Jadran Duncumb

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theorbo

Jadran Duncumb is an English/Croatian/Norwegian guitarist and lutenist. He was the first guitarist in twenty years to be accepted into the Barratt-Due Music Institute in Oslo, where he spent seven years learning the guitar under Vegard Lund. In 2008, he was a finalist on the guitar of the BBC Young Musician of the Year and NRK’s Norwegian equivalent, and the success in these competitions gave Jadran the opportunity to give recitals all over Europe, appear as a soloist with orchestras including the Norwegian State Radio Orchestra, London Mozart Players and BBC National Orchestra of Wales as well as have a BBC Radio-recorded recital at Wigmore Hall.

Since winning the Norwegian National Youth Competition twice in 2005 and 2006 with his pianist brother Emil, they have regularly played together in programmes of lesser-known pieces for their combination as well as more mainstream solo repertoire, as well as concerts on period instruments of music from early 19th century Vienna.

Jadran began playing the theorbo during his studies at the Royal College of Music in London and has since been very active as a continuo player in small chamber ensembles as well as in orchestras and opera pits, and has performed with leading ensembles including the English Baroque Soloists at the BBC Proms, I Fagiolini, Ensemble Diderot and the International Baroque Players as well as being a member of the Ensemble Amaranthos and regularly playing for the English Touring Opera.

His duo with the violinist Kinga Ujszàszi, “Repicco”, was selected in the Ambronay Festival “Eeemerging Artists Programme” and will this year give concerts and classes in Romania, Latvia, Italy, Hungary and at the Ambronay Festival in France.

He also frequently concertises with violinist Johannes Pramsohler, touring with programmes of music for baroque lute and violin by Bach and Weiss and their contemporaries. With Ensemble Diderot – Johannes’s ensemble – they recently made the first recording of Antonio Montanar’s violin concertos for Audax Records (available in June 2015), while a duo-CD of music by Bach and Weiss, including their jointly- composed Suite BWV 1025 will be released in 2016 on the same label.

Other regular collaborators include the viola da gamba players André Lislevand, Claire Bracher, harpsichordist and baritone Iason Marmaras, violinist Maria Ines Zanovello, and the soprano Elizabeth Dobbin and “Le Jardin Secret”, with whom he will record 17th century airs de cour by de Bousset as well as give recitals in Holland and England in the coming months.

Jadran completed his Masters in Trossingen, Germany with Prof. Rolf Lislevand.

theorbo

Jadran Duncumb is an English/Croatian/Norwegian guitarist and lutenist. He was the first guitarist in twenty years to be accepted into the Barratt-Due Music Institute in Oslo, where he spent seven years learning the guitar under Vegard Lund. In 2008, he was a finalist on the guitar of the BBC Young Musician of the Year and NRK’s Norwegian equivalent, and the success in these competitions gave Jadran the opportunity to give recitals all over Europe, appear as a soloist with orchestras including the Norwegian State Radio Orchestra, London Mozart Players and BBC National Orchestra of Wales as well as have a BBC Radio-recorded recital at Wigmore Hall.

Since winning the Norwegian National Youth Competition twice in 2005 and 2006 with his pianist brother Emil, they have regularly played together in programmes of lesser-known pieces for their combination as well as more mainstream solo repertoire, as well as concerts on period instruments of music from early 19th century Vienna.

Jadran began playing the theorbo during his studies at the Royal College of Music in London and has since been very active as a continuo player in small chamber ensembles as well as in orchestras and opera pits, and has performed with leading ensembles including the English Baroque Soloists at the BBC Proms, I Fagiolini, Ensemble Diderot and the International Baroque Players as well as being a member of the Ensemble Amaranthos and regularly playing for the English Touring Opera.

His duo with the violinist Kinga Ujszàszi, “Repicco”, was selected in the Ambronay Festival “Eeemerging Artists Programme” and will this year give concerts and classes in Romania, Latvia, Italy, Hungary and at the Ambronay Festival in France.

He also frequently concertises with violinist Johannes Pramsohler, touring with programmes of music for baroque lute and violin by Bach and Weiss and their contemporaries. With Ensemble Diderot – Johannes’s ensemble – they recently made the first recording of Antonio Montanar’s violin concertos for Audax Records (available in June 2015), while a duo-CD of music by Bach and Weiss, including their jointly- composed Suite BWV 1025 will be released in 2016 on the same label.

Other regular collaborators include the viola da gamba players André Lislevand, Claire Bracher, harpsichordist and baritone Iason Marmaras, violinist Maria Ines Zanovello, and the soprano Elizabeth Dobbin and “Le Jardin Secret” with whom he will record 17th century airs de cour by de Bousset as well as give recitals in Holland and England in the coming months.

