Boston
Singers' Resource News Bulletin December
7, 2004
Baritone,
Thomas Jones, is a much-featured and popular performer on the stages of
New England, in North America in general, in Europe and in the West Indies.
A noted interpreter of the Oratorio repertoire, he was the cover interview
in the July/August, 1993, issue of The New York Opera Newsletter (now
Classical Singer Magazine). His resume includes opera roles (particularly
Donizetti, Rossini, Puccini, and Verdi ), music theater works, and multiple
performances of the standard oratorio literature. He spoke with BSR about
how he came to be part of the Boston music scene, how his career has developed
and about his love of teaching.
Baritone Thomas Jones
has had solo engagements with orchestras, choruses, opera companies, pops
orchestras and recital series throughout the world. He has interpreted
the concert repertoire of Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Brahms,
Vaughan Williams and more, to critical acclaim. Mr. Jones has appeared
with well over 150 choruses, under the baton of notable maestros such
as Christopher Hogwood, Thomas Dunn, John Alexander, Robert Page, John
Oliver, and Gerald Mack. Richard Buell of The Boston Globe calls the vocal
and stage presence of Thomas Jones "irresistible". Anthony Tommasini
of The New York Times proclaims that Mr. Jones sings "with plush
sounds and musical vigor".
Mr. Jones has been part of many well-known Festivals, including Saratoga
Performing Arts Center, Berkshire Choral Festival, The Shenandoah Valley
Bach Festival, Great Waters Music Festival and Monadnock Music. He has
sung with the Boston Lyric Opera, the Harrisburg Opera Company of Pennsylvania
and Opera New England. His Boston-area orchestral appearances include
The Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra, Boston Civic Orchestra, The Back Bay Chorale,
Coro Allegro, The Worcester Symphony and The Nashua Symphony. Mr. Jones
was a semifinalist in the International Bel Canto Foundation Vocal Competition
and a semifinalist in the New York Oratorio Competition. In the summer
of 2000, he sang in a concert tour of Denmark, Sweden and Norway.
Joe Stroup: What got you started singing? Are there other musicians
in your family?
Thomas Jones: My grandfather is the only one I know of in my family
with any kind of musical background. He emigrated from Wales to Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania, which is where I'm from. He had no formal training, but
he had an amazing ear and could play anything at the piano that you sang
for him. I studied organ for eight years, as did my two brothers. When
I was about 8 years old we were learning songs at my church and I realized
I could sing, clearly and purely. I've been singing ever since. Until
I was about 12, I was a high-voiced soprano. Then came the 'tragic times'
of puberty. But I weathered that and came out the other end still singing.
I majored in Music Education (K-12) at Mansfield University (part of the
Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education).
JS: Before we continue, I have to ask; are you ever confused with
the other Welsh Baritone named Tom Jones?
TJ: Well, I started out using Tom. It's more the kind of person
that I am. I'm not that kind of formal guy. It (changing the name) had
to happen, though, because of an odd little incident in Washington, DC,
where I was scheduled to sing 'Messiah'. Some woman actually threatened
to sue the orchestra because that Tom Jones wasn't singing. From that
time on, my manager said, I should stay with Thomas.
JS: What made you decide to build your career here? Why not New
York?
TJ: I've always been drawn to Boston. As a kid I had this 'thing'
for New England, the history, the culture, everything about it. To give
you an idea: I was very map oriented, loved to draw them and look at them,
and, once, I mapped out a vacation to New England. Then I begged my parents
to take us there. I was the guide and I had the whole thing memorized,
right down to where we were going to park the car! I remember walking
down Boylston Street, I was only about 12, and feeling like I was home.
I told my parents, 'I'm going to live here someday'.
It was always the goal; to come here. I taught high school in Harrisburg,
PA for five years as the choral director but I knew I wanted to sing.
So, I earned my Masters in Vocal Performance, also at Mansfield, and moved
immediately to Boston.
I knew a lot about what was going on here musically and a lot about the
performance organizations from the Mansfield faculty. I knew it was one
of the few cities in the country where musicians are actually working
and that there were lots of solo possibilities. Boston was a better place
to get a career going than living in New York City. New York was, is,
so much harder to get started in. There's so much competition, so many
voices. Lots of wonderful young singers get swallowed by New York or spend
all their energies just living there. Now I can go to New York and I'm
a singer from out of town. I get to perform in these great places without
having to go through the 'pain and agony' of trying to make it there first.
JS: So how, exactly, did things get started for you in Boston?
