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Russell Keable - Holiday Orchestra Music Director
Russell Keable has established a reputation as one of Britain’s most exciting
and versatile musicians. ‘Keable and his orchestra did magnificently’ wrote The
Guardian, ‘one of the most memorable evenings at the South Bank' said The
Musical Times. He performs with orchestras and choirs throughout the
British Isles including the London Mozart Players, Manchester Camerata,
Northern Ballet Orchestra, BBC Concert Orchestra, Viva and Royal Philharmonic
Orchestra. He is a regular guest conductor for the Royal Oman Symphony
Orchestra and has conducted in Prague and Paris (concerts filmed by French and
British television). His regular performing partners include many leading
national and international soloists (including Steven Isserlis, Tasmin Little,
Nikolai Demidenko, John Lill and Nicholas Daniel).
Keable, a graduate of Nottingham University, studied conducting with George
Hurst and Norman Del Mar at London's Royal College of Music, and violin with
Maria Lidka. His academic interests have led him to seek out much rare
repertoire. He revived Dvorak's opera Dimitrij for a British stage
première in Nottingham and a London première concert performance. Research in
Los Angeles led to a reconstruction of music from Erich Wolfgang Korngold's
film score for The Sea Hawk. Other revivals have included the British
première of Korngold's celebrated opera Die tote Stadt, Nadia
Boulanger's Faust et Hélène, Copland's ballet Grohg, and
less-well-known works by many British composers.
He broadcasts regularly on Radio 3 and was invited by the BBC to conduct the
world première of Errollyn Wallen's Spirit Symphony in the final concert
of the 2005 Listen Up Festival (broadcast live from the Royal Festival Hall); a
performance that was awarded the Radio 3 Listeners' Award as part of the 2005
British Composer Awards.
For 21 years he has been associated with Kensington Symphony Orchestra, one of
the UK’s finest non-professional orchestras, with whom he has led first
performances of works by many British composers (including Maxwell Davies,
Knussen, Woolrich, Holloway, Colin and David Matthews, Joby Talbot and John
McCabe). His British première of Aulis Sallinen's Symphony no.8 was praised by The
Sunday Times as a 'finely-judged performance'.
Russell is also in demand as a composer, arranger and teacher. He has written
works for many British ensembles and has had premières throughout the UK
(including at the Edinburgh, Norwich, Aberystwyth and Newbury Spring
Festivals). His opera Burning waters, commissioned by the Buxton
Festival as part of their millenium celebration, was premièred in July 2000. In
2005 he was appointed Director of Conducting for the University of Surrey in
Guildford.
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