Details, Explanation and Meaning About David Munrow

David Munrow Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

David Munrow (August 12 1942 - May 15 1976) was a musician and early music historian.

In 1960 David Munrow went to Peru, teaching English under the British Council Overseas Voluntary Scheme. He returned with Bolivian flutes and other obscure instruments. Studying English at Cambridge University he noticed a crumhorn on a friend's wall and threw himself into independent study that climaxed in his book Instruments of the Middle Age and Renaissance (1976). From his starting position as a pianist, singer and bassoonist he taught himself many long-dead instruments. He joined the Royal Shakespeare Company as a bassoonist but soon played instruments of Shakespeare's time. By 1967 he was a lecturer at Leicester University and married to Gillian Reid. He teamed up with Christopher Hogwood to form the Early Music Consort. Beginning in 1968 he toured the world, unearthing obscure instruments in every country he visited. He commissioned reconstructions of instruments related to the cornett and racket. In 1970 two television programs made him a household name - The Six Wives of Henry VIII and Elizabeth R.

He was a man of manic energy. In his short life he released over 50 albums, many of them still in print. As well as his recordings with the Early Music Consort, he recorded with Musica Reservata, Alfred Deller and the King's Singers. He recorded Bach and Monteverdi many times but his widest influence was in the backwaters of the Gothic and Renaissance period. On BBC Radio 3 he presented "Pied Piper", a multi-ethnic, centuries-spanning spread of music from Monteverdi to ELO.

Munrow committed suicide while suffering from depression.

Discography

(Highly selective)


This is an Article on David Munrow. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About David Munrow


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything