John Taylor Ward

Artist John Taylor Ward is tall with short blonde hair. He is dressed in a black t-shirt and black tuxedo jacket. He is looking directly at the camera with a serious expression.
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John Taylor Ward

Artist John Taylor Ward is tall with short blonde hair. He is dressed in a black t-shirt and black tuxedo jacket. He is looking directly at the camera with a serious expression.

John Taylor Ward’s performances have been praised for their “stylish abandon” (The New Yorker),

“intense clarity and color” (New York Times), and “finely calibrated precision and heart-rending

expressivity” (Washington Post), while his entrepreneurial projects have brought classical music to

underserved communities and significantly broadened the cultural offerings of urban centers.


A native of Boone, North Carolina, Taylor grew up in a musical family (bluegrass and Broadway,

primarily). He spent his early years living a dual life as both a sought-after triple threat in regional

musical theater and an Anglican boy treble, traveling across the US and England in performances

and residencies. During his high school years at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts,

hours spent in the music library brought the outlines of his future professional life into steadily

sharpening focus for him. This led to a Howard Hanson scholarship at the Eastman School of Music,

where he was also a recipient of the Ornest Award and winner of Eastman’s concerto competition.

Under the guidance there of Paul O’Dette, Taylor was drawn to the study of performance practice

and baroque music. Upon graduation, he went on to attain three advanced degrees and numerous

awards from the Yale School of Music, where his scholarship focused on the performance practice

of shape-note music (a uniquely American genre of folk hymnody). Completing his studies at Yale,

he moved to Paris as a recipient of the Harriet Hale Wooley Fellowship.


Taylor’s “intensity and sincerity” (New Haven Independent) have yielded him collaborations with

many of the world’s great conductors, including Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Sir John Eliot Gardiner,

William Christie, Philippe Herrewege, Masaaki Suzuki, Nicholas McGegan, and Courtney Lewis. His

recent and future engagements include world tours with Les Arts Florissants (as a laureate of the

Jardin des voix) and the English Baroque Soloists (in several roles in Monteverdi’s three operas); the

US premier of Claude Vivier’s Kopernikus with the International Contemporary Ensemble and

Roomful of Teeth under the direction of Peter Sellars; the premier staging of Orfeo Chaman with

L’Arpeggiata at the Teatro Mayor in Bogotà; the trilogy of Monteverdi’s operas at the Boston Early

Music Festival; and Berio’s Sinfonia with the New York Philharmonic. Taylor has appeared as a

principal artist at the Luzern Festspiele, Berliner Festspiele, Festival Oude Musiek Utrecht, and

Lincoln Center’s Great Performers and in such venues as London’s Barbican, the Sydney Opera

House, the Kennedy Center, the Grand Théâtre de Provence, and the Philharmonie de Paris. Recent

roles include Jesus in Bach’s Passions, Rafael in Haydn’s Creation, Bottom in Britten’s A Midsummer

Night’s Dream, Arkêl in Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande, the Emcee in Kander and Ebb’s Cabaret,

Aeneas in Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas, Papageno in Mozart’s The Magic Flute, Giove (and Giove in

Diana) in Cavalli’s La Callisto, and the King in Maxwell Davies’ Eight Songs for a Mad King. He can

be heard on the Naxos, Warner Classics, and 4AD labels.


Taylor is a founding core member of Cantata Profana, a New York-based collective focused on the

narrative programming of chamber music and recent winner of Chamber Music America’s award for

Most Adventurous Programming. As the New York Times put it, “While its theatrical bent is a

constant, Cantata Profana’s approach to the repertory is admirably varied and indefinable. It’s

devoted not to new or modern or early music — such specialists proliferate –

but to most anything,

so long as the mixture is put together thoughtfully and put across persuasively.” Recent Cantata

collaborations include a solo show produced for Joe’s Pub at the Public Theater, the first-ever opera

on New York’s High Line, a reimagining of the “American Songbook” (incorporating everything from

Appalachian folk ballads to Miley Cirus) and numerous performances with the group’s sister

company, Heartbeat Opera, which “transforms great works of the operatic canon through visionary

adaptations, radical arrangements for chamber ensembles, and intimate, visceral productions that

put the singers and the instrumentalists at the center of the work. Heartbeat distills opera to its

essence, and cultivates new audiences for the artform.”


The proudest achievement of Taylor’s promotional endeavors is the Lakes Area Music Festival.

Founded in 2009, LAMF brings over one hundred musicians from around the world to showcase

everything from chamber music to full symphonic repertoire, live ballet performances, and even a

fully produced opera each season. Based in Brainerd, Minnesota, far removed from metropolitan

centers whose affluence fosters frequent contact and mutual support between patrons and the

arts, the Lakes Area Music Festival now serves over 10,000 people annually through its

performances, educational programs, and outreach activities. Dispelling myths of the death of

classical music, the Festival raises hundreds of thousands of dollars each year from small-dollar

donors and provides its programs free of charge to the public it serves, sixty percent of whom have

never seen an opera outside of the ones produced at the Festival. Most importantly, a community

of spirit has grown up around the Festival, which, with the cooperation of business and government

leaders, provides a footing for cultural and economic revitalization in central Minnesota.


In all he undertakes, it is not so much their content as his approach to them that stamps Taylor

Ward’s enterprises with their individuality. Whether bringing a virtuosic piece of music off the page

through dramatic instincts and historically informed acumen or transcending the existing models of

arts funding and programming, he at once flourishes at the highest levels of the musical

establishment and challenges the boundaries of what that establishment can encompass. His voice

– and hands – are helping to shape the future of the fine arts.

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