Andrew Wilson-Dickson

Last updated

Andrew Wilson-Dickson
Andrew Wilson-Dickson rehearsing Dido and Aeneas, Oct 2012.jpg
Born (1946-01-20) 20 January 1946 (age 77)
London, England
NationalityBritish
Alma mater Magdalene College, Cambridge
OccupationMusician
Employer Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama
Relatives Julia Wilson-Dickson (sister)
Website wilson-dickson.co.uk

Andrew Wilson-Dickson (born 1946) is a British composer, pianist and an authority on early music practice.

Contents

Biography

Wilson-Dickson was born in London on 20 January 1946. He attended Marlborough College where in a school music competition he was spotted by Sidney Watson who offered him a scholarship to Christ Church, Oxford, in spite of unfavourable A-level results. He turned this down in favour of an exhibition to Magdalene College, Cambridge, where he received piano lessons from Lamar Crowson and John Lill. [1] Later he held the post of organ scholar at York Minster where he studied the organ with Nicholas Danby and Francis Jackson.

He was appointed as one of the first members of staff of the newly formed University of Leicester music department in 1970.

In 1984 he was appointed to the staff of the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama where his focus on period music led to the creation there of an Early Music Department in 1999. [2] He was made an Honorary Fellow of the college in 2005. [3]

Now semi-retired, he divides his time between his homes in Cardiff and the south of France. He is the brother of the voice and dialect coach Julia Wilson-Dickson.

Composition

He began composition at school and has continued to compose ever since. In 1984, just prior to his move to Wales to work at the Welsh College of Music and Drama, he won the Tlws y Cerddor prize at the Welsh National Eisteddfod. [4] He won the Bournemouth-Parry International Festival composition prize in 1999 [5] and has received numerous commissions for orchestral works, opera and chamber music. He has written three chamber operas, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (1977), [6] :454Errors (1980) [6] :155 and Wycliffe (1984). In 2014 he produced his large-scale oratorio Karuṇā [7] on the theme of world peace. It received its first performance on 8 November 2014 conducted by the composer and with the Welsh Camerata, for whom the piece had been written, and soloists including Emma Kirkby. The piece received its second performance on 24 September 2016 at St John's Church, Waterloo, with the Choir of the 21st Century under the baton of Howard Williams. In 2016 he finished a fresh reconstruction of J S Bach's St Mark Passion for which he composed the recitatives and a number of short choruses in the style of the great master. [8] This received its first performance in Cardiff on Good Friday, 26 March 2016 [9]

Performance

He is known as an accompanist on piano and harpsichord, and is also an authority on performance practice on strings, specifically viols and the violone. [2] He has performed in BBC television and radio and concerts throughout the UK on piano, particularly the duet and two-piano repertoire, and internationally on harpsichord in chamber music and as continuo for professional orchestras and chamber groups. In 1992 he founded the Welsh Baroque Orchestra. [10] He has also directed a number of choirs, and currently directs the Welsh Camerata which he was invited to lead on its foundation in 2004. [11] In 2016 he was appointed to direct Devon Baroque, the principal orchestra in south west England specialising in baroque and early classical music played on period instruments.

Authorship

He has authored a book The Story of Christian Music: An Illustrated Guide to All the Major Traditions of Music in Worship which has been translated into a number of languages. [12] He has also written articles for The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2000 edition) [13] and for magazines and journals including The Consort, BBC Music and Choir and Organ.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frank Martin (composer)</span> Swiss composer (1890-1974)

Frank Martin was a Swiss composer, who spent much of his life in the Netherlands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James MacMillan</span> Scottish composer and conductor

Sir James Loy MacMillan, is a Scottish classical composer and conductor.

Joseph Horovitz was an Austrian-born British composer and conductor best known for his 1970 pop cantata Captain Noah and his Floating Zoo, which achieved widespread popularity in schools. Horovitz also composed music for television, including the theme music for the Thames Television series Rumpole of the Bailey, and was a prolific composer of ballet, orchestral, brass band, wind band and chamber music. He considered his fifth string quartet (1969) to be his best work.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Masaaki Suzuki</span>

Masaaki Suzuki is a Japanese organist, harpsichordist and conductor, and the founder and music director of the Bach Collegium Japan. With this ensemble he is recording the complete choral works of Johann Sebastian Bach for the Swedish label BIS Records, for which he is also recording Bach's concertos, orchestral suites, and solo works for harpsichord and organ. He is also an artist-in-residence at Yale University and the principal guest conductor of its Schola Cantorum, and has conducted orchestras and choruses around the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ton Koopman</span> Dutch conductor and harpsichordist (b. 1944)

Antonius Gerhardus Michael Koopman, known professionally as Ton Koopman, is a Dutch conductor, organist, harpsichordist, and musicologist, primarily known for being the founder and director of the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir.

