Recently Visiting scholar at Princeton, musicologist Malcolm Bruno lives in Wales. He is editor of a number of ongoing major publications and reconstructions for Breitkopf & Härtel and Bärenreiter Verlag in Germany.
Over the past 25 years, he has also produced many CD recordings for major labels specialising in baroque and choral repertoire, initially as Associate Director of the Taverner Consort and Players, and then as a series independent-producer for BBC Radio 3 and Public Radio International in the USA.
He is Artistic Director of Larvik Barokk Festival in Norway where he also chairs the board of the ensemble Barokksolistene which he founded with Bjarte Eike and Svein Eriksen in 2005.
Recently Visiting scholar at Princeton, musicologist Malcolm Bruno lives in Wales. He is editor of a number of ongoing major publications and reconstructions for Breitkopf & Härtel and Bärenreiter Verlag in Germany.
Over the past 25 years, he has also produced many CD recordings for major labels specialising in baroque and choral repertoire, initially as Associate Director of the Taverner Consort and Players, and then as a series independent-producer for BBC Radio 3 and Public Radio International in the USA.
He is Artistic Director of Larvik Barokk Festival in Norway where he also chairs the board of the ensemble Barokksolistene which he founded with Bjarte Eike and Svein Eriksen in 2005.
A musical childhood in America, first at the American Boychoir and then at the Juilliard and Manhattan Schools, led to undergraduate study at New York University. Moving to London then for postgraduate research – first for a doctorate in religious studies at King’s College and afterwards as a composer for an MMus at the Royal College of Music – gave rise to an Octavia scholarship to continue composition studies with Max Deutsch in Paris. Returning to Britain, he became music producer for Central Television in Birmingham, while establishing the Lufthansa Festival of Baroque Music in London with Ivor Bolton. With a growing interest then in period performance he produced Roger Norrington’s landmark Orfeo in 1986, before beginning his long association with Andrew Parrott. For further information view Publications.