John Wyre (May 17, 1941 - October 31, 2006) was a well-known percussionist.
Born as John Harvey Wyre and raised in Philadelphia, PA, John's father, Ross Wyre, was a high school music teacher, band director. Ross , himself, was an accomplished musician, having studied tuba at the Curtis Institute of Music (class of 1934).
John Wyre played in the All-Philadelphia Senior High School Orchestra, studied with Fred D. Hinger (Timpanist with the Philadelphia Orchestra at that time), and became involved in Alan Abel's Settlement Music School Percussion Ensemble (where fellow Nexus members Bill Cahn and Russell Hartenberger would also play). John then went to Rochester, NY to study with William Street at the Eastman School of Music (which would also be the alma mater of another future Nexus colleague, Bob Becker, as well as Cahn).
After leaving Eastman, John Wyre played with the Oklahoma City and Milwaukee Symphony Orchestras before becoming the Timpanist in the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, a position he held for 11 seasons between 1966 and 1981. In 1968, he joined Becker and Cahn, along with Robin Engelman (with whom John played in both the Milwaukee and Toronto orchestras), and Hartenberger at the Marlboro Music Festival in Vermont, and three years later these five musicians gave their first performance as Nexus. (The late Michael Craden [1941-1981] was also one of the founding members of the ensemble.)
For the next three decades, John Wyre performed with Nexus all around the world, playing music that ranged from traditional xylophone rags to Ghanaian drumming, from concertos composed for them to free-form improvisations. "My very favorite thing that we do is a piece called 'Tongues'," he shared in an unpublished interview. "Bob plays mbira. It's very simple, which is a sweet thing. I could play that all night and never get tired of it."
"Nexus is... making music, exploring the world together, sharing the stage from individual spontaneity to exquisite precision," he wrote for PN in an article celebrating the ensemble's 25th anniversary in 1996. Six years later, in another interview, Wyre explained why he chose to leave the ensemble. "It's been 31 extraordinary years, but I want to spend less time traveling all over the world. I want to spend more time writing and I want to work with some other musicians as well. There are a lot of things that I'll miss but I'm looking forward to some new horizons."
Although Nexus was an important part of his music life, he also organized and directed World Drum Festivals, played in numerous chamber ensembles, collected instruments and music of other cultures, and wrote a book: Touched by Sound: A Drummer's Journey. "My spiritual life is inexorably linked to music," he wrote in the book's Preface. "Sound has always been at the very core of my being."
He decided to depart from Canadian percussion ensemble Nexus in 2002. Stated Wyre: "After forty-five years of travel and performance I want to devote more time to composing and exploring new horizons."
John Wyre was inducted into the PAS Hall of Fame with the other members of Nexus in 1999 at PASIC '99 in Columbus. He received a Sabian lifetime achievement award at PASIC 2005.
John's latest book, Touched by Sound, A Drummer’s Journey, is published by Buka Music.
He passed away on October 31, 2006 in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada, after a long illness. John Wyre was survived by his wife Jean Donelson Wyre.