John Farnsworth Hall


John Farnsworth Hall was an Australian conductor and violinist.

Background

John Farnsworth Hall was born in Petersham, [New South Wales], a suburb of Sydney, in 1899. He was an original violin student at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, under its founding director Henri Verbrugghen. He was appointed deputy leader of the New South Wales State Orchestra.
He was a member of the Farmers Trio, a pioneering radio chamber trio, in 1923. The other members were Horace Keats, piano, and John Boatwright, cello.

Career

He went to London to further his career, and played under various notable conductors. He harboured an ambition to be a conductor himself, and while on tour in New Zealand, he was given an opportunity to conduct when Henri Verbrugghen fell ill.
He then became leader and deputy conductor of the new Sydney Symphony Orchestra. In 1946, Hall conducted the first performance by the SSO of Mozart's Flute Concerto No. 2 in D, with Neville Amadio as soloist.
In 1947 he was appointed the first resident conductor of the Queensland Symphony Orchestra. During his time there, he introduced the symphonies of Ralph Vaughan Williams to Queensland concert-goers. Conducting the Queensland Symphony Orchestra, featuring soprano Tatjana Hitrina, he covered Auber's Fra Diavolo, Khachaturian's Masquerade and others including "Knowest thou the Land". It was broadcast on ABC radio at 9:15 pm Wednesday 11 November 1953. He made a classic recording of Alfred Hill's piece for narrator and orchestra, Green Water, with the QSO and the speaker Peter Munro in 1954.
From 1954 he was conductor in residence of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra.

Later years

He retired from conducting in 1965, and died in 1987, aged 87. He was survived by his third wife and a daughter, both named Deirdre and grandchildren Brendan and Chapin Ayres.