Accompanist and solo pianist
James Baillieu has been one of the most highly regarded artists in his field since completing his studies with top honors in 2007. He has performed and recorded as an accompanist to both singers and instrumentalists of the top rank.
Baillieu was born in South Africa in 1982. Far from a child prodigy, he was encouraged to take up the piano after being diagnosed with poor hand-eye coordination. At first, he showed little talent but a great deal of enthusiasm, to the point where his mother had to tell him to stop practicing and go outside and play. He still claims to be unable to catch a thrown ball, however.
Baillieu studied music at the University of Cape Town and turned to the role of accompanist when given the opportunity to work and perform with singers in the school's strong opera program, including soprano
Pumeza Matshikiza. In 2005, he won a scholarship for foreign students at the Royal Academy of Music in London. Graduating in 2007, he won the Christian Carpenter Award and notched competition prizes in England and beyond. These included a win at the Das Lied contest in Berlin, where one of the judges,
Annette Dasch, was so impressed that she asked him to work with her.
Baillieu has been supported by the prestigious Young Classical Artists' Trust and has won several other important scholarships. In 2011, he was appointed professor of accompaniment at his alma mater, the Royal Academy. From 2012 to 2016, he held the prestigious Borletti-Buitoni Trust Fellowship.
Baillieu has collaborated with top singers, including
Dasch,
Ian Bostridge, and
Kiri Te Kanawa, as well as instrumentalists such as the
Elias and
Heath Quartets. He plays several concerts a year as a soloist and has appeared with the
Ulster Orchestra, the
English Chamber Orchestra, and the
Wiener Kammersymphonie.
Baillieu made his recording debut in 2013, backing tenor
Ben Johnson in
Britten's The Canticles, and he has been sought out by singers for albums on the boutique Champs Hill and Resonus labels. He presented his own series at London's Wigmore Hall, accompanying a variety of top singers. In 2018, he joined both singers and instrumentalists for an album of
music by Reynaldo Hahn on the Champs Hill label, and he backed trombonist
Peter Moore on the latter's album
Life Force. The following year,
Baillieu was heard with violinist
Tamsin Waley-Cohen on a Signum Classics recording of the
complete works for violin and keyboard of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach. The pandemic era saw
Baillieu keep busy in 2021 with a pair of albums on which he accompanied clarinetist
Julian Bliss and flutist
Adam Walker. He returned in 2022 as accompanist to baritone
Benjamin Appl on
Appl's recording of
Schubert's Winterreise, D. 911. ~ James Manheim