HarrisonParrott is an international artist and project management agency working in the field of classical music and the arts, with offices in London, Munich and Paris. It was founded in 1969 by Jasper Parrott and Terry Harrison.

HarrisonParrott
Founded1969
HeadquartersSomerset House, London, England, United Kingdom
Number of employees
75+ [1]
Websitewww.harrisonparrott.com Edit this at Wikidata

Company history edit

Harrison and Parrott entered the artist management business in the 1960s as employees of London-based Ibbs and Tillett Ltd.[2] Deciding that the Ibbs and Tillett style of operation did not allow them to '...forge relationships with individual artists, engaging with them and their ideas and ambitions',[3] they set up HarrisonParrott Ltd, working initially from a domestic residence. Theirs was very much a pro-active approach to developing musical careers.[4]

In 1985 the company was one of the European artist management concerns which founded the European Artists Direct consortium, having the aim of negotiating contracts directly with concert promoters in North America.[5]

Terry Harrison left HarrisonParrott in 1988 to set up Terry Harrison Artist Management, representing such names as Sir András Schiff[6] and Mayumi Fujikawa.[7] The company ceased trading in 2015 (then known as Harrison Turner Artist Management).[8] Terry Harrison died early in 2017 at the age of 79.[9]

Integrated within the HarrisonParrott group is the Polyarts company, based in London and Paris.[10] Polyarts[11] works across a range of musical genres and types of performing space.

Reflecting the global nature of its business, the company has become increasingly multilingual. According to a 2012 report in Classical Music magazine, Finnish, Greek, Italian, Mandarin, Portuguese, Spanish, Turkish, French, German, Hungarian, Japanese, Polish, Russian and Swedish were all spoken at HarrisonParrott's west London offices.[12]

On 21 February 2018 the company moved its London office to The Ark, an office building in Hammersmith. It had previously been based at Albion Court, also in Hammersmith.[13] It has since moved to new offices on nearby Hammersmith Grove.

The HarrisonParrott 50th anniversary was scheduled to be marked by three concerts in one day at London's Southbank Centre on 6 October 2019, featuring twenty of the company's artists.[14]

International Piano Series edit

HarrisonParrott has collaborated with other artist management companies in piano and orchestral series at London's Southbank Centre.[15] One example is the International Piano Series (in partnership with Southbank Centre) which for more than 30 years has presented established names and also provides a London platform for young talent. Pianists appearing have included Mitsuko Uchida,[16] Khatia Buniatishvili, Alice Sara Ott, Víkingur Ólafsson, Benjamin Grosvenor[17] and Bertrand Chamayou, while Southbank Centre schedules for the 2019–20 IPS season[18] feature Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Maurizio Pollini, Ingrid Filter, Stephen Hough[19] and Daniil Trifonov.

Touring and international festivals edit

HarrisonParrott has been active throughout the world in all territories where there is interest in classical music, including Latin America, most of Asia and the Middle East.[20]

In 1995, HarrisonParrott arranged the Pierre Boulez Festival in Tokyo in collaboration with the Kajimoto management company.[21] Previously, in 1991, the company had been one of the managing agents for the month-long Japan Festival in the UK.[22][23]

Among the company's varied orchestral touring activities has been the Vienna Philharmonic's first-ever visit to Colombia (March 2016)[24][25] and the first concert by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in Yerevan, Armenia, conducted by Lorin Maazel in 2012.[26] HarrisonParrott was active in the Minnesota Orchestra's visit to Cuba in 2015 – the first visit by a US orchestra since President Barack Obama took steps to normalise relations between the two countries in December 2014.[27][28]

HarrisonParrott-facilitated tours to China have featured strongly: the Boston Symphony Orchestra's return to the country in 2014 (for the first time since 1979-a trip that also embraced the orchestra's first visit to Japan in 15 years);[29] two tours of China by the Shakespeare's Globe Theatre company, in 2014 and 2016; and a 2015 visit by the Trondheim Soloists which celebrated the normalisation of diplomatic relations between Norway and China.[30]

