Jeremy Huw Williams
The Welsh baritone Jeremy Huw Williams studied at St
John's College, Cambridge, at the National Opera Studio in London, and with
April Cantelo. He made his debut with Welsh National Opera as Guglielmo
(Così fan tutte) and has since appeared in more than sixty operatic roles.
He has given performances at major venues in North and South America,
Australia, China, India, and most European countries.
In France he
has sung the roles of Olivier (Capriccio), Papageno (Die Zauberflöte),
George (Of Mice and Men), Guglielmo (Così fan tutte), Shchelkalov (Boris
Godunov), Baritone (Hydrogen Jukebox) and title role Till Eulenspiegel by
Karetnikov for L'Opéra de Nantes, and Sebastian (The Tempest) for L’Opera du
Rhin. In Italy he has sung the role of Nixon (Nixon in China) at the opera
house in Verona and Ferryman (Curlew River) at the opera houses of Pisa and
Trento. In Greece he has sung the role of Chou En-lai (Nixon in China) for
Greek National Opera. In Belgium he has sung the role of Marcello (La
Bohème) for Zomeropera. In Norway he has sung the role of Papageno (Die
Zauberflöte) for Vest Norges Opera and Serezha (The Electrification of the
Soviet Union) for Opera Vest. In Austria he has sung the role of Dr Pangloss
(Candide) in Vienna, a role that he repeated in Bremen, Munich, Leipzig,
Suhl and London. In the USA he has sung the role of Lukash (The Good Soldier
Schweik) for Long Beach Opera.
In Wales he has sung the roles of
Guglielmo (Così fan tutte), Escamillo (Carmen), Germont (La Traviata),
Marcello (La Bohème) and Le Dancaïre (Carmen) for Welsh National Opera and
the roles of Serezha (The Electrification of the Soviet Union), Tarquinius
(The Rape of Lucretia), Choregos (Punch and Judy), Mangus (The Knot Garden)
and Dr Simon Browne (For You) for Music Theatre Wales. In Ireland he has
sung the role of Teddy (The Silver Tassie) for Opera Ireland. In Scotland he
has sung the roles of Andrew (74 Degrees North), Father (Zen Story), Epstein
(The Letter) and Kommerzienrat (Intermezzo) for Scottish Opera.
He has
given recitals at the Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room, and at many major music
festivals. He has appeared with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales in
Tippett’s King Priam at the Royal Festival Hall, the City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra in Lambert’s Summer’s Last Will and Testament at Symphony
Hall, the Hallé in Handel’s Messiah at the Bridgewater Hall, the
Philharmonia in Mozart’s Requiem at St David’s Hall, the BBC Symphony
Orchestra in Nielsen’s Third Symphony at the Royal Albert Hall during the
BBC Proms, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra in Rawsthorne's
Medieval Diptych, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra in Adams’s The Wound
Dresser at City Halls, the BBC Philharmonic in Schubert’s Mass in Ab, the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, the London
Philharmonic Orchestra in Watson’s O! Captain, the Ulster Orchestra in
McDowall's Theatre of Tango, the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra in Mathias’s
This Worlde’s Joie at the Three Choirs Festival, and the BBC Concert
Orchestra in Stainer’s Crucifixion at Southwark Cathedral for BBC Radio 2.
He has also appeared with the RTE Concert Orchestra in Dvořák's Requiem
at the National Concert Hall in Dublin, the Orchestre National de Lyon in
Benjamin's Sometime Voices at the Auditorium de Lyon, l’Orchestre Léonard de
Vinci in Brahms’s Requiem at the opera house in Rouen, the Orquestra
Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya in Orff’s Carmina Burana at
the Auditori in Barcelona, and the Sønderjyllands Symfoniorkester in Bach’s
Christmas Oratorio.
He is renowned as a fine exponent of contemporary
music, having commissioned much new music and given premieres of works by
Alun Hoddinott, William Mathias, John Tavener, Michael Berkeley, Paul
Mealor, Julian Phillips, Richard Causton, Mark Bowden, and Huw Watkins. He
frequently records for BBC Radio 3 (in recital, and with the BBC NOW, CBSO,
BBC SO, BBC SSO, BBC Philharmonic and BBC CO), and has made many commercial
recordings, including more than ten solo discs of songs.
As a
principal singer with Welsh National Opera he appeared at the opening night
of the Wales Millennium Centre, and received the inaugural Sir Geraint Evans
Award from the Welsh Music Guild, given annually to a person or persons who
have made a significant contribution to Welsh music in any one year or
recent years: ‘there has been an unanimous decision that the first award
should be made to baritone Jeremy Huw Williams in recognition of not only
his performing ability but also for the tremendous support that he has given
to Welsh composers and their music in recent years’.
He was awarded
an Honorary Fellowship by Glyndwr University in 2009 for services to music
in Wales, and received the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Music from the
University of Aberdeen in 2011.
www.jeremyhuwwilliams.com