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David Munrow
Born: August 12, 1942; Birmingham, England   Died: May 15, 1976; Chesham Bois, England  
David John Munrow, in his brief career, was one of the most exciting and influential leaders of the British early music movement. After he completed his school education, he taught for a year in South America. He returned to England to attend Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he read for a degree in English from 1961 to 1964. He was an avid and talented flute player and while at Cambridge founded an organization to play early music. After he ...
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Featured David Munrow CDs & DVDs:
The David Munrow Edition - The Art Of Courtly Love
Release Date: 09/10/2002   Label: Virgin Classics Veritas Edition   Catalog: 61284   Number of Discs: 2
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Adam de la Halle (3)
Agricola, Alexander (1)
Alonso (1)
Anonymous (8)
Anthonello da Caserta (1)
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1)
Barbireau, Jacobus (1)
Bernard de Cluny (1)
Binchois, Gilles (1)
Borlet (1)
Cara, Marchetto (1)
Chastelain de Couci (1)
Clarke, Jeremiah (1)
De Vitry, Philippe (2)
Des Préz, Josquin (1)
Dickinson, Peter (1)
Dieupart, Charles (1)
Dufay, Guillaume (1)
Egidius de Pusiex (1)
Fogliano, Giacomo (1)
Gilles de Pusieux, Henri (1)
Grimace (1)
Guiot de Dijon (1)
Gulielmus, Magister (1)
Handel, George Frideric (1)
Isaac, Heinrich (1)
Jehannot de l'Escurel (1)
Johannes de Meruco (1)
Legrant, Johannes (1)
Machaut, Guillaume de (4)
Matteis, Nicola (1)
Matteo da Perugia (1)
Muset, Colin (2)
Parcham, Andrew (1)
Pepusch, Johann Christoph (1)
Pierre de Molins (1)
Purcell, Daniel (1)
Purcell, Henry (1)
Pykini (1)
Royllart, Philippus (1)
Scotto, Paolo (1)
Senfl, Ludwig (1)
Solage (1)
Telemann, Georg Philipp (4)
Thibaut, King of Navarre (1)
Traditional, Syrian (1)
Vivaldi, Antonio (1)
Zesso, Giovanni Battista (1)
Ziani, Marc'Antonio (1)
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Archiv Produktion (Dg) (1)
Decca (3)
Deutsche Grammophon (1)
Emi Classics (5)
Harmonia Mundi (1)
Nonesuch (1)
Testament (2)
Virgin Classics (1)
More Featured David Munrow CDs & DVDs:
The Art Of The Netherlands / Munrow, Early Music Consort
Release Date: 01/19/1992   Label: Emi Classics   Catalog: 64215   Number of Discs: 2
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Biography by Joseph Stevenson
David John Munrow, in his brief career, was one of the most exciting and influential leaders of the British early music movement. After he completed his school education, he taught for a year in South America. He returned to England to attend Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he read for a degree in English from 1961 to 1964. He was an avid and talented flute player and while at Cambridge founded an organization to play early music. After he graduated, he studied seventeenth century music at Birmingham University. It was his exposure to South American indigenous music, with its strong use of wooden instruments of the flute family, that stimulated his interest in such instruments, including the recorder.

At that time, interest in England in early music was growing. Munrow found himself in great demand as a recorder player. In 1967, he founded the Early Music Consort of London, with counter tenor James Bowman, violist Oliver Brookes, lutenist James Tyler, and harpsichordist Christopher Hogwood. They gave their first performance at Louvain the same year, making a London debut in 1968. Also in 1967, he became a lecturer in early music at Leicester University. Munrow's consort shook up the regular concert world and the growing early music establishment with its performing style. Their approach was entertaining, attractive, and exuberant, even brash, without traducing the boundaries of what was known to be authentic. Suddenly, "authentic" performances were no longer scholarly affairs of main interest to academics, but popular concert events eagerly attended by the general classical music audience.

The Consort appeared on television and in an intriguing development, the group also kept an interest in contemporary music. Therefore, several living composers wrote new music -- often in the most advanced musical style -- for these old-style instruments. These included Peter Dickinson (Translations, 1971), Elisabeth Lutyens (The Tears of Night, 1972), and Peter Maxwell Davies, who used the group as the on-stage band during his opera Taverner (1972), which is about a medieval English composer.

In 1969, Munrow became a teacher of the recorder at London's Royal Academy of Music. In 1971, he started making lecture appearances on BBC radio. His show, "Pied Piper," was aimed at young listeners and had a listenership among all ages. For reasons that remain obscure, he took his own life in 1976. Had he not, he surely would have been recognized as one of the most influential musicians of the last half of the twentieth century.
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