Keith Lockhart

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Conductor

Music director of the Boston Pops Orchestra since February 1995—and only the third man to lead this world-renowned group since 1930—Keith Lockhart has had some big shoes to fill. His predecessors at the Pops—Arthur Fiedler and composer/conductor John Williams—were among the century’s most distinguished musicians. But Lockhart isn’t intimidated by his job’s multiple challenges. Not inclined to take himself too seriously, he once—while serving as conductor for the Cincinnati Symphony—jumped out of giant birthday cake onstage; another time he made his entrance on inline skates. Asked by Spotlight magazine, published by the Fine Arts Center at the University of Massachusetts, what he might be doing if he weren’t conducting the Boston Pops, Lockhart said he’d probably be playing baseball: "The funny thing is, I always used to play shortstop or second base, but there’s a Keith Lockhart on the Atlanta Braves who already fills that position."

Although he remains basically committed to the three-part Boston Pops concert format first established by Arthur Fiedler, Lockhart has expressed a willingness to shake things up a bit. (A traditional Pops concert begins with a classical or light classical piece, followed by a concerto drawn from the better-known classics, and ends with selections from popular music.) Although he enjoys working with popular artists and performing popular music, Lockhart’s first love remains the great classical music composed for orchestra. When asked how he hoped to make his mark at the Pops, he told Arts Around Boston, "I want to be responsible in some small way… for really making this orchestra the proponent of classical music for everyone… and really proving… that this music exists for everybody…."

As if his responsibilities with the Boston Pops were not enough, Lockhart also became music director of the financially troubled Utah Symphony in the fall of 1998. (Their concert season runs from late September through the winter, while the Pops season runs from. May through July.) The search committee chose Lockhart for his enthusiastic following nationwide and the media-savvy stunts that have helped to endear him to audiences in Boston. It was clear, however, that the orchestra’s musicians would have preferred one of Lockhart’s rivals for the job: Graeme Jenkins, Carl Anton Rickenbacher, Matthias Bamert, and Carl St. Clair.

Born Keith Alan Lockhart on November 7, 1959, in Poughkeepsie, New York, he was the oldest of two children born to Newton Frederick and Marilyn Jean (Woodyard) Lockhart, both of whom worked as computer technicians. He was raised in nearby Wappingers Falls and educated in the public schools of New York’s Dutchess County. As a boy, he studied piano, clarinet, and flute. Interviewed by Classical Focus, Lockhart recalled his early training: "My parents bought a piano when I was six and since I hadn’t destroyed it by the

age of seven, they decided to let me have lessons." Although he was well schooled in music as a boy, it was not until college that he began to seriously consider a career in music. While majoring in German at Furman University in South Carolina, he studied for a summer with conductors Leonard Slatkin and Sergiu Comissiona at the Aspen Music Festival. That experience reenergized his interest in music. Back at college, he began making extra money by playing piano for an Elvis impersonator.

In the spring of 1981 Lockhart graduated from Furman with bachelor’s degrees in both German and piano performance. Shortly thereafter he married his college sweetheart, Ann Louise Heatherington, but the marriage ended in divorce only two years later. In September of 1981 he headed off to CarnegieMellon University in Pittsburgh to begin work on his master’s degree in orchestral conducting. During this time Lockhart served as the university’s director of orchestral activi-ties and later as conductor of the Pittsburgh Civic Orchestra. In 1989 he was named one of two conducting fellows of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute. The following year he was hired as assistant conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Beginning in the fall of 1992, he served as associate conductor of both the Cincinnati Symphony and the Cincinnati Pops orchestras, as well as music director of the Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra, a position he held until 1998.

In addition to his work with the Pittsburgh Civic Orchestra, the Cincinnati Symphony, Pops, and Chamber Orchestras, the Boston Pops, and the Utah Symphony, Lockhart has served as a guest conductor for most of the great symphonic orchestras in North America, including the New York Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Dallas Symphony, Indianapolis Symphony, Toronto Symphony, Seattle Symphony, Vancouver Symphony, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Ottawa’s National Arts Centre Orchestra, Montreal Symphony, Milwaukee Symphony, and the San Francisco Symphony. He conducted Douglas Moore’s The Ballad of Baby Doe in his debut at the Washington Opera; overseas he has conducted the Singapore Symphony and the National Symphony Orchestra of Taiwan. Lockhart appears occasionally in concert appearances with his wife, Lucia Lin, a violinist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra whom he married in 1996. He maintains residences in both Boston and Salt Lake City, as well as a home on the coast of Maine, where he vacationed often as a boy. Interviewed for Spotlight magazine Lockhart admitted to singing in the shower and confessed that he had a "lousy voice" but said, "the worst thing is I when I go to a Broadway show. Lucy (my wife) belts me. I tend to kind of lose myself and not realize I’m doing it."

His dual positions as music director keep Lockhart on the move, although as noted above the two orchestras’ seasons don’t overlap. On those rare occasions when he is not on the move and has some time for reflection, Lockhart tries to analyze the composers whose music he conducts. He described the process to Classical Focus: "I sit at a desk with a score, some pencils, and a cup of coffee. I look at the music and try to establish some connections. When you begin to understand what was going on in the head of the composer, it is rewarding."

Another big chunk of his time is taken up with the Pops recording schedule. Under a four-year recording contract signed with RCA Victor in 1996, Lockhart and the Pops turned out six albums, all of which were warmly received both critically and popularly: Runnin’ Wild: The Boston Pops Play Glenn Miller; American Visions; The Celtic Album; Holiday Pops; A Splash of Pops; and The Latin Album. In addition, RCA Victor released a compilation album in March of 2000 entitled Encore! that contained tracks from the orchestra’s first five albums under the contract.

Only 40 when the new millennium arrived, Keith Lockhart is certain to be a major force in American music for years to come. In the wake of the terrorist attacks on America on September 11,2001, the conductor told the Portland Press Herald (Maine) that he thought institutions like the Boston Pops could help provide comfort. "When people come together for the holiday this year [2001], they’ll want that touchstone—to be able to put their hand on something they recognize from when they were a child. They want the security music can bring."

Selected discography

With the Boston Pops
Runnin’ Wild: The Boston Pops Plays Glenn Miller, BMG/RCA Victor, 1996.
American Visions, BMG/RCA Victor, 1997.
The Celtic Album, BMG/RCA Victor, 1998.
Holiday Pops, BMG/RCA Victor, 1998.
A Splash of Pops, BMG/RCA Victor, 1999.
Encore!, BMG/RCA Victor, 2000.
The Latin Album, BMG/RCA Victor, 2000.

Sources
Books
The Complete Marquis Who’s Who, Marquis Who’s Who, 2001.

Periodicals
American Record Guide, March 1, 1998.
People, June 5, 1995, p. 84.
Portland Press Herald (Maine), December 20, 2001, p. 3D.

Online
"An Interview with Boston Pops Conductor Keith Lockhart," Arts Around Boston, http://artsaroundboston.com/archive/lockhart.htm (January 1, 2002).
"Classical Scene,"Classical Focus, http://www.classicalfocus.com/article1048.html (January 1, 2002).
"Keith Lockhart, Conductor Boston Pops," Greylock Associates, http://www.greylockassociates.com/lockhart.htm (January 1, 2002).
"Keith Lockhart—Conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra," Evening at Pops 2001, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pops/background/bios/lockhart.html (December 1, 2001).
"Pops Today and Tomorrow: A Conversation with Keith Lockhart," Evening at Pops 2001, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pops/background/keith_interview.html (December 1, 2001).
"Spotlight Magazine: On the Lighter Side with Keith Lockhart," Fine Arts Center, University of Massachusetts, http://www.umass.edu/fac/spotlight/archive/2000-2001/volume16-1/section/performing/ (January 1, 2002).
  • Genres: Classical

