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词条 Karin Schaupp
释义

  1. Discography

  2. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2015}}{{Use Australian English|date=June 2015}}

Karin Schaupp (born 1972) is a German-born Australian classical guitarist and actress.

She was born an only child[1] in Hofheim am Taunus, Germany, to a musical family.[1] Her mother and principal teacher, Isolde Schaupp, was a teacher of guitar at the Conservatorium of Wiesbaden. Her father, a doctor,[1] was an amateur pianist, and her aunt and grandmother were opera singers. She was given a half-size guitar by her grandmother when she was aged three. She started her guitar studies with her mother when she was five, and performed in public at age six.[2] Her family, including both sets of grandparents,[1] migrated from Germany to Australia when she was aged eight,[3] and they have been based in Brisbane, Queensland, where Isolde Schaupp continues to teach at the University of Queensland and the University of Southern Queensland.[1]

While in her teens, Karin Schaupp won prizes at competitions at Lagonegro, Italy and Madrid, Spain. At the Madrid competition she won the special competition prize for the Best Interpretation of Spanish Music.[2] She completed bachelor's and master's degrees in music at the University of Queensland.

She performed Joaquín Rodrigo's Concierto de Aranjuez with the Queensland Philharmonic Orchestra when she was aged 18.

She is a member of Saffire, also known as the Australian Guitar Quartet, along with Slava Grigoryan, Gareth Koch, and Anthony Field (replaced by Leonard Grigoryan).[4]

She has also performed and recorded with the recorder player Genevieve Lacey.[5]

Her many recordings include the world premiere recordings of Ross Edwards's Concerto for Guitar and Strings (2004), Nikita Koshkin's Hispanic Suite (1973; published 1997); and Philip Bračanin's Four Diversions (she also premiered Bračanin's Guitar Concerto in 1992 with the Queensland Symphony Orchestra).[6] She has also recorded Cradle Songs, inspired by the birth of her daughter Alexa.[7]

She has toured extensively in many countries. She was an honorary guest at the celebrations for the 50th anniversary of Chinese Radio.[8]

Schaupp also trained at the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA). In 2007, David Williamson wrote the one-woman play Lotte's Gift for her; it is based on her own life and that of her mother and grandmother (the Lotte of the title). The performance includes both acting and playing the guitar and is regularly toured by Schaupp.[2][9] In 2016, she and the actor Tama Matheson co-created theatre work titled Don Juan, based on Lord Byron's poem.

She is married to Giac Giacomantonio, a psychologist and former guitar student of her mother Isolde.[10]

Discography

Solo albums
  • 1997: Soliloquy, Warner Music
  • 1998: Leyenda, Warner Music
  • 2000: Evocation, Warner Music (Interview about Evocation)
  • 2004: Dreams, with Brett Dean (viola), David Leisner (guitar); ABC Classics (Review)
  • 2007 Lotte's Gift
  • 2010 Cradle Songs
  • 2011 Songs from the British Isles (EP) (with Katie Noonan)
  • 2012 Songs of the Southern Skies (with Katie Noonan)
  • 2014 Mosaic
  • 2017: Songs of the Latin Skies (with Katie Noonan)
Collaborations
  • 2003: Saffire with Saffire
  • 2004: Nostálgica with Saffire
  • 2004: Concert for guitar and strings by Ross Edwards (world premiere) on White Ghost Dancing with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra (TSO)
  • 2005 "Nourlangie", guitar concerto by Peter Sculthorpe on Quamby, with the TSO conducted by Richard Mills
  • 2006: Renaissance with Saffire
  • 2006: Songs Without Words with Genevieve Lacey
  • 2009: Spain with the TSO (Rodrigo: Concierto de Aranjuez; Castelnuovo-Tedesco: Romancero gitano; Bacarisse: Concertino for guitar and orchestra in A minor)

References

1. ^"Next stage" by Sharon Verghis, The Australian (6 November 2010)
2. ^karinschaupp.com
3. ^Profile at the Goethe-Institut
4. ^"Heart strings", The Age (29 June 2003)
5. ^Musica Viva
6. ^Four Winds Festival
7. ^ABC Shop
8. ^Tokafi
9. ^Lotte's Gift
10. ^Angela Blakston, "In her dreams, she makes the guitar sing", The Age, 11 September 2004, A2, p. 4
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16 : Living people|1972 births|APRA Award winners|Australian people of German descent|German emigrants to Australia|Australian classical guitarists|Australian female guitarists|People from Brisbane|National Institute of Dramatic Art alumni|Australian stage actresses|People educated at Clayfield College|People from Main-Taunus-Kreis|Women classical guitarists|21st-century women musicians|Actresses of German descent|21st-century guitarists

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