Patrick Allen | |
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Born | 17 October 1955 |
Occupation | Teacher and author |
Language | English |
Nationality | British |
Education | University of Leeds, University of Sussex, University of Strasbourg, SOAS |
Period | 1987–present |
Genre | Music Education |
Notable works | Singing Matters |
Notable awards | Times Educational Supplement Schoolbook Award, The Guardian Award for Secondary Teacher of the Year, NUT/MfY Teacher Award |
Website | |
www |
Patrick Allen (born 17 October 1955) is the English author of Singing Matters (Heinemann publishers), which won the Times Educational Supplement Schoolbook Award in 1999. [1] He also won The Guardian Award for Teacher of the Year in a Secondary School in 2004 [2] [3] and the NUT Teacher Award for "inspirational leadership of a music group" at the 2015 National Festival of Music for Youth. [4] [5] Until July 2015, he worked as an Advanced Skills Teacher, based at Ifield Community College in Crawley, England where he was also Head of Music and Chair of Arts. [6] He was awarded Advanced Skills Teacher status in 2001. [7] Allen is a UK judge for the Teaching Awards, [8] a music education consultant and a PhD research student at SOAS. [9]
Patrick Allen studied French, Music and English at three Universities (Leeds, Sussex and Strasbourg), and he began his career as a teacher of English and Drama. He switched to music teaching following MA studies at Sussex University. [10] His practical, hands-on approach to music proved popular with students and word of his success with classes and performing ensembles led to approaches from publishers in the 1990s.
Singing Matters (Heinemann 1997) was widely acclaimed in the educational and academic press and remains a very popular text and teaching tool with music educators in the United Kingdom and beyond. [11] [12] Allen's subsequent Heinemann publications, Developing Singing Matters (1999) and Composing Matters (2002) are also widely used in schools and provide a practical and inclusive repertoire of activities for secondary pupils. [13] [14] Allen also contributes to educational journals, and was a co-author of Music Suite, an interactive CD-ROM published by On-Line Classics (2004). [15]
His work as an Advanced Skills Teacher and his consultancy work have seen him provide support and training since 1998 for local education authorities and universities across the United Kingdom the National Association of Music Educators, The Scottish Association for Music Education, The Halle Orchestra, the Department for Education and Skills and a range of private training providers. [16]
Patrick Allen has been the director and conductor of this youth choir based at Ifield Community College since 1987. [17] As well as being seven times regional winners and national finalists in the National Festival of Music for Youth, [18] the choir was one of two choirs selected by the BBC in 2011 to represent the UK in the international Let the Peoples Sing choral festival. [19] The choir has performed five times on BBC Radio 3. In 2011 it was the subject of a feature on BBC Radio 3 Music Matters, [20] focusing on the integration of the school's Chagossian drummers, and later in the year performed in a broadcast gala concert from the BBC MediaCityUK in Salford Quays. [21] In 2012 the choir performed live on BBC Radio 3 from The Roundhouse in London. [22] As well as receiving widespread praise for its musical achievements the choir has also been praised for its inclusive approach, multicultural repertoire [23] and for "raising the aspirations" of its members. [24] The choir was the subject of a film by SVC Television, directed by Andrew Vere in 1996 [25] and has performed at world class venues such as The Royal Festival Hall, St Mark's Basilica in Venice and Barcelona Cathedral. The choir perform on Rihanna's single Towards the Sun (released March 2015), co-written and produced by former choir member, Tiago Carvalho. [26] [27] The song, featuring the choir and Patrick Allen as Choir Master, also appears in the DreamWorks Animation production Home: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, curated by Rihanna. [28] [29]
