Staff A-Z
Staff A-Z

Sue Addison
Professorial Staff - Sackbut
Learn about Sue Addison

Sue Addison
Sue Addison was born in Louth, Lincolnshire, which is situated in the heart of England and also at the heart of the brass band movement. It was during her teenage years as a member of the Market Rasen Town Band that Sue fell in love with playing the trombone. She then went on to study the trombone seriously at the Sam Newsom Music School in Boston before receiving an Exhibition Scholarship at the Royal College of Music London. She studied the trombone at the Royal College for four years with Arthur Wilson and John Iverson, graduating with an Honours ARCM, and receiving the Brass prize. Shortly after completing her studies at the Royal College, Sue was offered a position in the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under the directorship of Sir Simon Rattle.
It was during this time that the growth of the Period Instrument movement was having a positive impact on the music business and Sue was increasingly offered the opportunity to be part of this exciting new development. For this reason, she moved back to London as a freelance player where she became principal of the newly–formed London Classical Players, The Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, Sixteen Choir and Orchestra, Academy Of Ancient Music and the Gabrieli Consort. She was a member of the English Baroque Soloists and Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique for twenty-two years under the directorship of Sir John Eliot Gardiner.
Biography
She is a founder member of the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment and she also founded the ensemble His Majestys Sagbutts and Cornetts, of which she was a member for twenty-five years. She has played with nearly all of the major London orchestras and chamber ensembles including the London Sinfonetta and Nash Ensemble. She also plays Principal Trombone with Garsington Opera and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra.
She is currently professor of trombone and sackbut at the Royal Northern College of Music, the Centre for Early Music Performance and Research (CEMPR) at the University of Birmingham, and Birmingham Conservatoire. She has also given masterclasses at the Royal College of Music, Trinity Laban London, Mannes College of Music New York and Boston Early Brass symposium in the USA.
She was also awarded a Hon LRAM for her teaching work at the Royal Academy of Music in 2002.

Robert Alderson
Professorial Staff - Voice
Learn about Robert Alderson

Robert Alderson
Robert Alderson studied with the late Frederic Cox at the Royal Northern College of Music. After completing his studies he joined Scottish Opera for three years, then returned to Manchester and gained his Dip Ed Mus in Secondary Education (Distinction). Following this he gained a position as Head of Music in a large comprehensive school in Lancashire.
He returned to the RNCM as a Senior Lecturer in the School of Vocal Studies where he taught many young singers who are now enjoying successful, international careers. His teaching career has taken him across the world and he has been a vocal tutor, guest lecturer and has given masterclasses in many countries; Russia (Tchaikovsky Conservatoire Moscow and Krasnodar Conservatoire Krasnodar) England (Trinity Laban London. Yorke Trust Opera Course Norfolk) Germany (Bayreuth Festspiehaus) Wiesbaden (Wiesbaden Opera house) Austria (Bregenz Festspeile) Australia (Australian National University Conservatoire of Music and Drama in Canberra followed by an invitation to give classes at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts. Mount Lawley) America (Connecticut University’s Vocal Studies Department) Ireland (TU Dublin Conservatoire) Belgium (The Singel and Ghent Opera Studi) Egypt (Cairo University Music Faculty, Cairo Opera House. A Member of the board for Egypt’s First International Conference on Music Education at the Helwan University In Cairo ) India (Neemrana Music Foundation and Lyric Ensemble of Delh. Professor Alderson has recently ( June 2024 ) returned from Mexico where he was invited to take vocal masterclasses with the students at the Mexico Opera Studio.
Biography
Robert enjoyed a successful and varied career as a performer when he first graduated and has primarily dedicated his professional life to the teaching of singing. He has gained wide recognition for this and has been the subject of several publications and of a BBC2 documentary about his work.
He is happy to have joined the permanent Professorial staff at Trinity Laban, particularly as his great mentor Frederic Cox taught at Trinity during the same period in his own life and Robert is proud to follow in his footsteps.
The summer of 2022 he retired from his full time teaching commitment at the TU Dublin Conservatoire.

Ralph Allwood MBE
Head of ORNC Chapel
Learn about Ralph Allwood MBE

Ralph Allwood MBE
Ralph Allwood MBE DMus was Director of Music at Eton College for 26 years and is now a freelance choral director. He is the Director of the Eton (now Rodolfus) Choral Courses, which he founded in 1980. 9000 8 to 21 year olds have been students on courses over the last 42 years. He co-founded the Junior Choral Courses in 2012, and in recent years has launched courses in Texas, Shanghai and Shenzhen. The Rodolfus choir, made up of the best singers from the courses, has produced over 20 CDs since he founded it in 1982.
Ralph is co-founder and conductor of Inner Voices, a choir made up of singers from state schools in London. He is also Director of Chapel Music and an academic supervisor at Queens’ College Chapel, Cambridge and an Honorary Fellow of University College, Durham.
Biography
BA (Dunelm) DMus (Aberdeen)
Hon ARAM, Hon FRSCM, Hon FNMSM
Ralph has conducted choirs for 40 live broadcasts for BBC Radio 3, is a judge for the Llangollen Eisteddfod and has written much music heard worldwide on radio and television. He also teaches at his old school, Tiffin.
In 2015 he co-founded the Pimlico Musical Foundation to enable children from Pimlico Primary Schools to sing in choirs, particularly at St Gabriel’s Church. Since then, in addition to their own choirs, Pimlico’s five primary schools have produced a Pimlico Children’s Choir and, since September 2018, a Foundation Choir which sings regular Evensongs in St Gabriel‘s Church.
In 2012 Ralph was awarded a Doctorate of Music by Aberdeen University. He was made MBE in the 2012 New Year’s Honours list. In 2017, the Archbishop of Canterbury presented him with the Thomas Cranmer Award for Music and Worship. – 2012 Ralph Doctorate of Music by Aberdeen University.

