Richard Morrison (music critic)
Richard Morrison is an English music critic. As the chief music critic of The Times, he writes a wide-ranging cultural column which appears on Fridays. He also writes for the monthly publication BBC Music Magazine for which he won an award as columnist of the year.[1]
Morrison studied music at Cambridge University. While he is better known as a writer than a performer, he continues to perform music despite cycling injuries.[2] He is organist of St Mary's, Hendon, a church in the London suburbs.[3]
In 2014 he was one of a number of British critics accused of sexism in respect of their reviews of the mezzo-soprano Tara Erraught, who was singing the title role in a new production of Der Rosenkavalier.[4] Morrison, who described Erraught's portrayal of Octavian as "unsightly and unappealing,” apologized by saying, “Several musicians I count as close friends tell me that what I wrote would have upset greatly the promising young singer who took the role of Octavian. I regret that.”
Bibliography
- Orchestra: The LSO - a Century of Triumph and Turbulence[5] (2004)
References
- ↑ Consumer Media (2012), Professional Publishers Association (PPA).
- ↑ Morrison, Richard (2012). The day I got back on my bike, The Times
- ↑ Humphreys, Garry (2008). ‘Rhosymedre’ as you’ve never heard it before, Church Times.
- ↑ 'Don't listen to them': Dame Kiri Te Kanawa supports rising opera star dubbed 'dumpy' 'unsightly' and 'a chubby bundle of puppy fat' by male critics
- ↑ Higgins, Charlotte (2004). One hundred years of attitude