David Skinner

David Skinner is a British musicologist and choir director. He works at the University of Cambridge, where he is the director of music at Sidney Sussex College and is an affiliated lecturer, teaching historical and practical topics from the medieval and Renaissance periods. He is the founder of the vocal consort Alamire, and the cofounder of the vocal ensembles Magdala and The Cardinall's Musick. He has produced more than 25 recordings. He has been associated with a number of award-winning projects (including two Gramophone Awards and three runners up; Diapason d'Or; Deutsche Schallplatten; and a Grammy nomination).[citation needed ]

Skinner grew up in the United States.[until when? ][citation needed ] Skinner was educated at the University of Edinburgh. From 1989 to 1994, Skinner was a choral scholar at Christ Church of the University of Oxford. He would receive his DPhil at Christ Church in 1995 for a biography of Nicholas Ludford and a critical edition of Ludford's antiphons.[citation needed ] From 1997 to 2001, Skinner was a postdoctoral fellow at Christ Church. He was a member of the Christ Church Cathedral choir for six years,[when? ] as an academical clerk and a lay clerk.[citation needed ]

Skinner has taught at the University of Oxford, University of Glasgow, University of Cambridge, and Royal Holloway College.[when? ] Skinner was a lecturer in music at Magdalen College at the University of Oxford from 2001 to 2006.

With Andrew Carwood, Skinner cofounded The Cardinall's Musick in 1989. Skinner is the artistic director for the group, which in 2010 won the Gramophone magazine's ‘Recording of the Year’. This was only the second time that a recording of Early Music had won this award.

Skinner founded the consort Alamire in 2005. With the music group Fretwork and the Choir of Sidney Sussex College, Alamire won "Editor's Choice" and "CD of the Month" in Gramophone for February 2008. In 2011, Alamire commenced a ten-year programme with Obsidian Records to explore English choral music between the 15th and mid-17th century, although the death of Martin Souter, Obsidian's founder, interrupted this project. Subsequent releases have appeared on the Inventa Records label.

Skinner received a 2015 Gramophone Award for Alamire's recording of The Spy's Choirbook in this series, and their next recording, of Anne Boleyn's Songbook, won Australia's Limelight Award and was nominated for a BBC Music Magazine Award. The last project in the series to date built on Skinner's identification of Henry VIII's last queen Catherine Parr as author of an alternative text for one of Thomas Tallis's major motets.

His 2012 release of the works of the Renaissance composer Thomas Weelkes with the Choir of Sidney Sussex College was nominated for a Gramophone Award as well, with critics praising the choir's "exemplary ensemble and intonation, beauty of tone, clarity of diction, and interpretive expressiveness".[citation needed ]

He is the father of singer-songwriter Robin Daniel Skinner, known professionally as Cavetown.

Details

Vorname:David
Geburtsdatum:1964 (♑ Steinbock)
60. Geburtstag
Alter:60Jahre 3Monate 26Tage
Nationalität:Vereinigtes Königreich
Sprachen:Englisch;
Geschlecht:♂männlich
Berufe:Musikwissenschaftler,

Merkmalsdaten

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VIAF:134170068
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LCNAF:n94117852
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Datenstand: 27.04.2024 01:09:36Uhr