Kevin Mallon is a Northern Irish classical conductor, who now lives in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Kevin Mallon was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey but at an early age he went to live in Belfast, Northern Ireland and became a student at St. Malachy's College. He won a scholarship to Chetham's School of Music in Manchester, England, where he was influenced by John Eliot Gardiner. He later studied composition with Peter Maxwell Davies at Dartington College of Arts, and studied violin at the Royal Northern College of Music.[ citation needed ]
Mallon played violin with orchestras such as the Hallé Orchestra and the BBC Philharmonic, and later became concertmaster for Le Concert Spirituel and Les Arts Florissants. He performed with these groups around the world, in many European countries, in the United States and Canada, and in Asia. In 1993 he accepted positions with the University of Toronto and Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra. In 1996, Mallon founded the Aradia Ensemble, of which he is the music director. [1] With this early music group, and with the Toronto Chamber Orchestra, of which Mallon is music director, he has recorded more than fifty CDs for the Naxos label, including works by Buxtehude, Charpentier, Handel, Lully, Purcell and Vivaldi.[ citation needed ]
Mallon also conducts operas, working with the contemporary opera company Opera Anonymous, and with other orchestras, with whom he has conducted operas by Handel, Mozart and Vivaldi, among others. From 2004 to 2009, he was artistic director of Ireland's Opera 2005, formed to celebrate Cork's tenure as European Cultural Capital. This company had considerable success, being nominated for Three Irish Times Theatre Awards.[ citation needed ]
• Mozart, Marriage of Figaro, February 2005 (Irish Times Awards nomination) • Bizet, Carmen, June 2005 (Co-production with Castleward Opera) • Weill, Threepenny Opera, June 2006 • Rossini, Barber of Seville, November 2006 (Irish Times Awards nomination) • Lehar, Merry Widow, June 2007 • Mozart, Don Giovanni, October 2007 • Verdi Ballo in Machera, September 2008 (Irish Times Awards nomination)
In 2009, Mallon was touring conductor for the Odessa Opera Theatre, Odessa, Ukraine. He created new productions of Carmen and Don Giovanni and conducted these on tour to the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxemburg and Spain. He conducts the West Side Chamber Orchestra, based in New York City, and is music director of Thirteen Strings, a chamber ensemble based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. In 2010, Mallon composed and conducted music for the Camelot TV series. In 2013, he was appointed as the new musical director of Orchestra Toronto, taking the podium to conduct the orchestra's 2nd concert in its 60th anniversary season on 8 December 2013. [2]
He has described his conducting philosophy as follows:
Perhaps also of interest, is the transition I made from violinist to conductor. I was a good violinist, but I believe I am a better conductor. Maybe you need that self-belief to be a conductor—but it’s not meant in an arrogant fashion. Indeed, in of myself I am often full of huge Irish Catholic self doubts! All that to say, is that I have always known that I had my limitations as a violinist, but that I could rally many personal resources together to inspire musicians and to achieve a unified result, which combines everyone’s skills and contribution ... (It often sounds a bit new age-y, but when I conduct I focus on a point in space above the performers and I imagine everyone’s creative spirit converging on this point. Even if it is imaginary, it helps define that music is something that flows through you and comes from a spiritual place—and hopefully leaves your own ego aside in the process. – Or at very least you are not the dominating spirit!) ... Further to this is the notion that you are trying to achieve something that is beyond good or bad, right or wrong. If everyone is inspired to focus on a strong musical vision, one that is achieved together, then the performers can let go of the tensions and stress and fear of playing badly. When it works well, one can feel the flow of the music. On a more practical level, I have discovered that if you are an a***hole in rehearsal you eat alone that evening—something that can lead to a lonely life on the road. Better to be a colleague—to treat everyone as equal, making it clear that they have a job and you have a job—that none is more important than the other. (Not that “all are equal but some are more equal than others!”) That way you can enjoy a drink with friends- God help the tyrannical conductor![ citation needed ]
Sir Neville Marriner, was an English violinist and "one of the world's greatest conductors". Gramophone lists Marriner as one of the 50 greatest conductors and another compilation ranks Marriner #14 of the 18 "Greatest and Most Famous Conductors of All Time". He founded the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, and his partnership with them is the most recorded of any orchestra and conductor.
Trevor David Pinnock is a British harpsichordist and conductor.
The Juno Award for "Classical Album of the Year" has been awarded since 1994, as recognition each year for the best vocal classical music album in Canada.
Simon Andrew Thomas Standage is an English violinist and conductor best known for playing and conducting music of the baroque and classical eras on original instruments.
George Chlitsios is a Greek conductor and composer.
Lorenzo Regazzo, is an opera singer. His voice can be categorised as bass, bass-baritone or basso cantante. He is especially well known for interpreting Baroque, Classical, and bel canto repertoire. Among the qualities frequently noted by the critical press are his virtuosic coloratura technique, sumptuous tone, and vivid stage presence.
Ransom Wilson is an American flutist, conductor, and educator.
Joyce DiDonato is an American lyric-coloratura mezzo-soprano. She is notable for her interpretations of operas and concert works in the 19th-century romantic era in addition to works by Handel and Mozart.
Matthew White is a Canadian countertenor.
The Toronto Chamber Orchestra was founded by violinist and conductor Kevin Mallon.
Jean-Christophe Spinosi is a French conductor and violinist, the founder of French orchestra Ensemble Matheus.
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.
Martin Pearlman is an American conductor, harpsichordist, composer, and early music specialist. He founded the first permanent Baroque orchestra in North America with Boston Baroque in 1973–74. Many of its original players went on to play in or direct other ensembles in what became a growing field in the American music scene. He later founded the chorus of that ensemble and has been the music director of Boston Baroque from its inception up to the present day.
Adrian Simon Beers MBE was a British double bass player and teacher at the Royal College of Music and the Royal Northern College of Music. He was a principal player in the Philharmonia Orchestra and the English Chamber Orchestra, and a chamber musician, notably in the Melos Ensemble that he helped found.
Valentin Radu is founder, artistic director and conductor of Vox Ama Deus, with performances at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia and other various city, suburban, and Main Line area venues, has led numerous orchestras and vocal ensembles in Europe and the U.S., including the Hungarian National Philharmonic, Bucharest, Arad, Oradea Philharmonics, the Budapest Chamber Orchestra and the Romania National Radio Orchestra. In 1996 he conducted the Bucharest Philharmonic in Handel's Messiah, and in 1997 led the Romanian National Radio Orchestra in Handel's Acis and Galatea.
The International Classical Music Awards (ICMA) are music awards first awarded 6 April 2011. ICMA replace the Cannes Classical Awards formerly awarded at MIDEM. The jury consists of music critics of magazines Andante, Crescendo, Fono Forum, Gramofon, Kultura, Musica, Musik & Theater, Opera, Pizzicato, Rondo Classic, Scherzo, with radio stations MDR Kultur (Germany), Orpheus Radio 99.2FM (Russia), Radio 100,7 (Luxembourg), the International Music and Media Centre (IMZ) (Austria), website Resmusica.com (France) and radio Classic (Finland).
Diego Fasolis is a Swiss classical organist and conductor, the leader of the ensemble I Barocchisti. He has conducted operas in historically informed performance at major European opera houses and festivals, and has made award-winning recordings.
Christian Curnyn is a British conductor, harpsichordist and baroque music specialist.
Scott Yoo is an American conductor and violinist. He was appointed Chief Conductor and Artistic Director of the Mexico City Philharmonic Orchestra in 2016. He hosts the PBS TV series Now Hear This.
Riccardo Minasi is an Italian violinist and conductor in the field of historically informed performance.