The Scottish mezzo-soprano, Judy Brown, received her early musical training as a chorister at St Mary's Music School in Edinburgh, where she had lessons with Margaret Aronson. She read music at the University of Edinburgh, where she was a finalist in the Donald Tovey Memorial Prize and became the first female alto lay clerk to be appointed to the choir of St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral. While in Scotland, she studied with Patricia MacMahon and sang in concert with The Tallis Scholars (Director: Peter Phillips) in the East Neuk Festival, with the Dunedin Consort at the Festival Internacional de Músiques de Torroella de Montgrí, and participated in the Taipei International Choral Festival, Taiwan. As a soloist she sang George Frideric Handel's Messiah for Sospiro Baroque, Rossini's Petite Messe Solenelle for the Scottish Chamber Choir and J.S. Bach's Christmas Oratorio (BWV 248) for the St Magnus Festival Chorus under Martyn Brabbins.
In 2012 Judy Brown participated in the Crear Mastercourse and is one of Malcolm Martineau’s Crear Scholars. She was awarded the Bucher Fraser Scholarship for postgraduate study by the University of Edinburgh, was generously supported by the Trufflehunter fund and the Sir Richard Stapley Trust, and was the inaugural recipient of the Von Ibler - Innes Schola Cantorum of Edinburgh award to help her pursue postgraduate study in London. She graduated with a Masters in vocal performance from The Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where she studied with Susan Waters. She has sung in master-classes with Sarah Walker, Eugene Asti, Amanda Roocroft, Manuela Ochakovski and Estonian voice improvisation expert Anne-Liis Poll. She receives coaching from Graeme Danby and contralto Hilary Summers.
In demand as a soloist and consort singer with a broad range and extensive repertoire, Judy Brown works frequently with Academy of Ancient Music (Director: Richard Egarr), Monteverdi Choir (Director: John Eliot Gardiner), Dunedin Consort (Director: John Butt), City Bach Collective and Scottish Opera, and has performed at the Proms, Aix-en-Provence Festival, London Handel Festival, Handel Festival in Halle, Germany, St Magnus Festival in Orkney, Edinburgh International Festival and Tête-à-Tête opera festival.
Her repertoire ranges from the contemporary - Spirit Harbour, Lliam Paterson, Tête-à-Tête opera festival; 5 Acts of Harry Patch, Peter Maxwell Davies, Grosvenor Chapel; Six Celan Songs, Michael Nyman, Barbican, James MacMillan's Seven Last Words from the Cross - to early music - Charpentier’s Les Plaisirs de Versailles, London Handel Festival; Dietrich Buxtehude's Jesu Membra Nostri, Ross-on-Wye Festival, the SSAA version of Antonio Vivaldi's Gloria in St John's Smith Square for International Women's Day.
A sought-after alto soloist for oratorio work, she regularly performs across the UK in G.F. Handel's Messiah and Dixit Dominus, W.A. Mozart's Requiem, A. Vivaldi's Gloria, J.S. Bach's Passions (BWV 244, BWV 245), Mass in B minor (BWV 232) and Magnificat (BWV 243), and Rossini's Petite Messe Solennelle, and recently sang her first Angel in a huge performance of The Dream of Gerontius by Edward Elgar with massed choral societies of Epsom and Barnes in Southwark Cathedral.
Solo recital projects have included Debussy chansons in St Cecila's Hall, Edinburgh; Wagner, Strauss and Gustav Mahler at the Edinburgh International Festival as part of Songlines; music by composers and poets of World War I at St Martin-in-the-Fields; contemporary settings of Shakespeare sonnets for Song in the City, and a solo lieder recital of Schubert and Hans Gál in the Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh where her lieder singing was praised for its “dynamism and delicacy”. She sings with the City Bach Collective and the Kellie Consort, presenting solo J.S. Bach cantatas with period chamber ensembles. Work with larger ensembles includes Benjamin Britten's Phaedra, G. Mahler's Symphony No. 3, and E. Elgar's Sea Pictures, and she gave the second ever performance and Orcadian premiere of Sir Peter Maxwell Davies' The Birds with the St Andrews New Music Ensemble, alonsgide works by Errollyn Wallen.
On stage Judy Brown has sung the role of Mrs Noye in Noye's Fludde, Juno in both G.F. Handel's Semele and Charpentier’s Actéon changé en biche, performed in a new music and theatre piece Why does the Queen die? by Iain Burnside (revived after a successful premiere at the Oxford Lieder Festival) and played a fox and a Japanese warrior in the Tête-à-Tête opera festival. She sings for the chorus of Scottish Opera. In Opera Magazine her performance in the role of Äbtissin in Hans Gál's opera Das Lied der Nacht was highlighted; "contralto Judy Brown lent distinction ... brought all the requisite steadiness, purity, dignity and command."
Judy Brown is also a keen ceramicist, and when not singing can be found throwing pots in the studio in Brockley. |