A Marriner's tale
BBC Music Magazine
|April 2024
This month marks 100 years since the birth of Sir Neville Marriner, legendary founder and director of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields. Michael White speaks to those who knew him best
The New Yorker magazine once ran a cartoon featuring two parrots whose vocabulary has been pilfered from the radio. One says, "That was the Academy of St Martin in the Fields'; the other adds, 'conducted by Sir Neville Marriner'. And that the joke worked in a publication with a general, worldwide readership was telling.
Throughout more than half a century, the Academy and Marriner were joined umbilically into an uber-brand, commanding instant recognition in the universe of music. Together they toured the world, endlessly.
Together they made more recordings than any other conductor/ ensemble partnership in history, their only serious rival being Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Phil. And although he eventually passed the Academy's artistic direction over to Joshua Bell, Marriner remained closely involved as Life President until life left him in 2016 - continuing, as his son Andrew understatedly puts it, to be 'mentioned in dispatches' whenever the ensemble gets a name-check.
The dispatches will be in overdrive this month as Marriner's centenary celebrations kick in. And at the heart of them will be a series of concerts at St Martin-in-the-Fields, Wigmore Hall, the Festival Hall, and Lincoln Cathedral, flagging the city where Marriner was born on 15 April 1924 into a modest but musical family.
His father, a carpenter, was also the organist at the local Methodist chapel, which meant that the young Neville was raised in a culture of robust hymnody and annual Messiahs before leaving to study violin at the Royal College of Music.

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