Julie Andrews
Professorial Staff - Bassoon
Learn about Julie Andrews

Julie Andrews
Julie is a freelance bassoonist living In London. She leads a busy musical life playing with the London orchestras and chamber ensembles as well as teaching the bassoon and coaching ensembles at Trinity Laban, Goldsmiths College, Dulwich Prep School and James Allen’s Girls’ School.
As a freelance player, Julie plays regularly with London and regional orchestras, often as guest principal.
Biography
While Principal Sassoonist with the Britten Sinfonia and Haffner Wind Ensemble (a position she held for 13 years), she was soloist on the Britten Sinfonia recording of Richard Strauss’ Duo Concertante for Clarinet, Bassoon and Orchestra (EMI) with clarinettist Joy Farrall, and in 1999 recorded Mozart’s Bassoon Concerto K.191, and Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante for oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn and orchestra (with Nicholas Daniel, Joy Farrall and Stephen Bell) for the Classic FM label. Her recording of Mozart’s Bassoon Concerto, with the Britten Sinfonia, was chosen by the BBC Radio 3 Building a Library programme as the best available recording.
As well as performing on concert platforms throughout the UK and all over the world, Julie has spent a considerable amount of time as a studio musician, playing Principal Bassoon on numerous recordings of film soundtracks and backing tracks, including several Harry Potter and James Bond scores.

Alexander Ardakov
Professorial Staff - Piano
Learn about Alexander Ardakov

Alexander Ardakov
Born in Samara, Russia, Alexander Ardakov studied under the renowned pianist and professor Vera Gornostaeva at Moscow Conservatoire. Upon graduating, he joined the Moscow State Philharmonia as a performer.
Alexander won prizes at the Kabalevsky Piano Competition in Russia and the Viotti International Music Competition in Vercelli, Italy.
Moving to Britain and Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, where he has been teaching since 1991, have helped him develop as an international recitalist of exceptional versatility and musical integrity.
Biography
Alexander has made notable radio recordings for BBC Radio 3 and Classic FM. His extensive discography consists of 20 different CD albums. Among them is a remarkable recording of Rachmaninov’s Second Piano Concerto, with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir Alexander Gibson.
Alexander has given recitals at the Bösendorfer Hall in Vienna, Southbank Centre, Wigmore Hall, St Martin-in-the-Fields and St John’s Smith Square in London; Carnegie Hall in New York; Gasteig and Carl-Orff-Saal in Munich; Benaroya Hall in Seattle; and Herbst Theatre in San Francisco.
He frequently gives masterclasses in the UK and abroad.
Listen to Alexander Ardakov’s recordings on his YouTube channel
Photo: Alexander Dymnikov

Alison Armstrong
A-Level Music Distance Learning Teacher
Learn about Alison Armstrong

Alison Armstrong
Alison has had a long career in music education, initially as a violin teacher and subsequently with 35 years of experience of teaching A-Level Music, thirty of which were at Wells Cathedral School, one of the four specialist music schools in the UK.
With a particular interest in encouraging and developing students’ listening and analysis skills, Alison is one of the teachers on the Trinity Laban A level course who delivers the Appraising component.

Joe Arnold
Professorial Staff - Bass Trombone
Learn about Joe Arnold

Joe Arnold
Joe Arnold was a chorister at Wells Cathedral School in Somerset where he learnt trombone with Alan Hutt, former trombonist of the Royal Opera House and RPO, for 10 years. Joe was principal bass trombone of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain from the age of 16, and went on to study bass trombone at the Royal Academy of Music with Bob Hughes (London Symphony Orchestra) and Keith McNicol (Royal Opera House), graduating in 2012 after a year in the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester, a pan-European youth orchestra. He has performed with all of the major London Orchestras as well as several others around the UK, and has been Principal Bass Trombone of the Orchestra of English National Opera since 2012.
Biography
Aside from eight years experience in an opera orchestra, memorable concerts include Bruckner’s 7th Symphony with the Philharmonia at the BBC Proms, Wagner’s Ring Cycle with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Strauss’ Don Juan with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and Verdi’s Falstaff at the Royal Opera House. Away from music, Joe can be found playing or watching cricket, trail running, climbing or kayaking in Surrey or Dorset.