Biography

Boston Pops conductor Keith Lockhart was born in Poughkeepsie, New York in November 1959 and began piano lessons at the age of seven, later studying music at Furman University and Carnegie-Mellon University. After concurrently serving as Carnegie-Mellon's Director of Orchestral Activities and as Conductor of the Pittsburgh Civic Orchestra, Lockhart was named Assistant Conductor of the Akron Symphony Orchestra and Conductor of the Akron Youth Symphony in 1988; a year later, he was tapped as one of two Conducting Fellows of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute, and in 1990, he relocated again to accept the position of Assistant Conductor with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Beginning in 1992, Lockhart additionally served as Associate Conductor of the Cincinnati Pops and as Music Director of the Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra; in 1993, he toured with singer Mandy Patinkin, and later that year made his commercial recorded debut conducting the Cincinnati Sinfonietta and featured performer Mel Tormé. In June of that year, Lockhart made his Boston Pops debut, succeeding the renowned John Williams in becoming the twentieth conductor in the orchestra's illustrious history; hundreds of concerts as well as dozens of television specials and albums followed. Lockhart additionally served as guest conductor with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Toronto Symphony, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and others, and in 1997 made his debut with the New York Philharmonic. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
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Keith Lockhart

Keith Lockhart in 2003
Background information
Born (1959-11-07) November 7, 1959 (age 52)
Origin Poughkeepsie, New York, United States
Occupations conductor
Website www.keithlockhart.com

For the baseball player, see Keith Lockhart (baseball)

Keith Lockhart (born November 7, 1959, Poughkeepsie, New York), to Newton Frederick and Marilyn Jean Woodyard Lockhart, is an American orchestral conductor.

Contents

Education

Lockhart began his musical studies with piano lessons from Gwen Stevens at age seven. He holds degrees from Furman University and Carnegie Mellon University, as well as the honorary Doctor of Music degree from Muskingum College in New Concord, Ohio. He studied conducting at the Brevard Music Center.

Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia

He is an alumnus of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, the national men's music fraternity. Lockhart became a Sinfonian at Furman University, joining the Gamma Eta chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia in 1978.

Career highlights

Lockhart was a conducting fellow at the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute. For 5 years, he served as an associate conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and the Cincinnati Pops.[1] He was music director of the Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra from 1992 to 1999.

Boston Pops Orchestra

Lockhart became the 20th Conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra in 1995. In addition to regular in Symphony Hall, national and overseas tours, Fourth of July concerts on Boston's Esplanade, and performances at Carnegie Hall, he conducted the Boston Pops in 2002 in the pre-game show of Super Bowl XXXVI at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. This marked the first time a symphony orchestra was featured in performance during a Super Bowl. The Boston Pops has released eight albums on RCA Victor with Lockhart: Runnin' Wild: The Boston Pops Play Glenn Miller, American Visions, The Celtic Album, Holiday Pops, A Splash of Pops, Encore!, The Latin Album, and My Favorite Things - A Richard Rodgers Celebration.

Utah Symphony

From 1998 to 2009, Lockhart was Music Director of the Utah Symphony. He led the Utah Symphony as part of the opening exercises of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City. On October 1, 2007, Lockhart assumed artistic leadership of the Brevard Music Center, succeeding David Effron.

BBC Concert Orchestra

In August 2010, the BBC Concert Orchestra announced the appointment of Lockhart as its seventh principal conductor, with immediate effect.[2][3]

Marriage and children

Lockhart's first marriage was to his college sweetheart, Ann Louise Heatherington, Aug. 22, 1981. They divorced in 1983. He has a son, Aaron, from his second marriage to Boston Symphony Orchestra violinist Lucia Lin.[4] Lockhart married his third wife, Emiley Zalesky, in October 2007.[5] Lockhart and Zalesky have a son, Edward, born in April 2010.[6]

References

External links

Preceded by
John Williams
Principal Conductor, Boston Pops Orchestra
1995–present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Joseph Silverstein
Music Director, Utah Symphony Orchestra
1998–2009
Succeeded by
Thierry Fischer
Preceded by
David Effron
Artistic Advisor and Principal Conductor, Brevard Music Center
2008–present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Preceded by
Barry Wordsworth
Principal Conductor, BBC Concert Orchestra
2010–present
Succeeded by
Incumbent

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Mentioned in

Christmas Songs (1992 Album by Mel Tormé)
Celtic Wave (1998 Album by Various Artists)
The Latin Album (Classical Album)
Latin Album (2000 Album by Keith Lockhart & The Boston Pops Orchestra)