Christopher Fifield
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Christopher Fifield is an English symphony orchestra conductor and classical music historian and musicologist based in London.
Currently the conductor of the Lambeth Orchestra,[1] Christopher Fifield is known for his exploration of neglected compositions, often from the 19th century Romantic repertoire.[2] He is also known to the classical music listening public[3] for his concert intermission talks from The Proms and other broadcasts for BBC Radio 3, the BBC World Service, and Classic FM.
He has authored biographies of Max Bruch, Kathleen Ferrier, and Hans Richter. Fifield's most recent book is a meticulously researched history of the Ibbs and Tillett classical music artists and management agency.
A native of Croydon,[1] Christopher Fifield studied at the University of Manchester and at the University of Cologne. He began his conducting career[3][4] as deputy music director at the opera house in Cape Town, South Africa. He served on the music staff at Glyndebourne for twelve years and as director of music at University College London for ten years.
Fifield frequently conducts for the Oxford and Cambridge Musical Club.[5] He has conducted the Jubilate Choir[6] and the Northampton Symphony Orchestra[7] as well as other orchestras in the United Kingdom and in other countries.[1]
Christopher Fifield wrote the ‘Conducting Wagner’ section of Wagner in Performance,[8] published in 1992 by the Yale University Press. He is a contributor to the current edition of The Oxford Companion to Music[9] a reviewer for MusicWeb International,[10] and participates in academic conferences.[11]
[edit] Books
- 1988: Max Bruch biography. Max Bruch: His Life and Works. New York: George Braziller. ISBN 0-80761-204-9.
- 1993: Hans Richter biography. Foreword by Georg Solti. True Artist and True Friend: A Biography of Hans Richter. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19816-157-3.
- 2003: Kathleen Ferrier biography. Letters and Diaries of Kathleen Ferrier. Woodbridge: Boydell. ISBN 1-84383-012-4.
- 2005: Ibbs and Tillett history. Ibbs and Tillett: The Rise and Fall of a Musical Empire. Aldershot and London: Ashgate Publishing, formerly Scolar Press. ISBN 1-84014-290-1.
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Lambeth Orchestra, based at All Saints Church, West Dulwich (2007). About the conductor. Lambeth Orchestra website.
- ^ Alan Howe (28 May 2007). Lambeth Orchestra. The Independent. “The conductor Christopher Fifield is well-known for his exploration of neglected, usually Romantic-era repertoire. Some six years ago, he presented the first performance in more than 80 years of the Symphony No 1 by the composer Frederic Cliffe, a work that he then went on to record in an outstanding performance for the Sterling label.” Review of Lambeth Orchestra conducted by Christopher Fifield at St. Luke's Church, West Norwood. Performance of Rutland Boughton's Third Symphony, Frederic Cliffe's Violin Concerto in D, and the Arnold Bax tone poem Tintagel.
- ^ a b Christopher Fifield, London. Easy-Speak, UK Agency for speakers (8 April 2004). “Talks: A Voice from the pit - incidents an opera house audience never gets to hear about… How did we get those chickens off the stage in Fidelio? What was the prompter doing with a hair dryer in his box?”
- ^ Len Mullenger, MusicWeb International (30 October 2000). Music on the Web Welcomes Christopher Fifield. British Classical Music Discussion List Archives.
- ^ A Brief History. Oxford and Cambridge Musical Club (last updated 17 February 2004).
- ^ The Jubilate Choir, based in Shirley, London. Our History. Jubilate website.
- ^ Conductors. Northampton Symphony Orchestra (Most recent revision 25 August 2007).
- ^ Barry Millington and Stewart Spencer, eds (1992). Wagner in Performance. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-30005-718-0.
- ^ Oxford University Press (2002). Contributors to this edition. The Oxford Companion to Music.
- ^ Christopher Fifield, Review of Richard Aldous biography of Malcolm Sargent: Tunes of Glory: The Life of Malcolm Sargent. MusicWeb International.
- ^ Conference Abstracts. Sixth Biennial Conference on Music in 19th-Century Britain, University of Birmingham Conference Park (July 2007).