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Andrew Lawrence-King

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Andrew Lawrence-King (born in Guernsey 3 September 1959) is a harpist and early music specialist, and is currently the director of The Harp Consort. He also is also a conductor who directs from one of several continuo instruments, including harp, organ, harpsichord & psaltery.[1] He is also a countertenor singer.

Andrew Lawrence-King has founded Il Corago, a close-knit production team researching, performing and teaching historically informed stagings of early opera. Together with tenor Marco Beasley, Andrew directed the newly formed Baroque Opera Studio at the St Petersburg Academy of Early Music.

Early career

His musical career began as Head Chorister at the Cathedral and Parish Church of St Peter Port Guernsey, whence he won an Organ Scholarship to Selwyn College, Cambridge, graduating in Mathematics, and completing his studies at the London Early Music Centre.[2] He established himself as a continuo-player with Europe's foremost specialist ensembles and in 1988 co-founded and co-directed the continuo-group Tragicomedia with Stephen Stubbs, until the group split up. He joined Jordi Savall's Hesperion XX as harp soloist, and was appointed Professor of Harp and Continuo at the Akademie für Alte Musik Bremen. At the end of the 1990s he was replaced, historical harp was taught by Hannelore Devaere.

In 1994 Andrew Lawrence-King formed his own ensemble, The Harp Consort, and was signed up by Deutsche Harmonia Mundi for a seven-year series of solo and ensemble recordings:

  • Luz y Norte, the medieval 'opera' Ludus Danielis
  • Italian Concerto, on which he is both conductor and concerto soloist
  • La púrpura de la rosa, the first New World opera

His recital CDs include The Harp of Luduvico (Spanish and Italian renaissance) La Harpe Royale (French Baroque), His Majesty's Harper (John Dowland and William Byrd) and The Secret of the Semitones (Johann Sebastian Bach), and he has also recorded Antonio Vivaldi's The Four Seasons and George Frideric Handel's first opera, Almira.

Recent projects

The Harp Consort now records exclusively for Harmonia Mundi USA. Their chart-topping first release was Missa Mexicana: festive polyphony and popular dances from 17th-century Mexico. Their second CD, Miracles (songs by Gautier de Coincy, 13th -century Prior of Vic) won the Dutch "Edison" award: it was also Gramophone Magazine's Editor's Choice & The Daily Telegraph CD of the Year. Their latest release is El Arte de Fantasía: dances, tientos & chansons from the Spanish Golden Age.

Andrew Lawrence-King conducted a staged production of Peri's Euridice at the Los Angeles Getty Centre for the 400th anniversary of the earliest opera, and this season will direct Handel's Almira for the Helsinki Stadia.[3]

Accolades

His work on 17th-century dances with Steven Player & The Harp Consort has won the ensemble an unparalleled reputation for stylish and entertaining stage-shows, and his duo album with Paul Hillier was chosen by Elvis Costello as record of the year in Rolling Stone magazine. He has been awarded an honorary doctorate by Sheffield University for his achievements in Baroque opera. As harp soloist, he won the 2011 Grammy for Best Small Ensemble Performance in Dinastia Borgia directed by Jordi Savall.

Performances

He has led baroque operas and oratorios at:

  • La Scala, Milan
  • Sydney Opera House
  • Casals Hall, Tokyo
  • Berlin Philharmonie
  • Vienna Konzerthaus
  • New York's Carnegie Hall
  • Mexico City's Palacio de Bellas Artes.

Current activities

Andrew Lawrence-King now divides his time between solo recitals, tours with The Harp Consort, and appearances as guest director for orchestras, choirs and baroque operas in Europe, Scandinavia and the Americas, interspersed with worldwide performances of Luz y norte and Missa Mexicana. He is Professor of Early Harp & Continuo at the Escuela Superior de Musica de Catalunya (ESMUC) in Barcelona, and has been awarded a three-year fellowship by the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council AHRB to research Spanish Baroque music-drama. His first solo recital for Harmonia Mundi USA will be Chorégraphie: Music for Louis XIV's Dancing Masters.[4]

A keen sailor, Andrew holds the Royal Yachting Association's Ocean Yachtmaster certificate, and spends most of his free time aboard his boat, ‘Continuo’. His enjoyment of the sea is expressed in his revival of Guernesiaise traditional music, Les Travailleurs de la Mer: Ancient Songs from a Small Island.[citation needed]

References

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