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Karl Jenkins

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Karl Jenkins (born February 17, 1944) is a Welsh musician and composer.

Jenkins was born and raised in Penclawdd, Gower, Wales, just west of Swansea. His father—a local schoolteacher, organist, and choirmaster—gave him his initial musical instruction. Jenkins began his diverse musical career as an oboist in the National Children's Orchestra. He went on to study music at University College, Cardiff, and at the Royal Academy of Music. For the bulk of his early career, he was known as a jazz and jazz-rock musician, playing variously: baritone and soprano saxophones, keyboards and oboe (an unusual instrument in the jazz context). He joined jazz composer Graham Collier's group and later co-founded groundbreaking jazz-rock group Nucleus, which won first prize at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1970. Later he joined Canterbury progressive rock band Soft Machine in 1972 and co-led them for several years until he departed the band in the mid-1970s. The group defied categorisation and played venues as diverse as the Proms, Carnegie Hall, and the Newport Jazz Festival. The album on which Karl first played with Soft Machine, Six, won first place in the Melody Maker British Jazz Album of the Year award in 1973, in which Karl also won first place in the miscellaneous musical instrument section (as he did the following year). Soft Machine was voted best small group in the Melody Maker jazz poll of 1974.

Jenkins has created a good deal of advertising music, twice winning the industry prize in that field. Perhaps his most-heard piece of music is the classical theme used by De Beers diamond merchants for their famous television advertising campaign focusing on jewellery worn by people who are otherwise seen only in silhouette. He later included it as the title track in a compilation of various works called Diamond Music, and eventually created Palladio, using it as the theme of the first movement.

As a composer, his breakthrough came with the innovative crossover project Adiemus. Jenkins has conducted the Adiemus project in Japan, Germany, Spain, Finland, the Netherlands, and Belgium, as well as London's Royal Albert Hall and Battersea Power Station. The Adiemus: Songs of Sanctuary (1994) album sold well enough (topping the classical album charts) to spawn a series of successors, each revolving around a central theme.

He was awarded the Order of the British Empire in the New Year Honours list for 2005.

Partial list of works

And a Greatest Hits collection:

Other works: