David Jolley
Press Kit
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David Jolley has thrilled audiences throughout the world with his “remarkable virtuosity” (New York Times), and has been hailed as “a soloist second to none” by Gramophone Magazine. He has traveled extensively in North and South America, Europe, East Asia, and Japan, sustaining an active performance career. A chamber artist of unusual sensitivity and range, Mr. Jolley has frequently collaborated with such groups as the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio, the Guarneri Quartet, the American String Quartet, the Beaux Arts Trio, Musicians from Marlboro, and the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Mr. Jolley is currently a member of the virtuoso wind quintet Windscape; Trio Valtorna, with violinist Ida Kavafian and pianist Gilles Vonsattel; and The New York Brass Arts Trio (BAT), with trumpeter Joe Burgstaller and trombonist Haim Avitsur. Mr. Jolley was for five years a member of the Fleisher-Jolley-Tree-O, with violinist Michael Tree and pianist Leon Fleisher. He was also a founding member, now Emeritus, of the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, with whom he toured widely and made over two-dozen recordings for the Deutsche Grammophon label.
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Hornist David Jolley began his horn studies in his native Los Angeles with James Decker and Wendell Hoss. While still a student of James Chambers at the Juilliard School, from which he holds Bachelor and Master of Music Degrees, Mr. Jolley was honored to perform with the NY Philharmonic in New York and Washington, DC, under Leonard Bernstein.
Mr. Jolley has thrilled audiences throughout the world with his “remarkable virtuosity” (New York Times) and has been hailed as “a soloist second to none” (Gramophone Magazine), concertizing extensively in North and South America, Europe, South Asia, Korea, and Japan. As Principal Horn and founding member of Orpheus, Mr. Jolley made over two dozen recordings for the Deutsche Grammophon label. His other recordings include six solo recordings for the Arabesque label, among them the complete Mozart and Strauss Concerti.
A chamber artist of unusual sensitivity and range, Mr. Jolley is a member of the virtuoso “unquintet”, Windscape, Artists-in-Residence at MSM, the acclaimed New York Brass Arts Trio, with Trumpeter Joe Burgstaller and Trombonist Haim Avitsur, and Trio Valtorna, with Ida Kavafian and Gilles Vonsattel. Other groups with which he has collaborated include the Fleisher-Jolley-Tree Trio, with pianist Leon Fleisher and Guarneri Quartet member Michael Tree; the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio, the Guarneri, Orion, and American String Quartets, the Beaux Arts Trio, Musicians from Marlboro, and the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.
Past winner of the Concert Artists Guild Prize, Heldenleben and Coleman Competitions, Mr. Jolley was the first Hornist chosen to be a touring Affiliate Artist, and was the recipient of a grant from the Martha Baird Rockefeller Foundation.
Mr. Jolley’s keen interest in enlarging the Solo Horn Repertoire has resulted in the composition of many new works for him, including Ellen Taaffe Zwilich’s Concerto (Premiere, New York, Carnegie Hall), Twilight Music by John Harbison, (Premiere, Lincoln Center Chamber Society, Alice Tully Hall), George Perle’s Duos for Horn and String Quartet (Premiere with the Orion String Quartet, Alice Tully Hall).
Some of the many summer festivals in which Mr. Jolley has performed include the Marlboro, Sarasota, Chesapeake, Mostly Mozart, Bravo! Vail, and Music from Angel Fire Festivals. He performed and taught for many years at Aspen and the Music Academy of the West. International festivals at which he appeared include the Kuhmo, Vaasa (Finland), Dartington Hall (England), Vianden (Luxembourg), and Nimes (France) Festivals.
Joining the faculty of MSM in 2011, Mr. Jolley was Chair of Brass from 2014-2017. He also serves on the Faculties of Mannes, the New School, and Stony Brook University.
He is Chair of Brass at Queens College Aaron Copland School of Music, CUNY. Mr. Jolley has taught Master Classes at the Juilliard School, Indiana University, Yale, Eastman School of Music, University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin, Curtis Institute of Music, Cleveland Institute of Music, Northwestern University, Colburn, New England Conservatory, and UT-Austin.