TJ: I came here with my Masters and started doing some post-graduate
work at New England Conservatory and Boston University. I hoped to finish
a doctorate. But I was also getting work. I was on the go a lot. At some
point, I received some advice from Tom Dunn (former Artistic Director
of the Handel & Haydn Society), whom I consider my mentor, that I
decided to act on. He told me I should 'go and sing, don't finish the
doctorate', to strike while the iron was hot. He advised, 'if you do teach
later it will be because of your performance and not because of a piece
of paper'. I took the chance and it has proved to be absolutely right
on the mark.
But I give the credit for the opportunities that came my way, in part,
to Patricia Stedry, an amazing voice teacher. (A protégé
of Mary Davenport. Both have taught at Boston University.) She was extremely
meticulous that the voice was in line, that I wasn't doing material that
was too big. Truthfully, although I had finished a Masters degree and
knew a lot of repertoire, it wasn't until I moved to Boston that I learned,
really, how to sing, to figure out what to do with my voice, what the
inner workings of the anatomy were.
JS: The repertoire that you list on your web page shows quite a
range. Do you have any favorite roles or special works that you like to
do?
TJ: Basically, I have built my career on the Oratorio repertoire.
Early in my career I made the conscious decision that I wanted to be,
for lack of a better word, a 'serious' singer, though I don't think that
one is more serious than the other. But there is a time while you're trying
to establish yourself in a career that you don't want to send mixed messages.
In the beginning, if you send a confusing message no one knows who you
really are. Is he a Broadway singer or does he do opera or does he do
concert work? I made the choice I did because I love the Oratorio repertoire,
I enjoy it and I was good at it. And I didn't think of it or try to use
it as something to lead me into an opera career. That's fine for a lot
of people, but I never saw it that way. Plus, singing a lot of Bach and
Handel so early in my career proved to be a smart thing to do. Learning
the music of Bach, in particular, makes you a sharper musician because
his music is so cerebral.
JS: But there's also a good deal of Opera in your repertoire.
TJ: Mostly I sing at Opera galas where I'll sing arias with an
orchestra. But if you look at the roles I've done, you'll see that they
tend to be some of the lesser roles. I don't have a huge voice though
it's sizable and resonant in the right spots. But I'm not a Verdi singer
and that's okay. We are who we are and we bloom where we're planted. Early
on I sang with the Boston Concert Opera which was directed at the time
by David Stockton. He gave me roles like the Messenger/Assassin in Verdi's
'Macbeth', Baron Douphol in 'La Traviata', and Sharper in Massenet's 'Manon'.
He cast the larger roles with some of the major, important names in the
business.
Being a young singer (in my twenties) it was really great to be able to
be part of that. But back then it was more important for me to be on stage
watching them than to be doing music that pushed me into an area where
it would have been uncomfortable or that would have made me a singer I
would later regret. I avoided blowing my voice out by not doing bigger
things too soon. Now, as a result, my repertoire today is a little broader
- 'Elijah', Brahms' 'Requiem', Dvorak's 'Stabat Mater', 'Te Deum' and
'Mass in D'; stuff I never would have done very well in my twenties -
and I've moved into them with great ease.
JS: You mentioned early that you chose to be a serious singer,
but that you don't think of one type being more serious than the other.
What did you mean?
TJ: Years ago I did musical theater in summer stock. I feel I have
an affinity for doing it. As Pops-type concerts have become increasingly
a part of an orchestra's season, I'm happy to be doing more of that kind
of music. It's so cool, to sing those songs with an orchestra of 75 people
playing behind you.
JS: You've obviously had a very full singing career. Do you have
other musical outlets?
TJ: Well, predominantly, I've been able to make my living as a
singer for 20 years. I do other things because I want to. I'm the Music
Director at Old Cambridge Baptist Church in Harvard Square. I need that
for myself, spiritually. Also, I teach voice through the Office of the
Arts at Harvard University. I've been there for 12 or 13 years now and
I have a full load of students. That's so incredibly gratifying. If someone
said I had to give up either the singing or the teaching I'd have a hard
time picking which. I'm also the Vocal Coach for the Hasty Pudding Theater
and I hold vocal master classes on the Harvard campus for theater productions
and for the Freshman Arts Program (FAP) in the summer.
JS: You're spending a significant amount of time, then, with your
teaching and directing.
TJ: I feel that it's my responsibility to give back, to give students
every opportunity. Any abilities or gifts that I have are not something
that I can take credit for. I believe they are a gift from God. All I
can do is use them, develop them and give them back. That's the reason
that I love to teach.
---------------------------
Thomas Jones, Baritone, will be appearing with the Civic Symphony Orchestra
of Boston on Saturday, December 18 at 2:00 PM in a Holiday Pops celebration
of Christmas and Hannukah at the Fine Arts Center, Regis College, Weston,
MA. Tickets are $20 for adults, $15 for children. 617-923-6333. www.csob.org.
For additional information and for audio selections, go to www.singersincorporated.com/thomasjones.


