Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance
Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance is a music and dance conservatoire based in London, England. It was formed in 2005 as a merger of two older institutions – Trinity College of Music and Laban Dance Centre. Today the conservatoire has 1,195 undergraduate and postgraduate students based at three campuses in Greenwich (Trinity), Deptford and New Cross (Laban).
Trinity College of Music | |
Type | Conservatoire |
---|---|
Established |
|
Endowment | £22.7 Million |
Patron | The Duke of Kent |
Students | 1,195 (2018/19)[1] |
Undergraduates | 885 (2018/19)[1] |
Postgraduates | 310 (2018/19)[1] |
Address | King Charles Court Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich, London, SE10 9JF , , |
Campus | Urban |
Website | www.trinitylaban.ac.uk |
Faculty of Music
History
Trinity College of Music was founded in central London in 1872 by the Reverend Henry George Bonavia Hunt to improve the teaching of church music. The College began as the Church Choral Society, whose diverse activities included choral singing classes and teaching instruction in church music. Gladstone was an early supporter during these years. A year later, in 1873, the college became the College of Church Music, London. In 1876 the college was incorporated as the Trinity College London. Initially, only male students could attend and they had to be members of the Church of England.
In 1881, the College moved to Mandeville Place off Wigmore Street in Central London, which remained its home for over a hundred years. The college took over various neighbouring buildings in Mandeville Place. These were finally united in 1922 with the addition of a Grecian portico, and substantial internal reconstruction to create a first floor concert hall and an impressive staircase. However, other parts of the college retained a complicated layout reflecting its history as three separate buildings. The building is now occupied by the School of Economic Science.
Trinity moved to its present home in Greenwich in 2001. The east wing of King Charles Court was constructed by John Webb as part of a rebuilding of Greenwich Palace; it was subsequently absorbed into the Royal Naval Hospital complex, designed in part by Sir Christopher Wren, which had later become part of the Royal Naval College. To make the buildings suitable for Trinity's use and remove the accretions of a century of RNC occupation required a substantial refurbishment programme. Work to provide new recital rooms revealed that the building's core incorporates masonry from the Tudor palace. The overall cost of the move to Greenwich was £17 million.
Junior Trinity
Many of the college's staff also teach at Junior Trinity, a Saturday music school for exceptional young musicians who are keen on pursuing a musical career. Junior Trinity offers instrumental and vocal tuition for children and young people ages 5–19 along with GCSE and A-Level courses in Music and Music Technology for older students. Many students of Junior Trinity often continue their musical studies at top conservatoires and universities across the country. Trinity was the first music college to create such a department, and many conservatoires have now followed in Trinity's steps.
Admission
Admission into the Faculty of Music is by competitive auditions, held annually in November or December and March or April. The Faculty of Dance asks for similar qualifications and entry is also by audition; auditions are held at Trinity Laban itself and also at selected venues across Europe and the US. The Conservatoire has an acceptance rate of around 9.9% making Trinity Laban one of the most selective schools in the UK and Europe.
Trinity College London
Trinity College London was founded in 1877 as the external examinations board of Trinity College of Music. Today, the board's examinations are taken by students in over 60 countries, giving external students the opportunity to attain qualifications across a range of disciplines in the performing arts and arts education and English language learning and teaching. Trinity College London is based at the Blue Fin Building in central London. Trinity College London validated Trinity College of Music's Graduate Diploma (the GTCL) before it was replaced by the BMus model in 1997.
Trinity College of Music's historical association with the Masonic Order
Trinity College of Music has an historical association with Freemasonry, with the Trinity College Lodge No 1765 being founded in 1878[2] by seven early teaching members of the college who were freemasons, including the founder, the Reverend Henry George Bonavia Hunt. In the past, freemasonry was an important though private feature of the life of the College, among both members of staff and the undergraduate and postgraduate men. Trinity College Lodge is no longer associated with the college, since no member of the college belongs to it. By co-incidence, the College's patron, the Duke of Kent, has been Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England since 1968.
Faculty of Dance
History
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Laban Dance Centre. |
Laban Dance Centre was founded in Manchester as the Art of Movement Studio by Rudolf Laban, an Austro-Hungarian dancer, choreographer and a dance/movement theoretician.
In 1958, the school moved from Manchester to Addlestone in Surrey, and then to New Cross in London in 1975 where it was renamed the Laban Centre for Movement and Dance. In 1997, it was renamed the Laban Centre London. In 2002, the centre moved to newly built premises in Deptford and was renamed, Laban.
The faculty today
Laban offers undergraduate, postgraduate (including Transitions), amongst other courses. The Faculty of Dance also provides classes for adults and young people on the local community including Centre for Advanced Training. In 2019, the London International Screen Dance Festival was introduced by the institution.[3]
Laban Creekside (Deptford) includes 13 purpose-built dance studios; eight with ballet barres, the 300-seat Bonnie Bird Theatre, a smaller studio theatre, and a dance library. Laban Laurie Grove (New Cross) also has a number of studios and performance laboratories.
Architecture award
Designed by Swiss architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron (who won the Pritzker Prize in 2001 and who also designed the Tate Modern and the National Stadium in Beijing for the 2008 Olympic Games), the centre's building in Deptford won the Stirling Prize for Architecture in 2003.[4] Herzog and de Meuron collaborated with visual artist Michael Craig-Martin to create the building. The building includes an eco-technological roof known as a "brown roof".
