
Christopher Oldfather, Keyboard
Christopher Oldfather has devoted
himself to the performance of twentieth-century music for more than
thirty years. He has participated in innumerable world-premiere
performances, in every possible combination of instruments, in cities
all over America. The Westchester Philharmonic's Principal Keyboardist
for twenty-two years, he has also been a member of Boston's Collage New
Music since 1979, New York City's Parnassus since 1997, appears regularly
in Chicago, and as a collaborator has joined singers and instrumentalists
of all kinds in recitals throughout the United States. In 1986 he
presented his recital debut in Carnegie Recital Hall, and since then
he has pursued a career as a freelance musician. This work has taken
him as far afield as Moscow and Tokyo, and he has worked on every sort
of keyboard ever made, even including the Chromelodeon. He is widely
known for his expertise on the harpsichord, and is one of the leading
interpreters of twentieth-century works for that instrument. As a
soloist he has appeared with the MET Chamber Players, the San Francisco
Symphony, and Ensemble Modern in Frankfurt, Germany. His recording of
Elliott Carter's violin-piano Duo with Robert Mann was nominated for
two Grammy Awards in 1990. He has collaborated with the conductor
Robert Craft, and can be heard on several of his recordings.
Christopher Oldfather was nominated for a 2010 Grammy in the Best Chamber Music Performance category
for Schoenberg: String Quartets Nos. 3 & 4 with the Fred Sherry String Quartet.
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