Peter Bucknell

Peter Wentworth Bucknell (born 1967) is a filmmaker, author and classical violist residing in Barcelona.

Film

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Bucknell is a commercial and documentary film maker who has made underwater films. In 2014 he wrote The Underwater GoPro Book, a manual on the use of the GoPro. He is an underwater cameraman who has worked on New York's shipwrecks and in Mexico's caves.

Performing arts

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Author of Violin is Easy, a pedagogical book for teachers and students, Bucknell began in the performing arts as a classical musician. He performed the Australian premiere, broadcast live by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, of Chaconne for Viola and Orchestra by Michael Colgrass. He performed and recorded as solo violist with Apollo's Fire, the Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra, Les Concerts du Monde, and Los Angeles Musica Viva. He was guest principal viola in the Barcelona Symphony Orchestra and National Orchestra of Catalonia. He was the principal violist with the Rebel Baroque Orchestra from 1998 - 2009. He appeared as a guest on Jim Henson's The Ghost of Faffner Hall as a member of the Como String Quartet in 1988.

As a member of the Danel Quartet, specialising in the string quartets of Dmitri Shostakovich, Bucknell has appeared at Wigmore Hall and in many other European halls, and on Radio France. As a member of the Stradivari Sextet, Bucknell was loaned the "Mahler Stradivarius."[1]

He was a founding member of the Raw Fish Quartet performing at the George Crumb Festival in New York, concerts in Taiwan and La Jolla and at the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, playing George Crumb's Black Angels[2] and Steve Reich's Different Trains. He was a member of the Munich Chamber Orchestra, he recorded with Concerto Köln, and performed with Musica Antiqua Köln.

Background

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A documentary film maker, Bucknell is known for his factual short films and environmental films shot underwater and a documentary film shot in Vietnam about artist Le Thanh Nhon.

A classical viola player, Bucknell was for several years the Professor of viola at the Crane School of Music, State University of New York at Potsdam.

Bucknell's early studies on violin were with Russian pedagogue Nelli Shkolnikova. In 1991 he won the Auckland International Viola Congress Competition and the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Award. His Quartet won the Interpretation Prize in the Osaka International Chamber Music Competition.[3]

He studied music in Melbourne at the Victorian College of the Arts with Nathan Gutman; in Los Angeles, California with violist[4] Donald McInness; in Siena, Italy at the Accademia Musicale Chigiana with Yuri Bashmet; and in Cologne, Germany with Rainer Moog, a student of Walter Trampler at the Juilliard School, the principal violist of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra under Herbert von Karajan.

Bucknell holds a Bachelor of Economics and Commerce degree from the University of Melbourne and a Doctor of Music degree from the State University of New York at Stony Brook where he studied with professor[5] Mitchell Stern.

Bucknell is the son[6] of Tasmanian-born painter Toni Bucknell[7] of Melbourne, Australia. He is married to mezzo-soprano Rinat Shaham.[8]

Discography

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Recordings include two chamber music CDs on the classical music label, Musica Omnia, with the Atlantis Trio and the Atlantis Ensemble:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Rice University. "Italian Treasures: October 9, 2001". Houston Early Music.
  2. ^ Andante: Everything Classical. "Crumb Festival, September 29, 2002, Raw Fish: Black Mass: Black Angels, Images I". Andante.com. Archived from the original on 12 March 2007. Retrieved 18 April 2007.
  3. ^ "Peter Bucknell". Violinist.com. Retrieved 22 April 2007.
  4. ^ Allan M. Lee. "Donald McInnes Biography". The Viola Web Site.
  5. ^ Sounds For All Seasons. "Professor Mitchell Stern". sunysb.edu. SUNY Stony Brook Faculty Pages. Archived from the original on 23 April 2007. Retrieved 22 April 2007.
  6. ^ Toni Bucknell. "Toni Bucknell, artist". blogspot.com.
  7. ^ Rinat Shaham. "Singin'rin: Opera life and beyond". blogspot.com.
  8. ^ Musica Omnia, Inc. "The Atlantis Trio & Ensemble: Mendelssohn". MusicaOmnia.org. Archived from the original on 15 April 2013. Retrieved 18 April 2007.
  9. ^ Musica Omnia, Inc. "The Atlantis Ensemble: Schumann and Schubert". MusicaOmnia.org. Archived from the original on 15 April 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2007.
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