HarrisonParrott arranged performances of Akram Khan's production of Giselle with the English National Ballet in 2016,[31] including in Hong Kong in 2018.[32]

Creative partnerships edit

HarrisonParrott also acts as a creative partner – including artistic planning, project management, marketing and sponsorship – for cultural institutions. These have included the London Chamber Orchestra,[33] Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, Tiroler Festspiele Erl,[34] Marvão International Music Festival,[35] Estonian Festival Orchestra,[36] Gothenburg Symphony and Le Balcon. Previous partnerships also include Harpa Hall (Reykjavik),[37] Soundforms,[38] Britten in Japan[39] and Polska! Year.[40] HarrisonParrott's relationship with Turkey goes back to the 1990s: in 2004, the company co-presented Şimdi Now – a festival of Turkish culture in Berlin,[41] and in 2010 was consultant to La Saison de la Turquie, celebrating Turkish culture across France.[42]

Awards edit

In 2015, HarrisonParrott executive chairman Jasper Parrott received the Association of British Orchestras/Rhinegold Artist Manager of the Year award '...in particular [for] HarrisonParrott's work both with the Philharmonia Orchestra on a complex tour of South America and with the London Chamber Orchestra, whose management has been brought in-house'.[43][44]

HarrisonParrott Foundation edit

To mark HarrisonParrott's 50th anniversary, the company created the HarrisonParrott Foundation in April 2019.[45] The Foundation's aim was to support and champion diversity and inclusivity within the arts and ’challenge the idea that ethnicity, gender, disability and social background are impediments'.[46]

The Foundation comprises two programmes: ‘Artists for Inclusivity’ and ‘Apprenticeship Scheme’. ‘Artists for Inclusivity’ was created to organise workshops in schools near the HarrisonParrott London office, operating in partnership with the Tri-borough Music Hub.[47] An initial series of educational workshops and performances featured three HarrisonParrott artists[48] engaging with students, parents and music teachers in the West London area.

The ‘Apprenticeship Scheme’ was set up to work alongside the London-based Creative Access organisation.[49] The partnership supports diversity in the workforce, recruiting two participants each year to work across all the HarrisonParrott business areas.[50]

