About us Prima la musica! is run by Brian Clark and Carlos Muñoz Cutiño.
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Brian trained as a musicologist at St Andrews University in Scotland, and has been a freelance editor and typesetter since 1989. His customers include King's Music, The King's Consort, JOED Music, and some of the world's leading early music ensembles, as well as opera houses and standard orchestras. | 
Carlos is a lawyer by training, but has had plenty of experience in large organisations and is in charge of the day to day running of the business side of the company. Although he enjoys baroque and classical music, his preference is definitely for the Romantic period, and for the more modern sounds of his distant homeland. | 
Dennis Collins lives in France and works as a translator and musician. His speciality is early 17th-century Italy, and we sell editions by him of music by Donati, Grandi, Monteverdi, Rovetta, Rigatti, Barbara Strozzi and Isabella Leonarda. His own website, Celesti Fiori, gives full details of his editions. | 
Lutenist Richard Stone has performed as soloist and accompanist worldwide. He is founder and co-director of Philadelphia baroque orchestra Tempesta di Mare. In addition to accompanying, Stone also conducts, leading performances from the theorbo in repertoire ranging from Monteverdi's Poppea to Handel's Judas Maccabeus. He is soloist on the world-premiere CD of Weiss lute concerti with Tempesta di Mare on Chandos. Other recording and broadcast credits include Deutsche Grammophon, Polygram, NPR, the BBC and Czech Radio. Richard Stone is instructor of baroque lute and theorbo at the Peabody Conservatory. | 
Kim Patrick Clow, a native of Hampton, Virginia, fell in love with early music as a teenager, after hearing David Munrow's score to the BBC series "The Six Wives of Henry VIII." Encouraged by his parents Frances and Les, Kim's love of baroque music lead him in 1983 to research Christoph Graupner's music. After moving to New York City in 2000, Kim currently works as a freelance editor and typesetter, championing the music of the neglected masters such as Graupner, Telemann, Fasch and Stölzel. | 
Juliane Peetz studied musicology in Würzburg; her Masters essay was an edition of David Pohle's sacred vocal works. From 2005 to 2008, she has been working with a database catalogue project for the Düben collection in Uppsala, and now she is employed at the Department of Musicology at Greifswald University. | 
Dr Gottfried Gille works as Kantor and Organist in Bad Langensalza, Germany, where he also teaches Religious studies. Having studied church music and religion, and worked for a time, he went to the University of Halle/Saale, where he gained a diploma in musicology. His thesis was on the Life and Works of David Pohle. | Richard Maunder is the author of Mozart's Requiem (Oxford, 1988), Keyboard Instruments in Eighteenth-Century Vienna (Oxford, 1998), and many articles in musicological journals, mainly on the history of instruments and historical performance practice. His latest book is The Scoring of Baroque Concertos (Boydell & Brewer, 2004), in which he surveys the whole concerto repertoire up to about 1750, and shows that most of it was played as chamber music, one to a part. Richard has also published many editions of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century music, including thirteen volumes of J. C. Bach's Collected Works (New York and London, 1984-90), and radical new versions of Mozart's Requiem, K. 626 (Oxford, 1988), and C minor Mass, K. 427 (Oxford, 1990). He plays the baroque/classical viola and violone, and was the conductor of the first modern staged performance of J. C. Bach's Endimione (Cambridge, 1994). | 
Berna Can was born in Istanbul, Turkey and lives in New York. Originally trained as a painter, her love of the visual arts of the Italian Baroque led to a deep interest in the era’s music.. Berna has worked in various corners of the classical music industry since 2002, and currently writes reviews of early music recordings for the publication Early Music America. A devotee of the music of Antonio Caldara, she has been working on editions of the composer’s sacred music for Prima la musica! | | Nigel Springthorpe wrote his Ph. D. thesis on settings of the Passion in mid 18th century Germany, and we are happy to sell his editions of music by Johann Georg Roellig, who worked with Fasch (and succeeded him as Kapellmeister) at Zerbst. | The late Jean Luc Gester worked at the Sorbonne in Paris and specialized in 17th- and 18th-century music in Alsace. For Prima la musica! he edited motets by the Swiss composer, Johann Melchior Gletle. | Pierre Pascal wrote his thesis on string ensemble music in Salzburg, and he has so far supplied editions of sonatas by Heinrich Biber | 
Marianne Richert Pfau is Professor of Musicology at the University of San Diego, and occasionally guest-teaches at the Musicological Institute of the University of Hamburg. After degrees in historical wind instruments and performance practices at the Hochschule für Musik in her native Hamburg, Marianne went on to the Guildhall School of Music in London for a licentiate in music therapy, and did her Ph.D. in historical musicology at SUNY-Stony Brook.
The monograph Hildegard von Bingen: Der Klang des Himmels with Stefan Morent (Cologne: Boehlau, 2005), which includes an audio-CD, has garnered enthusiastic reviews on both sides of the Atlantic. Her complete edition of Hildegard's Symphonia chants (Bryn Mawr: HPC, 1993-98) is widely used.
Find out more about her ensemble here. | 
William Kempster completed his Doctorate at the University of Alberta, Canada, in 1999 with a thesis entitled: "Chromatic alteration in the Missa "L'Homme armé" of Pierre de la Rue: A case study in performance practice." He is the founding conductor of the Edmonton-based Chamber Choir Ensemble de la Rue (click here to visit their website), and is currently the Director of Choirs at the University of New Hampshire, USA. William has conducted choral and orchestral performances in Australia, Canada, the USA, France, Belgium, Germany and Bulgaria. | 
Graeme Stevenson is the 3rd successive generation of his family to have become an organist He took up his first organist post when he was 12 at St John's, Dundee, Graeme studied Music at Aberdeen University where he was organ scholar at Kings College. After graduating, he went on to do a Masters degree on Music for the Mass by Johann Ludwig Krebs. Graeme is currently Director of Music at the University of Dundee. Under his direction, the University Chamber Choir and Bach Consort have recorded CDs. He is also organist and choirmaster at Dundee Parish Church (St Mary's). As well as solo recitals throughout Scotland, Graeme also accompanies local choral societies for their concerts. In 2003, together with Paul Smith of Apex Productions, Graeme organised the world's fastest theatrical production by putting on Seven Brides for Seven Brothers 23 hours and 30 minutes after being told the title of the show. | This page is © Prima la musica! No copyright is knowingly infringed: if you are aware of a problem, please contact us |
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