Patrick Allen is responsible for the formation and development of a drumming group at Ifield Community College consisting entirely of boys from the displaced Chagossian community, who had been arriving in Crawley from Mauritius since 2004. [30] The special musical culture and relationship between the performers led to immediate national interest, and integration with the choir. A first performance at the Royal College of Music for the National Association of Music Educators, [31] was followed by a performance at the Royal Geographical Society at the Chagos Regagne Conference [32] [33] and two performances with the BBC Singers in Crawley and at Maida Vale Studios, entitled Rhythms of the World. [34] In May 2011 they, and the choir, were the subject of a feature in The Times. [35] [36] The drummers performed with the college choir on BBC Radio 3 and were interviewed for BBC Radio in 2011. [37] Their journey and experience in Crawley is described in a blog, [38] and in a number of articles. [39] They have also come to the attention of academic researchers, including a conference at King's College London in March 2012. [40] The group have also had coverage in the Mauritian press [40] and won awards in the Crawley community. [41] [42]
Title | Publisher |
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Singing Matters ISBN 978-0435810153 | Heinemann 1997 Oxford |
Developing Singing Matters ISBN 978-0435810184 | Heinemann 1999 Oxford |
Composing Matters Pupil Book ISBN 978-0435811822 | Heinemann 2002 Oxford |
Composing Matters CD/CD-ROM ISBN 978-0435811808 | Heinemann 2002 Oxford |
Composing Matters Teacher Resource Pack ISBN 978-0435811815 | Heinemann 2002 Oxford |
Europe: World of Music ISBN 978-0431117768 | Heinemann Library 2008 Chicago |
Main Publication | Chapter |
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NAME Magazine (National Association of Music Educators) No.2 1999 | Singing Really Matters! [43] |
Bluebirds and Crows (NAME) ISBN 0 9505789-3-2 | Finding the Perfect Song -a look at classroom repertoire. [44] |
NAME Magazine (National Association of Music Educators) No.12 2004 | Are Public Examinations Damaging Music Education? [43] |
NAME Magazine (National Association of Music Educators) No.29 2007 | Motivating Students to Sing [43] |
SecEd Magazine 14 October 2010 | What I have learned from the Chagossians [45] |
Sussex Life Magazine December 2011 | Singing the World. [46] |
Constructing Critical Consciousness ed. Lea. Peter Lang (New York) 2012 | Working with Chagossian Teenagers in Crawley, England [47] |
Crawley is a town and borough in West Sussex, England. It is 28 miles (45 km) south of London, 18 miles (29 km) north of Brighton and Hove, and 32 miles (51 km) north-east of the county town of Chichester. Crawley covers an area of 17.36 square miles (44.96 km2) and had a population of 118,493 at the time of the 2021 Census.
The Chagossians are an Afro-Asian ethnic group originating from freed African slaves brought to the Chagos Islands, specifically Diego Garcia, Peros Banhos, and the Salomon island chain, in the late 18th century as well as people of Asian descent. Under international law, they are the indigenous people of the Chagos archipelago. Most Chagossians now live in Mauritius and the United Kingdom after being forcibly removed by the British government in the late 1960s and early 1970s so that Diego Garcia, the island where most Chagossians lived, could serve as the location for a United States military base. Today, no Chagossians are allowed to live on the island of Diego Garcia or anywhere in the Chagos archipelago, despite many of the islands they used to inhabit being over 160 km away from Diego Garcia.
Sir Stephen John Cleobury was an English organist and music director. He worked with the Choir of King's College, Cambridge, where he served as music director from 1982 to 2019, and with the BBC Singers.
Ifield is a former village and now one of 14 neighbourhoods within the town of Crawley in West Sussex, England. Ifield is in the west of the town and is bordered by Ifield West, Horsham, Langley Green to the north east, West Green to the east across the ring road and Gossops Green and Bewbush to the south across the Arun Valley railway line.
The Stephen Perse Foundation is a family of private schools in Cambridge and Saffron Walden for students aged 1 to 18.
