Alison Kinder
Recorder, Viola da Gamba, Violin, Viols
Alison read music at Oxford and was then given a scholarship by Trinity College of Music where she studied viol with Alison Crum, being awarded the college’s Silver Medal for Early Music Studies. She is a founder member of Chelys consort of viols where she enjoys researching, performing and recording programmes covering all aspects of consort music. She has a particular interest in 'Renaissance' viols (early viols made with no soundpost) with The Linarol Consort who play on copies of the earliest surviving viol made by Francesco Linarol.
Venturing into the 18th Century with a beautiful 7-string viol named Flo, Alison plays with lutenist Lynda Sayce in Apollo's Revels, and the Christian Baroque ensemble Dei Gratia, where she also plays baroque violin. Alison has a great love of working with singers, and the affinity between the sound of the viol and the voice. One of her favourite places to be is as the gamba player with Musica Secreta, where a recent highlight has been the newly discovered complete Lamentations of Jeremiah by Antoine Brumel.
A keen teacher of both children and adults, Alison is a tutor on a number of Early Music courses including the Easter Early Music Course and Norvis, and she regularly leads workshops for the various Early Music Fora. She is co-director of Rondo Viol Academy, which runs weekend courses for players of all standards from Elementary to Advanced. Alison teaches viol and violin both privately and in schools, and directs the Warwickshire Youth Waits, a Renaissance band for young players which includes everything from recorders and viols to crumhorns, shawms, sackbuts and more!
Alison's playing has taken her to some of the UKs best known concert venues, including the Wigmore Hall, St John's Smith Square, and the Cadogan Hall for the BBC Proms, as well as to more unusual places such as lecture theatres in the University of Marrakech and the freezing rainy streets of London armed with a shawm for the Lord Mayor's Parade. She has has played for live broadcasts on BBC Radio 3, filmed for television, and recorded for BBC Radio 4.