Biography
Born in Melbourne, John Carmichael studied piano with
Raymond Lambert and composition with Dorian Le Gallienne at the University Conservatorium
before continuing his piano studies at the Conservatoire National in Paris with
Marcel Ciampi. Contact with Arthur Benjamin while he was still in Australia
led to a period of study with him in London, studies in composition continued
later with Anthony Milner.
John Carmichael was a pioneer in the field of music therapy; he developed music
teaching and music appreciation projects at Stoke Mandeville Hospital (where
the Paraplegic Olympics was born) and Netherden Mental Hospital in Surrey. Then
followed a period as Musical Director of the Spanish dance company Eduardo Y
Navarra, with extensive international touring including an Australian visit
during which ABC Televsions recorded their dance program Fuego en la Sangre
(Fire in the Blood). The contact with flamenco, expressed both in dance and
by the flamenco singers and guitarists, led John Carmichael to encapsulate the
experience in his Concierto Folklórico, released on ABC Classics with
the composer as piano soloist.
In 1980 James Galway premiered John Carmichael's Phoenix - Concerto for Flute
& Orchestra at the Sydney Opera House; he gave the American premiere at
the Hollywood Bowl a few months later and included the work in his Flute Masterpieces
series released by RCA to celebrate Galway's 60th birthday. HisTrumpet Concerto,
recently released on CD with John Wallace and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra,
was originally written for Australian trumpeter Kevin Johnston and also released
on ABC Classics, together with his Country Fair for clarinet and orchestra.
Writing for the piano has always stimulated ideas for compositions, including
works for four hands, and has led to collaborations with Australian pianists
such as Victor Sangiorgio and Antony Gray, who gave the premire of Carmichael's
Piano Quartet Sea Changes in London in 2000 with Australian string players Belinda
MacFarlane, Morgan Goff and Matthew Lee; the work was later released on the
ABC Classics CD Sea Changes.
John Carmichael's latest work, On the Green, for wind ensemble, was premiered
in London in September 2007. Celebrating the green spaces of West London where
the composer has lived for the least 40 years, it highlights the events whcih
take place in these areas open to all to enjoy - open air music, fun fairs,
children's games and care-free summer's days.
Concentration on melodic and thematic development within well-wrought musical
structures has always been a feature of Carmichael's music, something remarked
on by both listeners and reviewers. In 2007 on the release of the ABC Classics
CD Solo Flights, a complete recording by Antony Gray of Carmichael's music for
solo piano, it was selected as CD of the Week on the ABC network and was reviewed
in the Classic FM Magazine in the UK as '77 minutes of enchanting music', while
Rob Barnett in Classical Music on the Web, reviewing the CD Sea Changes, remarks
that Carmichael is 'completely serious in his pursuit of discovery in melody
- blissfully accessible and often sheerly beautiful'.