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A native of Mercer Island, Washington, Ms. Thornton holds degrees from the Eastman School of Music and Northwestern University. In addition, she has completed her course work towards a Doctor of Musical Arts degree at Rice University. She has performed with the Grand Tetons Festival Orchestra, Strings in the Mountains, the Aspen Music Festival, the Solti Orchestral Project at Carnegie Hall, the National Repertory Orchestra, the National Orchestral Institute, and the Music Academy of the West. Her primary teachers include Walfrid Kujala, Bonita Boyd, Leone Buyse, Carol Wincenc, Anne Diener-Giles, and Richard Breitstein. Ms. Thornton has been a winner and finalist of several competitions, including the Seventeen Magazine and General Motors National Concerto Competition, The Flute Talk Competition, Northwestern University Concerto Competition, the Farwell Award for Excellence in Performance by the Chicago Musicians Club of Women and the National Flute Association High School Solo Competition. She has also appeared as soloist with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, the Greece (NY) Symphony, the Colorado Young Sinfonia, and at the National Flute Association’s Boston and Chicago conventions. Julie recently held the position of Lecturer in Flute at Colorado State University, and was a featured clinician at the 2006 Colorado Flute Association Flute Fair. Julie is married to Michael Thornton, Principal Horn of the Colorado Symphony Orchestra. They are the proud parents of Lauren Meredith, born in October 2005. They enjoy performing chamber works for Flute and Horn and perform together each summer at the Washington Island Music Festival in Door County, Wisconsin. Ms. Thornton can be heard on the London, Teldec, Naxos, and Koch International labels. |


Piccolo
and Flutist, Julie Duncan Thornton, joined the Colorado Symphony Orchestra
in 1997. During her tenure with the Colorado Symphony, Ms. Thornton has
become one of the most sought after orchestral piccolo players in the
country. She has performed extensively with the New York Philharmonic,
the Minnesota Orchestra and the Houston Symphony. Invitations to perform
have also been extended by the Chicago Symphony, the St. Louis Symphony,
the Honolulu Symphony and many others.