"Thomas' direction
seems just right, capturing the humanity of the
music ...
there is no higher praise for Bach
performance"
— FANFARE
“unsurpassable as a Bach interpreter”
JEFFREY THOMAS
is Artistic and Music Director of the American Bach Soloists,
with whom he has directed and conducted recordings
of more than 25 cantatas, the Mass in B Minor, Musical
Offering, motets, chamber music, and works
by Schütz, Pergolesi, Vivaldi, Haydn,
and Beethoven. He has appeared with the Baltimore, Berkeley,
Boston, Detroit, Houston, National, Rochester, Minnesota,
and San Francisco symphony orchestras; with the Vienna
Symphony and the New Japan Philharmonic; with virtually
every American baroque orchestra; and in Austria,
England, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Mexico. He has
performed at the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival,
Spoleto USA Festival, Ravinia Festival, Saratoga Performing
Arts Center, Berkeley Festival and Exhibition, Boston
Early Music Festival, Bethlehem Bach Festival, Göttingen
Festival, Tage Alte Musik Festival in Regensburg,
E. Nakamichi Baroque Festival in Los Angeles, the
Smithsonian Institution, and at the Brooklyn Academy
of Music's "Next Wave
Festival," and he has collaborated on several occasions
as conductor with the Mark Morris Dance Group.
Before
devoting all of his time to conducting, he was
one of the first recipients of the San Francisco
Opera Company's prestigious Adler Fellowships.
Cited by The Wall Street Journal as "a superstar
among oratorio tenors," Mr. Thomas'
extensive discography
of vocal music includes dozens of
recordings of major works for Decca, EMI, Erato,
Koch International Classics, Denon, Harmonia Mundi,
Smithsonian, Newport Classics, and Arabesque.
Mr. Thomas is an avid exponent of contemporary
music, and has conducted the premieres of new operas,
including David Conte's Gift
of the Magi and Firebird Motel, and
premiered song cycles of several composers, including
two cycles written especially for him. He has
performed lieder recitals at the Smithsonian,
song recitals at various universities, and appeared
with his own vocal chamber music ensemble, L'Aria
Viva.
Mr. Thomas currently hosts two shows on one of the nation's premiere classical music radio stations, KDFC, the last major commercial classical station in America to make the transition to public radio. Through world-wide streaming audio, he brings his experience and love for Baroque and choral music to a global audience.
Educated at the Oberlin
Conservatory of Music, Manhattan School of Music, and
the Juilliard School of Music, with further studies in
English literature at Cambridge University, he has taught
at the Amherst Early Music Workshop, Oberlin College
Conservatory Baroque Performance Institute, San Francisco
Early Music Society, and Southern Utah Early Music Workshops,
presented master classes at the New England Conservatory
of Music, San Francisco Conservatory of Music, SUNY at
Buffalo, Swarthmore College, and Washington University,
been on the faculty of Lehigh University in Pennsylvania,
and was artist-in-residence at the University of California,
where he is now professor of music (Barbara K. Jackson
Chair in Choral Conducting) and director of choral
ensembles in the Department
of Music at UC
Davis. He was a UC Davis Chancellor's Fellow from 2001 to 2006; and the Rockefeller Foundation awarded him a prestigious Residency at the Bellagio Study and Conference Center at Villa Serbelloni for April 2007, to work on his manuscript, "Handel's Messiah: A Life of Its Own."