BINGHAM, JUDITH BIOGRAPHY(b 1952 )
Judith Bingham was born in Nottingham, grew up in
Sheffield and had already been composing actively for
many years when she entered the Royal Academy of
Music in 1970 to study composition and singing. Her
teachers included Alan Bush and Eric Fenby, later Hans
Keller, and Erich Vietheer (for singing).
Her individual musical voice soon attracted attention
and led to many requests for works, notably for the
King’s Singers, Peter Pears and the Songmakers’
Almanac. In 1977 she won the BBC Young Composer
Award and from 1983-96 she was a regular member of
the BBC Singers, for whom she has written eleven works:
at the end of 2005 she became their Associate Composer.
While her orchestral and choral works have made a
wide impact, Bingham has won particular acclaim for her
scores for brass – ensemble, band and solo; she is also
fast becoming recognised as a major composer of organ
music. In 2005 her huge orchestral piece Chartres was
selected for the Encore project and conducted by James
MacMillan. She was the 2004 winner of the Barlow Prize
for choral music, and has won three British Composer
awards in 2004 and 2006 for choral and liturgical music.
New projects include works for St Paul’s Cathedral, the
BBC Singers, choirs in Utah and Albuquerque, an organ
concerto, and a series of violin pieces for Peter Sheppard
Skaerved.
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