Juliette Pochin

Juliette Louise B. Pochin (born 1971)[1] is a Welsh classically trained mezzo-soprano singer, composer/arranger, and record producer. She is known not only for her performances in operas and as a classical recitalist but also for her recordings of operatically styled crossover music. Morgan Pochin Music Productions Ltd, the company she formed with her husband James Morgan, is known for its record productions for artists such as Katherine Jenkins and Alfie Boe, as well as its arrangements for film and television scores.

thanks to John Paul Pochin
Juliette Pochin

Biography and career

Born in Haverfordwest, Pochin attended the Royal Academy of Music (Junior Academy). She went on to read music at Trinity College, Cambridge as a choral scholar and also trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.[2] In 2005 she was signed by Sony BMG to record her debut album, Venezia, released in 2006 as Classic FM's "Record of the Week".[3] Five months after the album's release, the British owned chocolatiers, Hotel Chocolat introduced a new chocolate range named for her, inspired by a description of her voice in The Times as "sounding like melted chocolate".[4] She was the soloist for 3 years at the televised BBC Proms in the Park from Salford.

Pochin is married to the conductor and composer, James Morgan. The couple met at Cambridge University and first worked together composing for the Footlights. They went on to form Morgan Pochin Music Productions Ltd.

She is a regular orchestrator and musical director for BBC Radio 2 Piano Room.

Juliette's setting of Lemn Sissay's poem, Let There Be Peace, composed for the Brighton Festival, received its first live performance at Cadogan Hall in 2023.

Juliette wrote her first musical cabaret show, Music, Mayhem and a Mezzo during lockdown and is now a regular performer at The Crazy Coqs, The Pheasantry and Edinburgh Fringe Festival where she was Pick of the Fringe.

Morgan Pochin Music Productions

This music production company was founded by James Morgan and Juliette Pochin to produce recordings as well as compose original works for film and the concert platform.

Record Production

They have produced numerous albums that reached the Top 10 in the UK charts including: Luke Evans, A Song for You which reached No. 4 in the UK album charts, three studio albums for Alfie Boe, Joe McElderry's second studio album Classic which reached No. 2 in the UK charts and 100 Vera Lynn which peaked at No. 3 in the UK Charts.

Their album with the Poor Clares of Arundel, Light for the World debuted at No. 1 in the UK Classical music chart in October 2020, a position it retained for 19 weeks and reached No. 5 in the main UK Album chart.[5]

As Piano Hands, their piano duo, they released two albums for Rhino Records, (Warner Music) and can be regularly heard on Classic FM and Scala Radio.

Film and TV

In 2010, Morgan Pochin adapted Mozart's music into a modern film score for British film First Night based on his opera Così fan tutte and starring Richard E. Grant and Sarah Brightman. The film soundtrack album, arranged and produced by Morgan Pochin, was released on the Sony label in October 2011.

In 2012 Morgan Pochin produced the music for Dustin Hoffman's first film as director, Quartet – starring Maggie Smith, Billy Connolly, Tom Courtenay and Michael Gambon.

They also provided music for films including Operation Mincemeat, The Courier, and Ridley Scott's Killing Jesus.

They have composed and arranged music for several television shows including The Kumars at No. 42

Compositions

They were commissioned by the Brighton Festival to compose "The Great Enormo – a Kerfuffle in B flat for orchestra, soprano and wasps"; with words by Michael Rosen. It premiered with Michael Rosen as narrator, James Morgan as conductor, Juliette Pochin as soprano and the City of London Sinfonia. It has since been performed by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra at the Birmingham Symphony Hall, the Southbank Centre (Imagine Festival) and it has been translated into Portuguese for performances in Porto.

Their choral cantata Invictus was commissioned by Brighton Festival Chorus and performed by the City of London Sinfonia, Brighton Festival Chorus and Youth Choir, and massed children's choirs, and premiered at Brighton Dome in 2015 to mark the 800th anniversary of the Magna Carta.

Their choral composition Kubla Khan had its world premiere at the 2002 , Brighton Festival[9]

Charity Work

In conjunction with Parkinson's UK, Morgan Pochin arranged two gala fundraising concerts "Symfunny 1 & Symfunny 2 at London's Royal Albert Hall. for which they were both awarded a Points of Light Award at 10 Downing Street from the Prime Minister.

Recordings

As performer

Morgan Pochin Discography

  • A Song For You - Luke Evans (BMG)
  • Alfie – Alfie Boe (Decca)
  • Premiere – Katherine Jenkins (UCJ)
  • Bring Him Home – Alfie Boe (Decca)
  • 100: Dame Vera Lynn (Decca)
  • Classic – Joe McElderry (Decca)
  • Classic Christmas – Joe McElderry (Decca)
  • Someone To Watch Over Me - Ella Fitzgerald and the London Symphony Orchestra(Verve)
  • Act Two. - Collabro (Syco)
  • Songs Without Words (Universal/Classic FM)
  • Rise - Sir Cliff Richard (Rhino)
  • Light for The World Poor Clare Sisters of Arundel (Decca)
  • Classic Rock. (Decca)
  • Serenata - Alfie Boe (Decca)
  • Venezia – Juliette Pochin (Sony)
  • Home - Collabro (Peak Productions)
  • Love Like This- Collabro (BMG)
  • Symphonies Meines Leben I, II – Howard Carpendale (Electrola)
  • Happy Christmas - Howard Carpendale (Electrola)
  • Christmas is Here - Collabro (Peak Productions)
  • Sleep Baby Sleep – Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (Classic FM)
  • Songs Without Words (UCJ)
  • Swimming over London – The Kings Singers (Signum)

References

  1. Juliette Louise B Pochin in England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837–2008, FamilySearch, citing Birth Registration, Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales, citing General Register Office, Southport, England.
  2. Monk, Judith, Judith Monk spends time with Juliette Pochin, the mezzo-soprano with a "smooth and chocolaty" voice, Musical Opinion, 1 January 2007. Accessed via subscription 15 May 2010
  3. The Fountain, Debut Album Released by Former Choral Scholar at Trinity, Autumn 2006, p. 11. Accessed 15 May 2010
  4. Music Week,"Smooth diva sells chocolate", 6 December 2006. Accessed 15 May 2010
  5. Search results for "light for the world"
  6. Smith, David, "Four Seasons find their voice as Vivaldi sonnets are set to music", The Observer, 7 May 2006. Accessed 15 May 2010
  7. Achenbach, Andrew, Editors' Choice: Vaughan Williams, Gramophone, March 2008, p. 91. Accessed 15 May 2010
  8. Steane, John, Review: Knowles: Poetry Serenade, Gramophone, March 2009, p. 82. Accessed 19 May 2010
  9. Signum Records, Liner notes: Poetry Serenade, 2008. Accessed 19 May 2010
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