Richard Gill (conductor)

Richard James Gill AO (born 4 November 1941 in Sydney) is an Australian conductor who has earned awards for his work. He conducts choral, orchestral and operatic works, and has been involved in music training and education. This is evident in his Discovery and Ears Wide Open series of concerts, where he takes selected works from the traditional and the contemporary classical music repertoire and analyses the works in a humorous and entertaining manner, trying to find what makes the works "tick" and to, as he says, listen to the music "with new ears". In August 2005 Gill was appointed Music director of the new, Melbourne-based Victorian Opera.

Repertoire

Gill's operatic repertoire has included performances with Opera Queensland, Opera Australia, the Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne Festivals, and Windmill Performing Arts. He has conducted the world premieres of Alan John's The Eighth Wonder (1995) and Moya Henderson's Lindy (2002) with Opera Australia, and Jonathan Mills' The Ghost Wife at the Melbourne International Arts Festival in 1999 (and again at London's Barbican Centre in 2002), and The Eternity Man at the Sydney Festival in 2004. For the Victorian Opera he has conducted the new Australian works The Love of the Nightingale by Richard Mills (2007) and Alan John's Through the Looking Glass (2008). His work in the concert hall includes concerts with all the major Australian orchestras.

In 2006 he appeared in the 4-part ABC documentary/reality series Operatunity Oz, which sought Australian singers with opera potential, and in the 2007 follow-up episode Operatunity Oz – Twelve Months On.

He has composed the music for Brisbane Girls Grammar School school song, "Nil sine labore".[1]

Posts

Prior to becoming a professional conductor, Richard Gill was a music teacher at Marsden High School, West Ryde, in Sydney. Among his students there was Kim Williams who later became a lifelong friend.[2] In 1969, he was the founding conductor of the Strathfield Symphony Orchestra in Sydney.[3] He continued as conductor in 1973/74, and returned in 1979 to conduct the orchestra's 10th anniversary concert. In 1971 he studied at the Orff Institute of the Mozarteum in Salzburg. He was later invited to teach at the summer schools in Salzburg; on one occasion he was one of the pianists in the version of Carmina Burana for two pianos and percussion, conducted by Carl Orff himself.[4] In 1982, he was invited as a principal presenter to the annual conference of the American Orff Schulwerk Association (AOSA); this led to further workshops and classes throughout the United States. Other posts include dean of the Western Australian Conservatorium of Music (1985–1990) and Director of Chorus at the Australian Opera (1990–1996).

In 2014 he was appointed to succeed Paul Stanhope as Musical Director of the Sydney Chamber Choir.

Awards

Awards include an Order of Australia Medal in 1994,[5] a Centenary Medal in 2001,[6] the Bernard Heinze Award for services to music in Australia, and an honorary doctorate from the Edith Cowan University of Western Australia for his service to Australian music and musicians. In 2001 he received the Australian Music Centre's award for 'Most Distinguished Contribution to the Presentation of Australian Composition by an Individual'. In December 2005, he was awarded the Don Banks Music Award 2006 by the Australia Council for the Arts. In 2016 he was promoted within the Order of Australia to Officer level.[7]

Guest appearances

He has been an occasional guest on ABC-TV's popular-music panel show Spicks and Specks.[8][9]

In January 2009, Richard Gill worked with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra's National Youth Orchestra (NYO) in their National Music Camp in Napier, New Zealand, on the occasion of NYO's 50th anniversary celebrations.[10]

References

  1. "School Song", Gazette, Spring 2010, p. 43
  2. Gill, Richard (2012). Give me excess of it – A Memoir. Pan Macmillan Australia. pp. 154–155. ISBN 9781742613642.
  3. Strathfield Symphony – About
  4. Limelight, February 2009, p. 40.
  5. Gill, Richard James – Medal of the Order of Australia, It's an Honour website, Australian Government
  6. Gill, Richard James – Centenary Medal, It's an Honour website, Australian Government
  7. It's an Honour: AO
  8. "Opera's siren song" by John Mangan, The Age (17 August 2008)
  9. Richard Gill at the Internet Movie Database
  10. "Information on the NZSO NYO's 50th year celebrations". Retrieved 4 February 2009.
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