Colin Touchin - Conductor and Artistic Director
Colin
Touchin was Director of Music at the University of Warwick for over 14
years. During this time he inspired a growth of campus music-making from
6 regular ensembles to 20, and from 10 performances per year to over 50.
Ensembles at the University have won many International awards, been seen on
TV as semi-finalists in the Sainsbury's Choir of the Year competition and performed
with the Royal Philharmonic, London Mozart Players, Vernon Handley and Matthias
Bamert.
Previously as Head of Composition at Chetham's School of Music, he founded the
Symphonic Wind Orchestra, conducted the Classical Orchestra, taught clarinet,
recorder, electronic music, conducting, chamber music, and jazz.
As conductor, he established Warwick Orchestral Winds (originally Midlands Wind
Orchestra) and conducted the National Youth Wind Orchestras of Great Britain
and of Luxembourg; at the Birmingham Conservatoire he has conducted the Junior
Orchestra, Wind Band and Sinfonia; for some years recently, he conducted the
Heart of England Recorder Orchestra (HERO); he has taught, conducted, and given
workshops for students and teachers in 20 countries in the last 7 years.
Colin is increasingly in demand to coach peripatetic staff in conducting and
ensemble-training skills.
A composer and international adjudicator, Colin sometimes still finds time to
play recorder and clarinet. He gained the LTCL Performer's Diploma on the recorder
at aged 16, persuaded and taught by Dennis Bamforth. He was a clarinet pupil
of Graham Turner of the Hallé Orchestra, and performed in recorder masterclasses
with Ferdinand Conrad, Jeanette van Wingerden and Konrad Huenteler. He was invited
to be a tutor on the Northern Recorder Course when only 20, writing Prelude,
Chorale and Fugue for the first NRC Recorder Orchestra which was formed that
year, 1973. He has taught on several subsequent courses, and also at the Dolmetsch
Summer School. For several years he was a regular conductor at the Dartington
International Summer School; his compositions have been broadcast on Radio 3
and local TV and radio.
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