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Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir

Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir

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  • Years Active: 1980s, 1990s

Biography

English baritone Paul Hillier is one of the leading figures, both as a singer and conductor, in the world wide early music movement and now makes his home in the United States, where he has shown increasing interest in new music. As a boy he was a chorister at St. Paul's Cathedral in London. This position, obtained only after competitive auditions, carries with it an opportunity to learn a wide expanse of choral repertoire, to receive a thorough musical education and general education at the St. Paul's Cathedral School, important lifelong contacts, and great prestige. After graduating from school he studied music at London's Guildhall. He returned to St. Paul's Cathedral in 1973 as its vicar-choral for one season. He was also a member of the Queen's Chapel Royal at Windsor Castle. In 1974 he made his solo recital debut at the Purcell Room in London. In the same year he co-founded the Hilliard Ensemble, becoming its music director. The ensemble soon became one of the world's best known early music vocal groups, and was much in demand for performances worldwide, making a number of best-selling and award winning recordings. The all male quartet specialized in Renaissance music. In 1980-1981 he taught as a visiting professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz. After that he began to spend an increasing amount of time in America. He was the Copland Colloquium Fellow at Amherst College in Massachusetts in 1984. He became more interested in New Music and tried to get the Hilliard Ensemble to branch out in that direction. That, and a wish to add female voices and engage in the more theatrical style of performance presentation led to his leaving the Ensemble. In 1990 he moved to the United States to become a professor of music at the University of California, Davis. He founded Theatre of Voices, an ensemble of male and female singers, specializing both in early and recent music, and performing in dynamic, theatrical stage presentations. Unlike the Hilliard Ensemble, it was planned to include a varying number of singers, depending on the demands of the performances. Theatre of Voices records exclusively for Harmonia Mundi USA, on which it has released a repertoire ranging from 12th century chant to music of Arvo Pärt, including Litany of the Whale by John Cage, and the selection of early American religious music, including hymns sung in the "shaped note" tradition. In 1996 Hillier left California to join the faculty of Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana as Director of its Early Music Institute. This is an interdisciplinary study program offering undergraduate and graduate degrees involving not just the study of ancient performance practice and musicology but also courses in literature, fine arts, and medieval studies in other departments and schools of the university. Hillier also is conductor of Indiana University's Pro Rate singers, it's early music choir. Since his move to the United States, Hillier has maintained his active career as a singer and conductor, appearing frequently in North America, Europe, and Japan, though he has relaxed this pace sufficiently to carry out his teaching and administrative responsibilities and also research and write. His books include 300 Years of English Partsongs, Romantic English Partsongs, The Catch Book, and a book on Estonian composer Arvo Pärt, and is serving as editor of a book of collected writings of composer Steve Reich. Hillier has won many prizes for recordings. He performs on the Harmonia Mundi, ECM, EMI, Finlandia, and Hyperion labels.
— Joseph Stevenson , All Music Guide

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