Derek Adlam is a performer and instrument maker. Trained
in London, his teachers traced their musical ancestry to European traditions
established by Czerny, Liszt and Clara Schumann. As a child he was, however,
drawn instinctively to the ancestors of the modern piano. Neglected spinets and
strangely shaped pianos with haunting, ghostly sounds possessed a magical
appeal. This attraction remained strong, and while a student he began to play
the harpsichord. He also began to explore the musical possibilities offered by
the early piano. With the encouragement of his friends, he began his first
experiments in the restoration of an antique fortepiano.
A chance encounter with C. F. Colts great keyboard
instrument collection in Kent was a turning point. With the benefit of Mr
Colts critical eye and ear, and working with a gifted cabinet-maker,
Derek Adlam eventually became curator-restorer of the collection. At about this
time he recorded the complete Bach Partitas on the harpsichord for Oryx. This
received critical acclaim, The Gramophone pointing out that it was the first
time these great works had been recorded on the harpsichord. In 1969 he first
began the construction of new, old instruments with a virginal
based on an Antwerp muselar of 1611 by Ioannes Ruckers. This was premiered by
Colin Tilney in a recital of English renaissance music at the Purcell Room,
London.
During these years of development, interest in early
music was expanding rapidly. This movement had received a strong impetus after
the Second World War. After years of destruction and confusion, baroque music
especially seemed to offer order , clarity and beauty. To some extent, it was
an anti-establishment movement providing a platform for young talent turning
away from long held tastes and opinions, and the 19th-century symphonic
tradition.
In 1971, a move to Finchcocks in Kent, followed. There,
in partnership with fortepianist Richard Burnett, a thriving instrument making
workshop was set up alongside a public museum of playable harpsichords,
fortepianos, clavichords and organs. The workshop produced many restorations
and new instruments for professional players, museums and teaching
institutions. Today, these are in use around the world.
In 1982, Derek Adlam moved to Welbeck in Nottinghamshire
to the Harley Foundations newly opened art and craft workshops. He became
involved with the Foundations charitable work, and until 1999 supervised
many of its artistic developments, including the building of a public art
Gallery at Welbeck. Although no longer building instruments, he continues to
perform, principally on the clavichord, and has given recitals in many European
countries and the United States. He is President of the British Clavichord
Society.
|
|