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・ Joseph Hill (violin maker)
・ Joseph Hillebrand
・ Joseph Hilliard Cain, Sr.
・ Joseph Hilton Smyth
・ Joseph Hinks
・ Joseph Hinrichs
・ Joseph Hinton
・ Joseph Hinton (composer)
・ Joseph Hippolyt Pulte
・ Joseph Hirkala
・ Joseph Hirsch
・ Joseph Hirsch Weiss
・ Joseph Hirshhorn
・ Joseph Hirst
・ Joseph Hirst Lupton
Joseph Hislop
・ Joseph Hitches
・ Joseph Hoare
・ Joseph Hoare (bishop)
・ Joseph Hoare (college principal)
・ Joseph Hobson
・ Joseph Hoch
・ Joseph Hocking
・ Joseph Hodel
・ Joseph Hodges
・ Joseph Hodges Choate
・ Joseph Hodgkins
・ Joseph Hodgson
・ Joseph Hodkinson
・ Joseph Hoeflich


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Joseph Hislop : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Hislop

Joseph Hislop (5 April 18846 May 1977) was a Scottish lyric tenor who appeared in opera and oratorio and gave concerts around the world. He sang at La Scala, Milan, the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, and the Opéra-Comique, Paris, as well as forging a remarkable career in Denmark and Sweden, where he was made a Knight of the Dannebrog and a Knight of the Order of Vasa. He toured America, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand on several occasions and made a large number of recordings, some of which are available on CD re-issues. Hislop is notable for having been the final teacher of the Swedish tenor Jussi Björling and for developing a number of fine British singers through his post-War work at the Guildhall School of Music and at Sadler's Wells. After retiring to Fife, he taught the Scottish baritone Donald Maxwell.〔Michael T R B Turnbull, Joseph Hislop: Gran Tenore (Scolar Press, 1992).〕
==Career==
Joseph Hislop was born in the city of Edinburgh, at 16 Beaumont (sc. Bowmont) Place, in 1884. He was a pupil and chorister at St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral School, Palmerston Place, Edinburgh, under Dr Thomas Collinson and at the School of Arts (now Heriot-Watt University) where he studied photoprocess engraving. His early employment was in photo-press engraving at Hislop and Day (Edinburgh), then in Glasgow. Subsequently he studied at Bolt Court in London, learning the new three-colour process. Hislop was aware of his vocal ability, but his chances of making a progression into the professional ranks of classical music were dismissed by Dr Collinson. He was sent from Bolt Court to Gothenburg to introduce the latest photoprocess methods to a firm in that Swedish city.〔This paragraph sourced from Michael T R B Turnbull, Joseph Hislop: Gran Tenore (Scolar Press, 1992)〕
While living in Sweden, he joined a Stockholm male voice choir; but his exceptional voice stood out from the others and he was persuaded to abandon his initial career and train in Stockholm for the operatic stage. He was taught by Dr Gillis Bratt, a medical throat specialist who also sang. Then, uniquely for a non-Swede, he was accepted as a student at the Opera School in Stockholm. He made very rapid progress, and appeared in a performance of Gounod's ''Faust'' at the Royal Swedish Opera in 1914.〔1914, Swedish Wikipedia, and Davidson 1955.〕 He then went to Milan to further his training, and within a fairly short time he was singing leads in such major Italian opera houses as La Scala, La Fenice, Venice, Teatro di San Carlo, Naples and Teatro Regio, Turin.
Hislop made his London debut at Covent Garden, as Rodolfo in ''La bohème'', in 1920. He was a great success, and he went on to receive acclaim for his performances in ''Rigoletto'', ''La traviata''. He continued singing at Covent Garden until 1928. In 1924, he appeared opposite Dame Nellie Melba. In 1926 he sang ''Faust'' opposite Feodor Chaliapin as Mephistopheles. This was a particularly memorable performance,〔G. Davidson, ''Opera Biographies'' (Werner Laurie, London 1955), 132-34 at p. 133.〕 and was immortalised in extensive highlights (13 sides) by one of the early 'live' recording endeavours of the Gramophone Company (HMV).〔J. Steane and K. Hardwick, 1979, ''Royal Opera House Covent Garden, Historic Recordings of Actual Performances'' Album insert, (EMI Records, London 1979), pp 7, 10.〕 In the 1926 season he sang Handel's ''Messiah'' and was greatly admired in it.
He established a successful career in America, and first appeared (again in ''Faust'') in Chicago in 1920. He toured in North and South America: he was warmly received in Buenos Aires in Argentina. In addition to his Verdi and Puccini roles, he was also a distinguished Roméo and Des Grieux in ''Manon''. He made extended tours in Australia and New Zealand (where his associate artist, with whom he literally came to blows, was the pianist Isador Goodman)〔Virginia Goodman, ''Isador Goodman: A Life in Music'', 1983, p. 41〕 and South Africa. Offers from abroad combined with lack of opportunity at home meant that he seems to have made only a handful of main stage performances in his native country.〔Stephen Fraser() Retrieved 14 September 2014〕
In Stockholm he received Royal honours, including the Literis et Artibus (1922) and the Order of Vasa in 1929. In Denmark he received the Order of the Dannebrog in 1926. He was appointed Professor of Singing at the Royal Swedish Academy of Music, Stockholm, remaining there until 1948.〔Davidson 1955, 134.〕 His students in Sweden included Birgit Nilsson and Per Grundén in Stockholm and Jussi Björling in Gothenburg. He also taught in London at the Guildhall and also supervised singers at Sadler's Wells.〔H. Rosenthal and J. Warrack (Eds.), ''The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera'' (OUP, London 1974 printing).〕

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