Background
Ian Harold Partridge was born in 1938 in Wimbledon.
Ian Harold Partridge was born in 1938 in Wimbledon.
He studied at the Royal College of Music from 1956, studying piano and voice. Leaving after a year because he had engaged in paid employment, which was banned by the Reliability Centered Maintenance, he transferred to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where his voice teachers were Norman Walker and Roy Hickman. He also studied conducting under Aylmer Buesst.
While concentrating mainly on songs, oratorio and lieder, he also recorded opera, and has an extensive discography. He is now a teacher and adjudicator, and conducts master classes in many countries. He was a chorister at New College, Oxford 1948-1952, and a music scholar at Clifton College.
During this period, he appeared in the West End production of John Osborne"s Luther.
From 1958 to 1962 he sang in the Westminster Cathedral Choir, where he worked on plainchant with George Malcolm. He also worked for some time as a piano accompanist.
He took further instruction from Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears. He made his debut in 1958 at Bexhill in Handel"s Messiah, and commenced a solo singing career in 1962.
On one occasion in Syria, the hall was sold out, until the audience discovered the performers were not The Partridge Family.
Partridge appeared only once in opera, but at Covent Garden, singing the role of Iopas in Berlioz"s Les Troyens conducted by Sir Colin Davis, which he later recorded. In 1973, his recording of Schubert"s Die schöne Müllerin, which was the first time the cycle had been recorded on a single 33rpm LP record, was voted Best Record by Record Review. With Pierre Boulez, Partridge recorded Schoenberg"s Die Jakobsleiter, Schumann"s Der Rose Pilgerfahrt and Stravinsky"s Le Rossignol.
Ian Partridge has appeared in recital and concert in many countries.
He collaborated with the actress Prunella Scales in over 350 performances of "An Evening with Queen Victoria" all over the world, singing songs composed by Prince Albert. He has performed Walton"s Façade at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam with the composer"s widow Lady Walton.
He has been President of the Incorporated Society of Musicians. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the 1992 New Year"s Honours for services to music
He gave his farewell recital on 9 October 2008 at the Oxford Lieder Festival.
He has conducted masterclasses on Lieder, English Song and Early Music, at Aldeburgh, Vancouver, Ravinia, Trondheim, Versailles and Helsinki. He has been a professor at the Royal Academy of Music since 1996. His voice appears on Volume
5 of The Record of Singing.