References edit

  1. ^ "Brochure" (PDF). HarrisonParrott. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  2. ^ Fifield, Christopher (2005). Ibbs & Tillett: The Rise and Fall of a Musical Empire. Aldershot: Ashgate. pp. 325–334. ISBN 1-84014-290-1.
  3. ^ "Jasper Parrott". Classical Music. 21 January 2006.
  4. ^ "A Dollop of HP". Classical Music. 19 December 1991.
  5. ^ "The Agency Angle". Classical Music. 14 September 1985.
  6. ^ May, Thomas (2 March 2019). "Poetry and Politics: Sir András Schiff does double duty with Seattle Symphony". bachtrack.
  7. ^ "Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance: Mayumi Fujikawa".
  8. ^ "Terry Harrison is a unique character in artist management". Classical Music. April 2015.
  9. ^ "Obituary: Terry Harrison. 'Ebullient music agent who presented the skull of one of his clients to the Royal Shakespeare Company'". The Times. 4 April 2017.
  10. ^ "New link, new label". Classical Music. March 2015.
  11. ^ "Polyarts".
  12. ^ "Language Matters". Classical Music. 10 March 2012.
  13. ^ "HarrisonParrott is on the move!". HarrisonParrott. 5 February 2018. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  14. ^ "Fifty Years in a Day". Southbank Centre.
  15. ^ "Southbank Centre".
  16. ^ Maddocks, Fiona (4 December 2018). "Mitsuko Uchida: 'You have to risk your life on stage'". The Guardian.
  17. ^ Fairman, Richard (27 April 2018). "Technically dazzling: Benjamin Grosvenor at Queen Elizabeth Hall". Financial Times.
  18. ^ "International Piano Series". Southbank Centre.
  19. ^ "Stephen Hough: Bach, Chopin & Liszt". Southbank Centre.
  20. ^ "International Relations". Classical Music. April 2013.
  21. ^ Pons, Philippe (1 June 1995). "Le retour triomphal de Pierre Boulez à Tokyo après vingt ans d'absence". Le Monde.
  22. ^ "Island to Island". The Times. 16 September 1991.
  23. ^ "Japan Festival 1991 Ltd". The National Archives.
  24. ^ "Vienna Philharmonic Tour USA-Colombia-Brasil".
  25. ^ "Wiener Philharmoniker – Austria – Director: Valery Gergiev – Rusia". Teatro Mayor, Bogota.
  26. ^ Tsatryan, Harutyun (8 November 2012). "Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra has arrived in Yerevan". erit.am.
  27. ^ Baker, Peter (17 December 2014). "U.S. to Restore Full Relations With Cuba, Erasing a Last Trace of Cold War Hostility". The New York Times.
  28. ^ Cooper, Michael (16 May 2015). "Minnesota Orchestra, in Groundbreaking Cuba Tour, Sells Out House". The New York Times.
  29. ^ Eichler, Jeremy (3 May 2014). "Back after 35 years, BSO gets warm welcome in China". Boston Globe.
  30. ^ "Trondheim Soloists". National Centre for the Performing Arts, Beijing. 2017.
  31. ^ Siever, Christie (14 April 2018). "Akram Khan's Giselle: an astonishing twist on a timeless classic". The Irish Times.
  32. ^ "English National Ballet: Akram Khan's Giselle". Hong Kong Sinfonietta. 2018.
  33. ^ "Artist Manager News". Classical Music. October 2015.
  34. ^ "A consultancy centred around international strategy and programming for the Tiroler Festspiele Erl". HarrisonParrott.
  35. ^ "Guardian Witness: "Marvão International Music Festival"". The Guardian.
  36. ^ "Estonian Festival Orchestra". Pärnu Music Festival.
  37. ^ Moore, Rowan (28 August 2011). "Reykjavik's dazzling new concert hall basks in the reflective glory of Olafur Eliasson's inspired design". The Guardian.
  38. ^ Showley, Roger (12 January 2016). "Symphony bayfront site gets initial OK from port". U-T San Diego.
  39. ^ Cooke, Mervyn (2001). Britten and the Far East: Asian Influences in the Music of Benjamin Britten. UK: Boyell Press. ISBN 0851158307.
  40. ^ Brown, Mark (8 March 2010). "Nigel Kennedy lines up soundtrack to 1973 England v Poland game". The Guardian.
  41. ^ "Capturing Turkish Culture's Changing Face". DW: Made for Minds. 2004.
  42. ^ "Saison de la Turquie en France". La France en Turquie.
  43. ^ "Classical Music magazine - ABO/Rhinegold awards announced, with Sir Mark Elder winning overall ABO gong | Classical Music". Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  44. ^ "Jasper Parrott | ABO/Rhinegold awards – Rhinegold". rhinegold.oilinternet.com. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  45. ^ Anderson, Andrew (12 April 2019). "HarrisonParrott launches foundation". International Arts Manager.
  46. ^ Bradshaw, Melissa (April 2019). "HarrisonParrott to launch foundation supporting diversity and inclusivity". Rhinegold Publishing (Classical Music).
  47. ^ "Tri-borough Music Hub". Tri-borough Music Hub.
  48. ^ "Tri-borough Music Hub – Summer Term 2". Tri-borough Music Hub.
  49. ^ "HarrisonParrott works with Creative Access to support diversity in the arts". Creative Access.
  50. ^ Bradshaw, Melissa (April 2019). "HarrisonParrott to launch foundation supporting diversity and inclusivity". Rhinegold Publishing (Classical Music).

External links edit