary music for the recorder, particularly from British composers.J.M Thomson, A. Rowland-Jones. The Cambridge Companion to the Recorder (1995), p. 164

Turner was born in Stockport and attended Stockport Grammar School, where the music master was Geoffrey Verney (previously a colleague of Ralph Vaughan Williams) and the assistant music master Douglas Steele (1910-1999, a composer and previously an assistant to Thomas Beecham at Covent Garden).[https://www.stockportgrammar.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Old-Stops-Review-Issue-4.pdf 'The Most Memorable Music Masters', in Old Stops' Review, Issue 4 (2014). p. 8] Here Turner began to play recorder and was first introduced to a wide range of repertoire.Peter Dickinson. [https://www.musicalopinion.com/issues/spring-2019/ 'John Turner, master recorder player'], in Musical Opinion, Spring 2019

He went on to study law at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, where he also continued to pursue his musical interests with contemporaries such as Christopher Hogwood and David Munrow. He then took up a legal career, often acting for musicians and musical institutions. In later life he retired from legal work and became a full time musician.Carson Cooman. [https://americanrecorder.org/docs/ARwin13body.pdf John Turner at 70: an Interview], in American Recorder, Winter 2013, pp. 13-21

Many composers have written recorder music especially for Turner, including Arthur Butterworth, John Casken, Arnold Cooke, Gordon Crosse, Peter Dickinson, Howard Ferguson, John Gardner, Anthony Gilbert, Peter Hope, John Joubert, Kenneth Leighton, Norman Kay, Robin Orr, Ian Parrott, Ronald Stevenson and Christopher Wright. He claims to have given over 600 first performances of works for the recorder, including pieces by non-British composers such as Leonard Bernstein, Ned Rorem and Peter Sculthorpe.[https://recorderist.co.uk/performances/ John Turner: list of first performances, at recorderist.co.uk] Turner is also a composer of works such as the Four Diversions for descant recorder and piano, which were first performed by David Munrow and Christopher Hogwood at Adlington Hall, Macclesfield in 1969.[https://www.sheetmusicplus.com/title/four-diversions-digital-sheet-music/22304282 Notes in the score of Four Diversions, Forsyth Brothers]

Turner has issued many recordings, including (with pianist Peter Lawson) John and Peter's Whistling Book,[http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/dec99/turner.htm Forsyth CD FCD001/2 (1999)] English Recorder Concertos,[https://www.gramophone.co.uk/review/english-recorder-concertos Dutton CD WHL2143 (2003)] Jigs, Airs and Reels,[http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2004/may04/jigs.htm Campion Cameo 2034 (2004)] and titles issued by Divine Art Recordings and Prima Facie.'[https://divineartrecords.com/product-tag/john-turner/ John Turner', Divine Arts Recording Group][https://primafacie.ascrecords.com/blog/2018/03/21/a-profile-of-john-turner/ 'A profile of John Turner', Prima Facia (2018)]

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