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Lunchtime Recitals: Summer 2006

Robert Munns: 12 July
Programme
  1. The Archbishop’s Fanfare Robert Munns
  2. Prelude and Fugue in B minor BWV 544 J S Bach (1685–1750)
  3. Homage to Mozart (1756–1791) on the 250th Anniversary of his birth
    1. Adagio for Glass Harmonica K617 (1791)
    2. Fugue in G minor K154 (1782)
  4. Ciacona in F minor Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706)
  5. A celebration of the life of Percy Whitlock (1903–12 July 1946)
    1. Adagio in D (1926)
    2. Folk Tune (1929) from Five Short Pieces
    3. Carol (Homage to Frederick Delius) (1933) from Four Extemporisations
    4. Two Sketches on Verses from the Psalms (1934):
      1. Pastorale (Ps 23:1)
      2. Exultemus (Ps 81:1–3)


Robert Munns is a former Scholarship holder at the Royal Academy of Music and has had a very extensive career as a concert organist, conductor and church musician. His many overseas tours have included performances, master classes and broadcasts on five continents that have attracted great acclaim. In England, he has performed at the Henry Wood Promenade Concerts, the St Albans Festival, and at most major concert venues including S Paul’s Cathedral, Westminster Abbey, Westminster Cathedral and the Royal Festival Hall in London.

His overseas appearances include the Salt Lake Tabernacle; S Thomas’ Church, Fifth Avenue, New York; Washington National Cathedral; the Kaiser-Wilhelm Church, Berlin; S Peter’s Cathedral, Geneva and the Laurenskirk, Rotterdam. Appearances in the Far East include Hong Kong, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Adelaide and the Melbourne International Festival. In 1992 he was the first British organist in forty-five years to give concerts in Romania.

The Royal Academy has honoured him for services to British Music. Since 1996 he has made yearly concert tours to the United States. As a teacher he has universal recognition and since 1994 he has given workshops and classes in Malaysia, Singapore and Canada.

2005 took him to the States again, coast to coast. This year he is more home-based with recitals in Wales, England and at King’s Chapel Aberdeen on the first Aubertin Organ in Britain.

He will be very active in 2007 in the tercentenary celebrations of the Danish composer Dietrich Buxtehude, with recitals already booked in England and Scotland.


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