
David Hurley, countertenor
Robin Tyson, countertenor
Paul Phoenix, tenor
Philip Lawson, baritone
Christopher Gabbitas, baritone
Stephen Connolly, bass
www.kingssingers.com
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Founded at King's College in Cambridge in 1968, the King’s Singers are one of the world's most sought-after and acclaimed vocal ensembles. Known for presenting diverse programs encompassing a wide range of repertoire, they have performed throughout North America in such prestigious venues as New York's Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, Washington’s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, in the major halls of Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and San Francisco, and at major American music festivals such as Tanglewood, Ravinia, the Hollywood Bowl, Wolf Trap and Interlochen. In addition to the King’s Singers’ countless a cappella recitals, the ensemble has appeared with the symphonies of Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Detroit, Fort Worth, Minnesota, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and Toronto, as well as the National Symphony Orchestra, and the New York, Boston and Cincinnati Pops Orchestras. In February 2002, the ensemble performed for the second time with the renowned Mormon Tabernacle Choir as part of the Olympic Arts Festival at the Winter Olympic games in Salt Lake City. The Washington Post has written: “The singing was technically breathtaking, luxuriously beautiful and musically intact.”
Internationally, King’s Singers uphold a strong presence across most of the globe. The group has performed in the major halls of London, Paris, Rome, Salzburg, Vienna, Amsterdam, Budapest, Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Beirut, Taipei, Hong Kong, Macao, Seoul, Tokyo and Mexico City, among others. They have toured throughout almost every European country from Iceland to Turkey and have ventured as far abroad as South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.
This renowned ensemble shows its versatility by working with other fine musicians on collaborative projects. Their widely acclaimed 2005 recording, “Sacred Bridges,” with the Middle Eastern musicians of Sarband, was recently chosen as Editor’s Choice by Gramophone magazine. Other collaborations have included performances with pianist Emanuel Ax and percussionist, Evelyn Glennie, jazz with the Orchestra di Santa Cecilia in Rome, Lebanese folksongs with the singer Fadia El-Hage and Spanish Renaissance music with The Harp Consort. As part of a strong commitment to music education, the King’s Singers frequently teach as part of their international performance schedule, giving presentations and master classes. They are the Prince Consort Ensemble in Residence at the Royal College of Music in London and sustain a bi-annual teaching post at the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival in Germany.
The King’s Singers have explored new music since their inception and continue to maintain this tradition. Over the past three decades, they have commissioned over 200 works from a host of prominent contemporary composers including Richard Rodney Bennett, Luciano Berio, Peter Maxwell Davies, György Ligeti, Steve Martland, Gian Carlo Menotti, Krysztof Penderecki, Ned Rorem, John Rutter, Gunther Schuller, Toru Takemitsu and John Tavener. American composer Libby Larsen wrote a set of songs for the King’s Singers, “A Lover’s Journey”, which was premiered at their 2001 Valentine’s Day concert in New York City.
Most recently, the ensemble commissioned seven composers and poets to create works for The Oriana Collection, a compilation of world premieres that was presented at the 2002 London Proms in honor of the Golden Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. Of the performance, The London Times stated, “the six voices of the King’s Singers achieved an impressive intimacy.” The Triumphs of Oriana was featured on disc, released to coincide with the Jubilee event and featured as part of the Proms performance.
For the 2005-2006 season, cross country tours of the United States and Canada bring the ensemble to Connecticut, Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Arkansas, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, Texas and Utah as well as Calgary, Canada. International performances this season will take the group again to Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan in Asia, as well as performing for their many faithful fans in Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy, Holland and their home turf of the United Kingdom.
This extraordinary vocal ensemble is equally at home singing Renaissance madrigals, transcriptions of orchestral classics, folk music in various languages and popular songs. This wide-ranging repertoire is reflected in the ensemble's more than 70 recordings, which have won several Grammy nominations. In January 2001, King’s Singers received another Grammy award nomination in the category of “Best Classical Crossover Recording” for Circle of Life (RCA Victor), an orchestral recording featuring popular songs from hit films with the Metropole Orchestra of Holland conducted by Carl Davis. Chanson d'Amour, a collection of international love songs, reached the top ten on the Billboard crossover charts. Other recordings in the canon run the gamut from Annie Laurie – Folk Songs of the British Isles to Good Vibrations, featuring unique arrangements of pop songs by Paul Simon, Billy Joel and Phil Collins, among others. The ensemble’s first Christmas recording in ten years, released by Signum in 2003, included holiday favorites that reflect a traditional English Carol service, while their CD, Guasaldo - Tenebrae Responsories for Maunday Thursday, features music recorded in the acoustical splendor of Douai Abbey in Berkshire, England. A recording of music contemporary to the period of the infamous Gunpowder Plot of 1605 was featured on Treason and Discord, coinciding with the 400th anniversary of that attempt to blow up the Houses of Parliament in London.
In addition to their sold-out concerts in recital, orchestral and festival venues worldwide, the King’s Singers’ efforts to share their artistry extend to numerous workshops and master classes with choral ensembles, including student, amateur and professional groups. Their video catalogue has been enhanced with an educational program produced by Hal Leonard entitled King’s Singers: A Workshop, featuring excerpts of master classes and concerts held in Dallas’s Meyerson Symphony Center. This follows the earlier video The Art of The King's Singers, a documentary-style program showing the everyday life of the sextet on the road, as well as in rehearsal, performance, and master class settings.
A new performance DVD is already on sale in Europe and its release is eagerly anticipated here in the U.S.
The King’s Singers are familiar to American television audiences through their numerous television appearances, including Evening at Pops with the Boston Pops; their own six-part series entitled The King's Singers Madrigal History Tour, broadcast on A&E; an Emmy award-winning ABC Christmas special with Julie Andrews, Plácido Domingo and John Denver; and numerous appearances on the The Tonight Show and NBC’s Today show. Parents and children alike recognize them from their appearance on PBS's Newton's Apple, and from a special promotional spot produced by PBS, which features the King’s Singers’ signature song, You Are the New Day. The ensemble has been heard frequently on the American Public Radio and National Public Radio networks, including NPR’s Performance Today and Minnesota Public Radio's Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor, and St. Paul Sunday Morning.
The Washington Post has written: "The singing was technically breathtaking, luxuriously beautiful and musically intact.”
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