Joshua Rifkin is an American conductor, pianist, and musicologist; he is currently a professor of music at Boston University. As a performer he has recorded music by composers from Antoine Busnois to Silvestre Revueltas, and as a scholar has published research on composers from the Renaissance to the 20th century.

John Hardy is an English-born composer who has been commissioned by the Arts Council/National Lottery, the BBC, Welsh National Opera and the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, among others. His work includes opera, choral and orchestral pieces, site-specific theatre events and film.

Robin Blaze is a British countertenor.

The St Mark Passion, BWV 247, is a lost Passion setting by Johann Sebastian Bach, first performed in Leipzig on Good Friday, 23 March 1731. Though Bach's music is lost, the libretto by Picander is still extant, and from this, the work can to some degree be reconstructed.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harold Boatrite</span> American composer (1932–2021)

Harold Boatrite was an American composer.

Onutė Narbutaitė is a Lithuanian composer.

Hans Vogt was a German composer and conductor.

Gary Cooper is an English conductor and classical keyboardist who specialises in the harpsichord and fortepiano. He is known as an interpreter of the keyboard music of Bach and Mozart, and as a conductor of historically informed performances of music from the Renaissance, Baroque, Classical and Romantic periods.

James Gilchrist is a British tenor specialising in recital and oratorio singing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Organ concertos, Op. 4 (Handel)</span>

The Handel organ concertos, Op. 4, HWV 289–294, are six organ concertos for chamber organ and orchestra composed by George Frideric Handel in London between 1735 and 1736 and published in 1738 by the printing company of John Walsh. Written as interludes in performances of oratorios in Covent Garden, they were the first works of their kind for this combination of instruments and served as a model for later composers.

John Butt is an English orchestral and choral conductor, organist, harpsichordist and scholar. He holds the Gardiner Chair of Music at the University of Glasgow and is music director of the Dunedin Consort with whom he has made award-winning recordings in historically informed performance. He is a prolific scholar, conductor and performer of works by Johann Sebastian Bach.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mona Lyn Reese</span> American composer

Mona Lyn Reese is an American composer, best known for her operas and choral music. Her work is melodic and accessible with an emphasis on driving or complex rhythms, movement, and contrasting textures. Her music communicates and expresses emotions traditionally or experimentally without allowing a prevailing fashion to dictate style, form, or harmony.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Julian Perkins</span> British early music conductor and keyboard player

Julian Perkins is a British conductor and keyboard player. Shortlisted for the Gramophone Award in 2021, he is Artistic Director of the Portland Baroque Orchestra in the USA. He lives in London, England and is also Founder Director of the early music ensemble Sounds Baroque and Artistic Director of Cambridge Handel Opera Company.

The Welsh Camerata is a chamber choir of 25-30 singers based in Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom, specialising in the performance of early music. The choir is constituted as a company limited by guarantee.

References

  1. "Keyboard player". wilson-dickson.co.uk.
  2. 1 2 "RWCMD Andrew Wilson-Dickson". Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama .
  3. "Python star and writer honoured". BBC . 1 July 2005.
  4. "Andrew Wilson-Dickson composer" (PDF).
  5. "Biographical information".
  6. 1 2 Griffel, Margaret Ross (2013). Operas in English : A Dictionary (Rev. ed.). Lanham, Martland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN   9780810883253.
  7. Power, Steph (4 December 2014). "Welsh Camerata: Karuṇā – An oratorio by Andrew Wilson-Dickson". Wales Arts Review .
  8. "Review".BBC Wales – Music for the Passion of Christ
  9. "Review". Archived from the original on 17 November 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2016.Classical-music.com J S Bach's St Mark Passion
  10. "Composers of Welsh – Andrew W Dickson". www.composersofwales.org. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
  11. "Director – Welsh Camerata". www.welshcamerata.com.
  12. Wilson-Dickson, Andrew (2003). The Story of Christian Music : From Gregorian Chant to Black Gospel : An Authoritative Illustrated Guide to All the Major Traditions of Music for Worship. Oxford: A Lion Book. ISBN   9780745951195. OCLC   52474167.
  13. Sadie, Stanley, ed. (2001). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2. ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN   978-0333608005.