Arthur Maud
Arthur Maud is an Anglo-American composer, conductor, and musicologist.
Education
Born and raised in Airedale, the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, Maud studied singing at an early age and was chorister and soloist in local churches until the family emigrated to the US in 1948. He has studied composition in Germany ) and America with Dominic Argento, Paul Fetler, Harald Genzmer, Carl Orff, Leroy Robertson, Leo Sowerby and others. A 'Christmas Cantata' on Crashaw's 'Song on the Birth of our Lord' was written for the MA at the University of Utah in 1960; and 'Sinfonia Concertante for Organ and Orchestra' for the PhD at the University of Minnesota in 1977.Performance
As Director of Concentus Musicus Minnesota he prepared and directed more than twenty years of concert seasons for its vocal and earlyinstrumental ensembles and produced the following recordings containing major works by 15th and 16th century composers:
- Tomas Luis de Victoria
- Jean Mouton
- Heinrich Finck
- Josquin Desprez ‘Missa de Beata Virgine’
- Robert Fayrfax “Magnificat O bone Jesu” & John Taverner ‘Missa Sancti Wilhelmi devocio’
- Wilhelmi devocio’
- William Byrd
- Jacob Handl
- Francisco Peñalosa,
Compositions
Beginning in 1995 an association with St John on Bethnal Green Festival, London, resulted in composition of six secular song sets for solo/choir/strings and keyboard:- Of Life, Love and Our Learned Old Vicar
- Three sonnets of Jones Very ECS Publishing, Boston, Cat. No. 5425-7
- A Sir John Soane Triptych
- From Ann with Love
- Voices of Bethnal Green
- A Toy Trilogy
- "Humoresque"—string quintet
- "Love and Age"—piano, flute and alto
- "A prayer for unity"—tenor solo, choir and keyboard ... and several other anthems.
- Two orchestral masses--'Missa Sancti Clementi' and 'Missa de Requiem'
- Service music--'St Clement's Vespers' and 'Rite II setting of the Eucharist'
- Two carols for choir--”From a distant home” and “Ave plena gracia”.... and a dozen anthems. ‘Missa Sancti Clementi’ and ‘St Clement’s Vespers’ were included in an ‘Evensong and Concert of Music by Arthur Maud’, October 1996, as one of the Cathedral Concert Series at St Mark's Cathedral, Minneapolis. In 2001 the Schubert Club commissioned “In te Domine speravi” setting a new translation of Psalm 31 by Christopher Brunelle and Joyce Sutphen and premiered by the Rose Ensemble.
- Canonic variations on a theme partly by Harald Genzmer performed by the Utah Symphonic Trio at USC, Los Angeles, CA
- Parade’s End, wind quintet, commissioned and performed by the Sylmar Ensemble, Minneapolis, MN
- Sonata for Viola and Piano composed for violist Helen Kirklin and pianist Roberta Swedien
For the Concentus Musicus Minnesota programs Maud made over fifty arrangements of dances and Minnesinger and troubadour songs, and transcribed many polyphonic works from manuscript. A web site is being assembled where much of this recorded material can be accessed.