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Duncan Honeybourne

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Birth name
  
Duncan Honeybourne

Genres
  
Classical music

Role
  
Teacher

Name
  
Duncan Honeybourne

Years active
  
fl. 1990-


Duncan Honeybourne httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb6

Born
  
October 27, 1977 (age 47) England (
1977-10-27
)

Occupation(s)
  
Pianist, Teacher, Lecturer

Education
  
Birmingham Conservatoire, Royal Academy of Music

Similar People
  
Rupert Marshall‑Luck, John Joubert, Ernest John Moeran, Herbert Howells, City of Birmingham Symphon

Christopher edmunds piano sonata b minor duncan honeybourne


Duncan Honeybourne (born 27 October 1977 at Weymouth, Dorset) is an English pianist, teacher and lecturer.

Contents

Honeybourne began his studies at the Royal Academy of Music Junior Department, where he won the senior piano prize. He gave his first London recital at the age of fifteen and toured extensively throughout Britain as solo recitalist and concerto soloist. Awarded a place to continue at the RAM, he chose instead to move to the Birmingham Conservatoire where he graduated in 2000 with a B.Mus First Class Honours degree and won many prizes, and later received the honorary award of HonBC for professional distinction. His teachers included Rosemarie Wright and Philip Martin, and his further piano studies were in London with John York, Leeds with Fanny Waterman, and subsequently for three years on a Goldenweiser Scholarship in London with the Russian pianist Mikhail Kazakevich. He made his debut as soloist at Symphony Hall, Birmingham and the National Concert Hall, Dublin, in 1998.

Duncan Honeybourne has played concertos and given recitals at many major venues and at leading festivals in the UK, Ireland and Europe, and is especially renowned for his interpretations of 20th century British and Irish piano music. His solo performances have been frequently broadcast on BBC Radio 3, RTÉ Lyric FM and FM3 (Ireland), Radio Suisse Romande (Switzerland), YLE Radio 1 (Finland), SABC (South Africa), ABC Classic FM (Australia) and Radio New Zealand Concert, and he has appeared on BBC and RTÉ Television. Honeybourne has toured extensively as a recitalist, has partnered many renowned artists in chamber music and has given premieres of new works dedicated to him by several celebrated composers, including the Piano Sonata no.3 by John Joubert, the Piano Sonata no.2 by Andrew Downes and Four Nocturnes by Sadie Harrison. He gave the world premiere of the Andrew Downes Piano Concerto at Birmingham Town Hall on 1 March 2009.

Duncan Honeybourne is a Tutor in Piano at the University of Southampton and gives regular masterclasses and lecture recitals. He has devised and written several words and music programmes and is a frequent writer on music and musicians. He has created and directed several series of piano and chamber concerts and is Founder/Artistic Director of the Weymouth Lunchtime Chamber Concerts.

Duncan Honeybourne's discography on the EM Records and Divine Art labels includes the complete solo piano music of E.J. Moeran, premiere recordings of works by Walford Davies and Gurney alongside music by Stanford, Elgar, Vaughan Williams, Holst, Bax, Howells, Pitfield and Fleischmann. His CD "A Forgotten English Romantic", exploring the piano music of composer, poet and priest Greville Cooke, was a MusicWeb International Recording of the Year in 2014.

Robert schumann 5 stucke im volkston op 102 benjamin birtle cello duncan honeybourne piano


References

Duncan Honeybourne Wikipedia


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