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He
is a cellist born one of five children in Marlboro, Vermont, who began in
music by singing in French and German with his family who were taught by
his mother. He started learning
the cello when he was eight years old and became a member of the Green
Mountain Fiddlers, which was put together by the Vermont Symphony Orchestra
for teaching young performers.
In
1973 he studied at the University of Massachusetts, staying there for two
years, and went on to receive full scholarships to the Juilliard School of
Music and the Curtis Institute of Music.
Working
as a soloist and ensemble member he became co-principal cellist of the Orpheus
Chamber Orchestra in 1984 and stayed with them for around thirteen
years, leaving in 1997. That same year he joined the New York
Philharmonic and in 1998 was made Acting Associate Principal
there.
In
1990 he took the position of Artist-President with Speculum Musicae, which he still holds, and in 1996 became
principal cellist for the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra. Often seen performing with other
ensembles he has featured with the Columbia String Quartet, the Group for
Contemporary Music and the New York Music Ensemble to name a few.
He
has also taken part in many national music festivals and recitals, both
nationally and internationally, and performed with orchestras such as the
Aspen Orchestra, Anchorage Symphony, the Hartford Chamber Orchestra and the
Juilliard Orchestra. He has
taken part in nearly 100 premiere performances and commissioned several new
works for cello, and in 2000 was the soloist on "Triduum"
by James McMillan.
Winning
several awards during his career he was given the Special Performance Award
by the New England Conservatory when he was a finalist in 1987 and the
National Endowment for the Arts honoured him the
Solo Recitalist's Award.
No
stranger to the recording studio he can be heard on On
The Transmigration of Souls by John
Adams , River of Ponds by Larry Bell, Best Of...by Marcus Miller
, A Set of Pieces: Music by Charles Ives by the Orpheus
Chamber Orchestra , Clarinet alla Cinema
by Charles Russo, Music by Emerging Composers by Speculum Musicae, The Girl With Orange Lips by Dawn
Upshaw, and The Music of Elliott Carter, Vol. 5 which was nominated
for a Grammy for its "Oboe Quartets".
In
the field of musical education he has been a faculty member of the
University of Massachusetts and, most recently, Queens College and Columbia
University. His wife is the Orpheus
Chamber Orchestra violist, Sarah Clarke.
Orpheus
Chamber Orchestra recordings
Adagio
in G Minor (Tomaso Albinoni /Remo Giazotto)
Deutsche Grammophon 429 390-2 GH (CD: Albinoni: Adagio, Pachelbel:
Canon)
Sources:
- http://www.orpheusnyc.com/Musicians/Eric_Bartlett.html
- http://www.infopoint.com/fun/music/cabrillo.old/bios/bartlett.html
- http://www.larrybellmusic.com/cds/river_ponds.html
- http://nyphil.org/attend/guests/index.cfm?page=interview&interviewNum=41&selectedNav=
- http://shopping.yahoo.com/p:Eric%20Bartlett:1927703680
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=41:11860~T3
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