Laurence Dreyfus

Laurence Dreyfus
Born 1952 (age 6566)
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Nationality American
Alma mater Yeshiva University
Juilliard School
Columbia University
Brussels Conservatoire
Occupation Musicologist, lecturer
Years active 1980–present
Home town Cherry Hill, New Jersey, United States
Musical career
Origin Cherry Hill, New Jersey, United States
Instruments Viola da gamba
Years active 1995–present

Laurence Dreyfus, FBA (born 1952) is an American musicologist and player of the viola da gamba who was University Lecturer and Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford.

Early life

Dreyfus was born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts, and lived in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, where he attended Cherry Hill High School West.[1] He earned a B.A. at Yeshiva University, studied cello under Leonard Rose at the Juilliard School, and earned his Ph.D. in Musicology at Columbia University, where he studied with the distinguished Bach scholar Christoph Wolff. Commuting from New York, he studied viola da gamba with Wieland Kuijken, earning two diplomas from the Brussels Conservatoire, including its Diplome supérieur with Highest Distinction.

Career

After teaching at Yale University, Stanford University, and The University of Chicago, Dreyfus moved in December 1992 to London to become Thurston Dart Professor of Performance Studies at King's College London and hold a Chair at the Royal Academy of Music (which that year elected him as an honorary member). In 2002, he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy for his musicological work.

Dreyfus is a noted scholar of both J. S. Bach and Richard Wagner. He has published three books with Harvard University Press: Bach's Continuo Group (1986), Bach and the Patterns of Invention (1996) (which won the Otto Kinkeldey Award for best book of the year from the American Musicological Society) and Wagner and the Erotic Impulse (2010).

As a performer, Dreyfus has made a number of solo and ensemble recordings, some of which have won major awards. As a soloist, he has recorded the viola da gamba sonatas of J.S. Bach, the Pièces de violes of Marin Marais,and Pièces de clavecin en concert of Jean-Philippe Rameau, all with harpsichordist Ketil Haugsand on the Simax label). He founded the viol consort Phantasm, which won one Gramophone Award in 1997 for their recording of Purcell's Fantasies and another in 2004 for its recording of Consorts by Orlando Gibbons; this disc was also a finalist for Gramophone's Record of the Year. Their 2005 CD "Four Temperaments," with Elizabethan music by William Byrd, Alfonso Ferrabosco the younger, Robert Parsons (composer) and Thomas Tallis was nominated for awards by Gramophone (magazine) and the BBC Music Magazine. The group has also recorded works by William Byrd, John Jenkins (composer), William Lawes, Richard Mico, Matthew Locke, and other composers, as well as Bach's Art of Fugue.

Views

In August 2015, Dreyfus was a signatory to a letter criticising The Jewish Chronicle's reporting of Corbyn's association with alleged antisemites.[2]

References

  1. "Chorale of 100 Voices To Sing in Cherry Hill", The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 15, 1970. Accessed January 1, 2018. "Two young Cherry Hill residents will appear with the group. They are Laurence Dreyfus, protege of renowned Cellist Leonard Rose, who will be accompanied by Ronald Kimmel for a cello solo."
  2. Dysch, Marcus (18 August 2015). "Anti-Israel activists attack JC for challenging Jeremy Corbyn". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
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