John Purser is one of Scotland’s most important cultural ambassadors. His award-winning radio series and book, ‘Scotland’s Music', is widely regarded as the essential authority on the subject. He is an award-winning composer, playwright and author, as well as a champion of Scottish Gaelic, and continues to bring new passion to the Scottish cultural landscape.
|
JOHN PURSER was born in Glasgow of Irish parents in 1942. He was educated at Lathallan School and Fettes College, and in 1963 took diplomas in Composition, Singing and Violoncello at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, where his composition teacher was Dr Frank Spedding. With the aid of a Caird scholarship, he continued to study composition with Sir Michael Tippett and Dr Hans Gál. As a mature student he took a 1st in English Literature at Glasgow University (1980), followed by a PhD (1989), on The Literary Works of Jack B. Yeats. In 2009 he was awarded the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa by the University of Aberdeen.
He has been a free-lance composer, cellist, musicologist, critic, poet, playwright and broadcaster, as well as lecturing on classical music for many years for the Glasgow University Extra-Mural Department (as it was then called), and has lectured and broadcast on Scottish music world-wide. He was the first Manager of the Scottish Music Information Centre 1985-1987 and was joint editor with James MacMillan of Stretto magazine. In 1992 he published Scotland's Music accompanied by an eponymous series of 30 90-minute broadcasts for BBC Radio Scotland.
More recently, John studied Gaelic at Sabhal Mòr Ostaig (the Gaelic College on the Isle of Skye) where he has assisted in course development. In 2006 he was appointed as a Researcher and was Gaelic Music Course Director there from 2006-2008. He was one of the team of researchers for the five-year research project, “Window to the West – towards a redefinition of the visual within Gaelic Scotland”, funded by the AHRC. In 2007 he completed an expanded and up-dated edition of his book, Scotland’s Music and a series of 50 radio programmes on the same subject, for BBC Radio Scotland. In the same year publishing a critical biography of the composer Erik Chisholm.
John lives on the Island of Skye where he and his American wife, Barbara, are crofters, keeping a small herd of cattle.
You can find a complete biography and CV here
He has been a free-lance composer, cellist, musicologist, critic, poet, playwright and broadcaster, as well as lecturing on classical music for many years for the Glasgow University Extra-Mural Department (as it was then called), and has lectured and broadcast on Scottish music world-wide. He was the first Manager of the Scottish Music Information Centre 1985-1987 and was joint editor with James MacMillan of Stretto magazine. In 1992 he published Scotland's Music accompanied by an eponymous series of 30 90-minute broadcasts for BBC Radio Scotland.
More recently, John studied Gaelic at Sabhal Mòr Ostaig (the Gaelic College on the Isle of Skye) where he has assisted in course development. In 2006 he was appointed as a Researcher and was Gaelic Music Course Director there from 2006-2008. He was one of the team of researchers for the five-year research project, “Window to the West – towards a redefinition of the visual within Gaelic Scotland”, funded by the AHRC. In 2007 he completed an expanded and up-dated edition of his book, Scotland’s Music and a series of 50 radio programmes on the same subject, for BBC Radio Scotland. In the same year publishing a critical biography of the composer Erik Chisholm.
John lives on the Island of Skye where he and his American wife, Barbara, are crofters, keeping a small herd of cattle.
You can find a complete biography and CV here