Giles Davies

Giles studied at the Purcell School of Music and on a scholarship with Norman Bailey at the RCM, where he won the Lieder Competition. Since then, his concert and opera engagements have taken him across the globe, in repertoire from all periods. He has recorded for the BBC, Capriol Films, Naxos, Chandos, Divine Art Records, Boo Productions, and on numerous film soundtracks.

Rodney Earl Clarke

UK baritone Rodney Earl Clarke, as seen in Les Misérables in London’s West End and featuring on the new anthem ‘We thank you’ for Her Majesty’s Platinum Jubilee, is hailed by Gramophone Magazine as a “singer to be watched”. 

Rodney Earl Clarke is recognised for his versatility in performance. Born in South-East London, Rodney enjoyed performing at an early age. Encouraged by his Jamaican parents and surrounded by three brothers and a sister, Rodney knew from early on that his singing voice was to be a huge part of his life.

Timothy Nelson

Timothy Nelson gained a degree in Physiology from Cardiff University before studying with Peter Savidge at the Royal College of Music International Opera School, where he was awarded the McCulloch Prize for Opera and won the Bruce Millar Gulliver Prize, the Joan Chissell Schumann Competition and the Gerald Moore Award Singers Prize.

Andrew Rupp

Born in Canterbury, Andrew Rupp began his musical training as a chorister at the Cathedral there. He furthered his studies at St John’s College, Cambridge, where he read Natural Sciences and sang as a Choral Scholar. He is currently studying with Philip Doghan.

Edward Price

Edward Price was a member of the Choirs of Clare and King’s Colleges, Cambridge, before joining the BBC Singers in 2001.

Edward appears regularly as a soloist throughout the UK. He gave the world première of Carl Rütti’s Requiem with the Bach Choir and David Hill and then recorded the work to critical acclaim last year. 

Martin Lamb

Martin Lamb read English at St John’s College, Oxford, before taking up a postgraduate place at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where he won the Sir Frederick George Painter Prize.

Laurence Williams

Laurence Williams is an international bass-baritone soloist and choral conductor. He trained at The Guildhall School of Music and Drama and graduated with distinction and a Concert Recital Diploma in 2017. He is widely praised for his lyrical tone and engaging communication of narrative.

Acclaimed for his eloquent singing and rich tone, his recent performance highlights include:

Duncan Rock

Young baritone Duncan Rock is fast making his mark on the international opera stage. He is currently a Harewood Artist for English National Opera where he recently made his Coliseum debut singing Donald in David Alden’s new production of Billy Budd. Also for ENO this season he will appear as Morales in a new version of Carmen, Schaunard in Jonathan Miller’s La Bohème, and as Papageno in the final revival of Nicholas Hytner’s much-loved The Magic Flute.

Robert Rice

British baritone Robert Rice has established a reputation as an insightful interpreter of challenging repertoire as well as a concert singer of distinction. Having been a choral scholar at King’s College, Cambridge, and a postgraduate at the Royal Academy of Music under Mark Wildman, he continued his studies with Richard Smart, Sheila Barnes and Nicholas Powell. 

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