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British percussionist
Gary Kettel has worked with equal facility in the classical and pop worlds. Born in the early '50s, he became a prodigy as a percussionist (it's hardly a surprise) and achieved the rank of co-principal in the
BBC Symphony Orchestra at the age of 20. The orchestra's conductor at the time was the feared
Pierre Boulez, but (according to orchestrator
Larry Ashmore) the young
Kettel wasn't fazed: as the musicians were asked to make yet another repetition during a rehearsal of a difficult contemporary score,
Kettel raised his hand and said, "Hang on, Pierre, I think I know where you're going wrong." Whether for that reason or to pursue more lucrative work in the pop sector,
Kettel left his BBC post. He appeared in 1974 on the experimental African Sanctus disc assembled by ethnomusicologist
David Fanshawe, but his recording career did not get started in earnest until the early '80s. He has appeared on recordings ranging from contemporary classical music (such as a disc of
Alberto Ginastera's chamber music released on the ASV label in 1995) to straight pop (the 1998 A Very Special Season Christmas album by Diana Ross), but he has been most prolific in various fields where pop and classical meet: film music, symphonic rock, and crossover music from various countries; among his successes in the 2000s have been recordings with Australia's Ten Tenors and trumpeter
Chris Botti. His credits include several of
James Horner's soundtracks, including that for the controversial Apocalypto, and he has also worked with solo percussion star
Evelyn Glennie. In the 1990s and 2000s
Kettel has broadened his expertise to include Latin American and Japanese percussion; he played taiko drums on the 2006 release Here's to the Heroes.