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Biography
Conductor James Ross won scholarships to Harrow
School in London and to Christ Church at Oxford
University. There he studied history, took a master's degree in
music and a doctorate on French
opera under Roger
Parker, winning the Sir Donald Tovey Prize. He was a finalist in the BBC
Philharmonic Orchestra's 1998 Conducting Competition and since
then has conducted in Austria, Belgium, Bosnia,
Canada, China, Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Italy, Serbia, Spain, Sri
Lanka and the
USA. He is the Music Director of St
Albans Symphony Orchestra, Oxford’s
Christ Church Festival Orchestra, The
Oxford Opera Company, Sidcup
Symphony Orchestra, Haslemere
Symphony Orchestra and Chorus,
Welwyn Garden City Orchestra and
Chorus, the Royal College of Paediatrics Orchestra and
Chorus. Previous positions include
conductor of Oxford
University Sinfonietta. He has performed in leading
UK concert halls, including Symphony
Hall,
Birmingham, St. John's Smith
Square, London, and the Sheldonian
Theatre,
Oxford.
He
has conducted
over 750 works, ranging from the Baroque, most of the standard symphonic and choral repertoire,
to contemporary music by Boulez, Ligeti, Stockhausen and
many more;
accompanying includes Mahler, Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
with Sir Thomas Allen,
Elgar
'Cello Concerto, Brahms Double Concerto and Tchaikovsky Rococo Variations with Guy Johnston,
and concerts with members of The National Opera Studio;
major 20th-Century works include Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring; Schoenberg, Pierrot
Lunaire; Janácek, Sinfonietta and Bartók, Music for
Strings, Percussion and Celesta.
He has also conducted much
specialist French music and has a strong interest in contemporary music.
Numerous first performances including New
Music Days with Roxanna Panufnik,
Paul Patterson and members of the City
of London Sinfonia,
supported by the Arts
Council.
In
1996 he was an assistant for Bernard Haitink’s Don
Carlos recording with The Royal
Opera, London. His teachers have included Tsung Yeh (USA
/ Hong Kong),
Zdenek Bilek (Czech Republic), Victor
Feldbrill (Canada), Ernst Schelle (Switzerland) and Alan Hazeldine
(UK); he has also received advice
from Bernard
Haitink, Paul Daniel,
Peter Donohoe,
Sir David Willcocks and
Sir Charles
Mackerras. He is a frequent
guest speaker, including at the Bibliothèque
Nationale de France; he has also
taught
at Oxford University
and contributed to Music and
Letters (Vincent d'Indy's Fervaal, 2003), Opera, English Historical
Review, Musical Times
and is a co-author of Vincent
d'Indy et son temps and French
Music
Since Berlioz, published
in 2006. In the last ten years, he has helped raise over
£100,000 through concert-giving for charities including Whizz-Kidz,
Addaction,
Rethink,
The Fund for Epilepsy, NSPCC,
Response
International, UNICEF,
Sunera
Foundation of Sri Lanka and
Oxfam. He is a member
of the Performers and Composers Section of the Incorporated
Society of Musicians (UK), of the Conductors
Guild (USA) and League
of American Orchestras.
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