Julius Drake is a pianist who has specialized in vocal and instrumental accompaniment, and in chamber music. Unlike the majority of accompanists, who tend to work with a small group of soloists over most of their careers,
Drake has collaborated with an unusually wide group of artists.
Drake was born in London on April 5, 1959. He began playing piano at seven and took lessons at the Purcell School. Moving on to the Royal Academy of Music, he made his debut at the Purcell Room in London in 1981. Early in his career, he specialized in the music of
Schumann.
Drake has recorded extensively since the late 1990s. A noted early release, with soprano
Katarina Karnéus, featured songs by Jean Sibelius. A versatile vocal accompanist,
Drake has often mastered unfamiliar repertory such as the
Haydn Canzonettas (with
Christoph Genz), African American spirituals (with Ruby Philogene), and songs by Ivor Gurney (with
Paul Agnew). His most frequent vocal collaborator has been tenor
Ian Bostridge, but he has also worked with
Matthias Goerne,
Lorraine Hunt Lieberson,
Victoria de los Angeles, and many other distinctive vocal stylists. His instrumental collaborators include clarinetist
Emma Johnson and hornist
Richard Watkins, whom he accompanied on the 2019 release
The Romantic Horn (Signum Classics). Also in 2019,
Drake backed tenor
Nicky Spence on a recording of
Janacek's rarely heard The Diary of One Who Disappeared and Nursery Rhymes. During this time,
Drake was in the process of recording the complete songs of
Liszt with soprano
Anna Prohaska.
Drake has served as the director of the Perth International Chamber Music Festival in Australia and the Machynlleth Festival in Wales. He has devised song series for Wigmore Hall in London, the BBC, and the Royal Concertgebouw in Amsterdam.
Drake teaches song accompaniment at Graz University for Music and Performing Arts in Austria and has given numerous masterclasses.