Worth School is a private co-educational Roman Catholic boarding and day school for pupils from 11 to 18 years of age near Worth, West Sussex, England. Until 2008, Worth was exclusively a boys' school. The school is located within Worth Abbey, a Benedictine monastery, in 500 acres (2.0 km2) of Sussex countryside. It is one of the three prominent Benedictine independent boarding schools in the United Kingdom; the other two being Ampleforth and Downside. For the academic year 2015/16, Worth charged day pupils up to £7,275 per term, making it the 42nd most expensive HMC day school.
Jonathan Fa'afetai Lemalu is a New Zealand bass baritone opera singer. Born to Samoan parents who had emigrated to New Zealand, he was educated in Dunedin. His first singing teacher was Honor McKellar, who began teaching him while he attended Otago Boys' High School. He studied both Law and Music at the University of Otago, graduating with a Bachelor of Laws in 1999.
Crompton House CE School is a coeducational Church of England secondary school and sixth form located in the High Crompton area of Shaw and Crompton in the Metropolitan Borough of Oldham, Greater Manchester, England.
Susan Elizabeth Digby, Baroness Eatwell OBE, known as Suzi Digby, is a British choral conductor and music educator.
The Blue Coat Church of England School is a specialist secondary school and sixth form located in Coventry, England. It is an International Cross Of Nails (ICON) school, with links to schools all over the world. The school is funded by the state, with academy status. It is a specialist Music, Maths and Science academy.
Ifield Community College (ICC) is a maintained comprehensive secondary school in Crawley, England, for pupils aged 11 to 18.
St Colman's College is a Roman Catholic English-medium grammar school for boys, situated in Newry, County Armagh, Northern Ireland.
St Margaret's Church is an Anglican church in the Ifield neighbourhood of Crawley, a town and borough in West Sussex, England. It is the ancient parish church of the village of Ifield; the medieval settlement was expanded to form one of the New Town of Crawley's 13 neighbourhoods, and the church's modern parish now serves several other neighbourhoods as well.
Gareth Edmund Malone is an English choirmaster and broadcaster, self-described as an "animateur, presenter and populariser of choral singing". He is best known for his television appearances in programmes such as The Choir, which focus on singing and introducing choral music to new participants. Malone was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2012 Birthday Honours, for services to music.
Francis Edward Ifield OAM was a British-born Australian country music singer and guitarist who often incorporated yodelling into his music.
Ian Partridge is a retired English lyric tenor, whose repertoire ranged from Monteverdi, Bach and Handel, the Elizabethan lute songs, German, French and English songs, through to Schoenberg, Weill and Britten, and on to contemporary works. He formed a renowned vocal-piano duo with his sister Jennifer Partridge, with whom he worked for over 50 years. While concentrating mainly on songs, oratorio and lieder, he also recorded opera, and has an extensive discography. He is now a teacher and adjudicator, and conducts master classes in many countries.
The Chagos Islands national football team is a football team representing the territory of the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean. However, this area, which falls under the administration of the British Indian Ocean Territory, is uninhabited save for the presence of a US military base on the island of Diego Garcia, after the United Kingdom evicted the local population between 1967 and 1973. As a consequence, the team in fact represents the Chagossian diaspora around the world.
Jonathan Romesh Ranganathan is a British actor, comedian, and presenter with a Sri Lankan background. His style of comedy is deadpan and often self-deprecating.
"Towards the Sun" is a song by Barbadian singer Rihanna for the soundtrack to the 2015 film Home, in which she voices main character Tip. The song was premiered on BBC Radio 1 on February 9, 2015, and it was released for digital download as the soundtrack's lead single the same day by Westbury Road. The song was sent to mainstream radio on March 17, 2015 in the US. The song was written and produced by Tiago Carvalho and Gary Go, with additional writing by Rihanna.
Winifred Honor McKellar was a New Zealand mezzo-soprano opera singer and singing teacher, and was the first full-time lecturer in singing at the University of Otago in Dunedin. Her students included Jonathan Lemalu, Patrick Power and Matt Landreth. In 1989, she was awarded a Queen's Service Medal for services to music, and in 2012, she was made a life member of the New Zealand Association of Teachers of Singing.
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