Young Musician of the Year
Contents |
Host
Humphrey Burton (1978-92)
Sarah Greene (1994)
Christopher Warren-Green (1996)
Stephanie Hughes (1998-2004)
Howard Goodall (2006)
Gethin Jones (2008)
Clemency Burton-Hill (2010-2)
Alison Balson and Milos (2014)
Co-hosts
Ernest Lush (1978)
Jane Glover (1988)
Mervyn Williams (1990)
Edward Gregson (1990 final)
Paul Daniel (1992 final)
Sarah Walker (1996)
Alistair Appleton (2004)
Aled Jones, Nicola Loud (2008)
Howard Goodall (2010)
Josie D'Arby (2012, and 2014 Jazz award)
Broadcast
BBC Cymru Wales for BBC1, 7 February 1978 to 29 April 1984
BBC Cymru Wales for BBC2, 14 April 1986 to 28 May 2000
BBC Cymru Wales for BBC Four/Two, 19 May 2002 to 13 May 2012
BBC Cymru Wales for BBC Four, 18 April 2014 to present
Synopsis
Lest you should think that UKGameshows.com is just about rip-off phone-ins, people eating creepy-crawlies, and badly-thought-out lottery promotions, we bring you... Culture! With a capital C.
The title is a complete misnomer as its only held every other year, but "Young Musician of the 24 Months" sounds rubbish. The instrumental portion of the BBC's brace of high-brow musical contests (this runs in even numbered years, Cardiff Singer of the World in odd numbered) consists of a series of category finals for Brass, Woodwind, Keyboards, Strings and (since 1994) Percussion, with the winners progressing to the Concerto Final where they play with a full orchestra, invariably prompting letters to the Radio Times asking rhetorically how you judge a violinist against a percussionist anyway. The champion goes on to the Eurovision Young Musicians competition, where they're beaten by the Austrian contender.
In each category final, the competitors perform a solo piece, or a concerto - a work that spotlights their solo instrument with orchestral accompaniment. The category winners progress to the gala final. This format was altered slightly in 2010, with the introduction of a new semi-final stage between the category finals, and the gala final, which reduced the field from five to three.
Champions
Year | Winner | Instrument |
1978 | Michael Hext | trombone |
1980 | Nicholas Daniel | oboe |
1982 | Anna Markland | piano |
1984 | Emma Johnson | clarinet |
1986 | Alan Brind | violin |
1988 | David Pyatt | horn |
1990 | Nicola Loud | violin |
1992 | Frederick Kempf | piano |
1994 | Natalie Clein | 'cello |
1996 | Rafal Payne | violin |
1998 | Adrian Spillett | percussion |
2000 | Guy Johnston | 'cello |
2002 | Jennifer Pike | violin |
2004 | Nicola Benedetti | violin |
2006 | Mark Simpson | clarinet |
2008 | Peter Moore | trombone |
2010 | Lara Ömeroğlu | piano |
2012 | Laura van der Heijden | 'cello |
2014 | Martin James Bartlett | piano |
2016 | Sheku Kanneh-Mason | 'cello |
A Jazz award was inaugrated in 2014, to Alexander Bone (saxophone)
Inventor
The contest was established in 1978 by BBC Music employees Humphrey Burton and Walter Todds.
Trivia
Regional heats were shown in 1978; a round before the category final was shown until 1994, and again in 2002 and 2004. Until 2000, all programmes were shown on BBC2; since 2002, the heats have been shown on digital channel BBC4, with only the final going out on BBC2. In 2010, with the introduction of a new semi-final stage, the contest got a little more mainstream coverage with highlights of the new stage also being shown on BBC2. By 2014, the pendulum had swung highbrow: the television contest was stuck on BBC4, but all the category finals and the grand final were broadcast on Radio 3.
Web links
See also
Weaver's Week review (2008)