Anthony Hopkins debuts as a composer at 88: 'Bracken Road' is out now
Anthony Hopkins has signed with Decca Classics and released 'Bracken Road', the first single from 'Life Is a Dream', recorded with Gustavo Dudamel and the Philharmonia.
Anthony Hopkins has two Oscars, 88 years on the clock and, as of Friday, a brand-new career: classical composer with a record deal. The Welsh actor has signed with Decca Classics and released his first single, “Bracken Road”, ahead of his debut album, “Life Is a Dream”, due on 21 August.
The story behind the piece is the stuff of cinema. Hopkins wrote “Bracken Road” in 1963, when he was a young actor at the Liverpool Playhouse, improvising at the piano before rehearsals. The album gathers orchestral works composed across more than six decades — the man learned piano at age 4 and was writing music for local plays as a teenager, long before Hannibal Lecter ate up his schedule.
Who recorded Anthony Hopkins’ album?
This is no weekend session: “Life Is a Dream” was recorded in April at London’s Alexandra Palace by the Philharmonia Orchestra under Gustavo Dudamel, one of the most in-demand conductors on the planet. Release details are on the Decca Classics page, which frames the project as the fulfilment of a desire that predates the acting career itself — “music was my first desire”, Hopkins has said.
The timing raises a smile: this is the week the veterans refused to leave the stage, with the Rolling Stones dropping their 25th studio album and Hopkins debuting at 88. Retirement age? Apparently just a suggestion.
By Lucy Bennett
Image: Omar David Sandoval Sida / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)