Reputation
The Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance is internationally recognised as a leading school for music and dance training. The school has been ranked ninth in the world's top 10 music schools.[5] The website shareranks.org listed it as 11th (out of 77) in a list of Best Music Colleges/Conservatories in the world (in March 2018).[6]
In The Guardian University Guide 2011 (published in June 2010), Trinity Laban was ranked in the following league tables:
- Joint 1st (with Warwick University) out of 87 institutions in drama and dance.[7]
- 8th out of 71 institutions in music.[8]
- 5th out of 35 in the specialist institutions league table.[9]
Notable alumni
Music
- Howard Arman (Conductor)
- Peter Arnold (Pianist)
- Sir Granville Bantock (Composer)
- Sir John Barbirolli (Conductor, CH)
- Helen Bower (Violinist)
- Thomas Bowes (Violinist)
- Mairead Carlin (Singer)
- Edith Coates (Mezzo-Soprano, OBE)
- Avril Coleridge-Taylor (Pianist, Conductor, Composer)
- Deva (Composer, Singer)
- Wilberforce Echezona, musicologist
- Predrag Gosta (Conductor, Harpsichordist)
- Gavin Greenaway (Composer)
- Heather Harper (Soprano, CBE)
- Stjepan Hauser (2Cellos) (Cellist)
- Ilaiyaraaja (Composer, Singer, Songwriter)
- Harris Jayaraj (Composer)
- Albert Ketèlbey (Composer)
- Fela Kuti (Musician, Activist)
- Sunny Li (Pianist)
- Amaal Mallik (Composer, Singer)
- Mantovani
- Cecilia McDowall (Composer)
- Salim Merchant (Composer)
- Mickey J Meyer (Composer)
- Tom Misch (Producer, composer, singer, guitarist)
- Margaret Price (Soprano, DBE)
- Marcella Puppini (Singer)
- A. R. Rahman (Composer, Singer, Songwriter)
- Anirudh Ravichander (Composer, Music Director, Singer, Songwriter, Record Producer, Arranger, Instrumentalist, Conductor)
- Amy Shuard (Soprano, CBE)
- Iyad Sughayer (Pianist)
- Lana Trotovšek (Violinist)
- Philip Turbett (Bassoonist)
- Barry Wordsworth (Conductor)
Dance
- Lea Anderson (choreographer, artistic director, MBE)
- Radhika Apte (actress)
- Cressida Bonas (actress)
- Sir Matthew Bourne (choreographer, KBE )
- Bilinda Butcher (vocalist/guitarist of My Bloody Valentine)
- Anjali Jay (actress and dancer)
Notable staff
Current and former staff include:
- Deniz Arman Gelenbe – Piano, Head of Piano Department 2007–2016, The Juilliard School BM, MSc, Student of Adele Marcus and Gyorgy Sandor
- Richard Arnell – former Professor of Composition
- Peter Arnold – Professor of Piano
- Mulatu Astatke – conga drums
- Issie Barratt – Composer
- Gabriele Baldocci- Piano
- Andrew Bernardi-Violinist
- Oliver Butterworth – Former Professor of Violin
- Nicholas Clapton – Singer (former Professor of Singing)
- Natalie Clein – Cello
- Christine Croshaw – Professor of Piano, Chamber Music and Accompaniment
- Alison Crum – Professor of Viola da gamba, member of the Rose Consort of Viols
- Meredith Davies – Principal 1979–88
- Graham Anthony Devine – Classical guitar
- Terry Edwards – Conductor
- Myers Foggin CBE – Principal
- Philip Fowke – Piano
- Sophie Fuller – Musicology[10]
- Harry Gabb – Organ professor
- Henry Geehl – Conductor, composer, pianist
- Rivka Golani – Viola
- Philip Jones – former Professor of trumpet (founder of the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble)
- Mark Lockheart – Jazz saxophonist
- Joanna MacGregor – Piano (honorary Professor)
- Stephen Montague – Composer
- Andrew Poppy – Composer
- Joan Rodgers – Soprano
- Daryl Runswick – Composer
- Yonty Solomon – Pianist (Professor of Piano)
- Stephen Stirling – Horn
- John Tavener – Composer (Former Professor of Composition)
- David Thomas – Singer (bass)
- John Ashton Thomas – Composer
- Philip Turbett – Bassoon (modern and historical)
- Jan Van Dyke – dance
- Vasko Vassilev – violin
- Marguerite Wolff – piano
References
- "Where do HE students study?". Higher Education Statistics Agency. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
- "Trinity College Lodge Plea (Issue 6, July 2003)". Masonic Quarterly. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
- "Announcement of the London International Screen Dance Festival". Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music & Dance.
- RIBA Stirling Prize Winner 2003 Archived 2008-06-03 at the Wayback Machine
- "World Top Music School". World Top Rankings and Information. Archived from the original on December 31, 2014. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
- "Best Music Colleges/Conservatories in the world - most, greatest of everything ranked User Contributed Rankings - ShareRanks.com". shareranks.com.
- "University guide 2011: Drama and dance". The Guardian. London. June 8, 2010.
- "University guide 2011: Music". The Guardian. London. June 8, 2010.
- "University guide 2011: Specialist institutions league table". The Guardian. London. June 8, 2010.
- "Sophie Fuller". www.trinitylaban.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
External links
- Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance – official website
- Reviews and Courses – profile on WhatUni