Jadran completed his Masters in Trossingen, Germany with Prof. Rolf Lislevand.

theorbo

Jadran Duncumb is an English/Croatian/Norwegian guitarist and lutenist. He was the first guitarist in twenty years to be accepted into the Barratt-Due Music Institute in Oslo, where he spent seven years learning the guitar under Vegard Lund. In 2008, he was a finalist on the guitar of the BBC Young Musician of the Year and NRK’s Norwegian equivalent, and the success in these competitions gave Jadran the opportunity to give recitals all over Europe, appear as a soloist with orchestras including the Norwegian State Radio Orchestra, London Mozart Players and BBC National Orchestra of Wales as well as have a BBC Radio-recorded recital at Wigmore Hall.

Since winning the Norwegian National Youth Competition twice in 2005 and 2006 with his pianist brother Emil, they have regularly played together in programmes of lesser-known pieces for their combination as well as more mainstream solo repertoire, as well as concerts on period instruments of music from early 19th century Vienna.

Jadran began playing the theorbo during his studies at the Royal College of Music in London and has since been very active as a continuo player in small chamber ensembles as well as in orchestras and opera pits, and has performed with leading ensembles including the English Baroque Soloists at the BBC Proms, I Fagiolini, Ensemble Diderot and the International Baroque Players as well as being a member of the Ensemble Amaranthos and regularly playing for the English Touring Opera.

His duo with the violinist Kinga Ujszàszi, “Repicco”, was selected in the Ambronay Festival “Eeemerging Artists Programme” and will this year give concerts and classes in Romania, Latvia, Italy, Hungary and at the Ambronay Festival in France.

He also frequently concertises with violinist Johannes Pramsohler, touring with programmes of music for baroque lute and violin by Bach and Weiss and their contemporaries. With Ensemble Diderot – Johannes’s ensemble – they recently made the first recording of Antonio Montanar’s violin concertos for Audax Records (available in June 2015), while a duo-CD of music by Bach and Weiss, including their jointly- composed Suite BWV 1025 will be released in 2016 on the same label.

Other regular collaborators include the viola da gamba players André Lislevand, Claire Bracher, harpsichordist and baritone Iason Marmaras, violinist Maria Ines Zanovello, and the soprano Elizabeth Dobbin and  “Le Jardin Secret” with whom he will record 17th century airs de cour by de Bousset as well as give recitals in Holland and England in the coming months.

Jadran completed his Masters in Trossingen, Germany with Prof. Rolf Lislevand.

theorbo

Jadran Duncumb is an English/Croatian/Norwegian guitarist and lutenist. He was the first guitarist in twenty years to be accepted into the Barratt-Due Music Institute in Oslo, where he spent seven years learning the guitar under Vegard Lund. In 2008, he was a finalist on the guitar of the BBC Young Musician of the Year and NRK’s Norwegian equivalent, and the success in these competitions gave Jadran the opportunity to give recitals all over Europe, appear as a soloist with orchestras including the Norwegian State Radio Orchestra, London Mozart Players and BBC National Orchestra of Wales as well as have a BBC Radio-recorded recital at Wigmore Hall.

Since winning the Norwegian National Youth Competition twice in 2005 and 2006 with his pianist brother Emil, they have regularly played together in programmes of lesser-known pieces for their combination as well as more mainstream solo repertoire, as well as concerts on period instruments of music from early 19th century Vienna.

Jadran began playing the theorbo during his studies at the Royal College of Music in London and has since been very active as a continuo player in small chamber ensembles as well as in orchestras and opera pits, and has performed with leading ensembles including the English Baroque Soloists at the BBC Proms, I Fagiolini, Ensemble Diderot and the International Baroque Players as well as being a member of the Ensemble Amaranthos and regularly playing for the English Touring Opera.

His duo with the violinist Kinga Ujszàszi, “Repicco”, was selected in the Ambronay Festival “Eeemerging Artists Programme” and will this year give concerts and classes in Romania, Latvia, Italy, Hungary and at the Ambronay Festival in France.

He also frequently concertises with violinist Johannes Pramsohler, touring with programmes of music for baroque lute and violin by Bach and Weiss and their contemporaries. With Ensemble Diderot – Johannes’s ensemble – they recently made the first recording of Antonio Montanar’s violin concertos for Audax Records (available in June 2015), while a duo-CD of music by Bach and Weiss, including their jointly- composed Suite BWV 1025 will be released in 2016 on the same label.

Other regular collaborators include the viola da gamba players André Lislevand, Claire Bracher, harpsichordist and baritone Iason Marmaras, violinist Maria Ines Zanovello, and the soprano Elizabeth Dobbin and “Le Jardin Secret” with whom he will record 17th century airs de cour by de Bousset as well as give recitals in Holland and England in the coming months.

Jadran completed his Masters in Trossingen, Germany with Prof. Rolf Lislevand.