Dominic Ashworth
Professorial Staff - Jazz Guitar
Learn about Dominic Ashworth

Dominic Ashworth
Dominic Ashworth studied guitar at the University of Toronto, Canada, and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. He is an active freelance player who has worked with Carol Kidd, Jacqui Dankworth, Dave Cliff and Janette Mason. Dominic is also a composer, and has written and recorded many original works for radio and television and performs with orginal guitar trio Digtal Moves. He performs in London with groups such as Julian Stringle’s Pathfinder, the Mick Foster Group, Digby Fairweather’s Half Dozen and Michael Garrick’s Big Band & Quartet.

Eugene Asti
Lecturer in Art Song and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Eugene Asti

Eugene Asti
Much in demand as an accompanist, Eugene Asti has performed with many great artists including Dame Felicity Lott, Dame Margaret Price, Nancy Argenta and Elizabeth Connell, in places such as the Wigmore Hall, the Rome Opera House, the Musikverein in Vienna, the Aix-en-Provence Festival, Paris, Madrid, Brussels, Düsseldorf, Vancouver, and New York. He devised recital series for St. John’s Smith Square and St. George’s Brandon Hill to mark the Brahms and Mendelssohn anniversaries in 1997, and in 1999 planned a series for St. John’s Smith Square to mark the Poulenc and Strauss anniversaries. For the 2002/3 season, he devised a recital series involving many high-profile musicians for St. John’s Smith Square to honour Robert Schumann.
Biography
He has done much recording work for the BBC, most recently including several broadcasts for Radio 3’s Voices programme with Sophie Daneman, Sarah Connolly, Christine Rice, Stephan Loges and Rebecca Evans. Other engagements have included recitals with Dame Felicity Lott, Alison Buchanan, Sophie Daneman, Rebecca Evans, Susan Gritton, Stephan Loges and James Rutherford, including live broadcasts from Wigmore Hall, the Waterfront Hall in Belfast, Bridgewater Hall in Manchester and at New York’s Weill Recital Hall and Lincoln Center.
Eugene Asti studied at the Mannes College of Music, New York with Jeannette Haien where he earned his BMus and MA.

Lynton Atkinson
Professorial Staff - Voice
Learn about Lynton Atkinson

Lynton Atkinson
In opera, Lynton made his debut at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in Fidelio and having created the role of Sir Ywain in Sir Harrison Birtwistle’s Gawain, became a contract principal artist. Since then he has sung the principal roles in L’elisir d’amore, La traviata, The Pearl Fishers, Don Giovanni, Die Zauberflöte, Die Entführung aus dem Serail, and The Merry Widow, throughout the UK, Europe, including Strasbourg, Amsterdam, Berlin, Turin, Trieste, Dublin, and Berlin. Lynton’s concert career has taken him to many major centres and european festivals including performances with the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields conducted by Sir Neville Marriner, the Hallé and Ulster Orchestras, the Göttingen Festival and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. He has performed in the Musikverein Vienna, with the RAI National Symphony Orchestra in Milan, and Claudio Monteverdi’s Vespers in venues such as Westminster Abbey, Winchester and Norwich Cathedrals, Cologne’s Philharmonie, Berlin’s Neues Schauspielhaus, Disney Hall in Los Angeles and at the Tanglewood and Ravinia Festivals. In the USA he sang the title roles in Monteverdi’s Orfeo and Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria with Boston Baroque to critical acclaim. He sang Edward Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius and The Apostles with the Bonn Symphony Orchestra and Joseph Haydn’s The Seasons in the Stresa Festival. With René Jacobs, Lynton performed the St. Matthew Passion and sang Benjamin Britten’s St Nicholas to acclaim in Berlin’s Konzerthaus. Having sung twice at the Three Choirs Festival, Lynton has performed Elijah both with Willard White and also with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra.
Biography
Lynton received his early musical training under George Guest in the choir of St. John’s College Cambridge. Having graduated in Music, he continued his vocal studies with David Mason and Gita Denise.
Lynton teaches singing at Winchester College and Trinity Laban in addition to his busy private teaching practice.
In his solo recordings for Harmonia Mundi, Virgin Classics, Meridian, Telarc, BBC TV and Radio, Channel 4 and Classic FM he has appeared with artists such as Dame Janet Baker, José Carreras, Richard Bonynge, Sir Charles Mackerras, Sir Edward Downes, Richard Hickox, René Jacobs, and the King’s Consort. He has recorded works by composers including Respighi, Vivaldi, Monteverdi, Strauss, Verdi, and Lehár. Lynton has been a regular guest soloist in broadcasts with the BBC Concert Orchestra.
With Sir Charles Mackerras he recorded Entführung, a production by Elijah Moshinsky filmed in Istanbul and available on a BBC DVD.
Lynton won the Richard Tauber Competition, which enabled him to study in Vienna with Anton Dermota, and was a prizewinner in the Alfredo Kraus International Singing Competition.

Derek Aviss OBE
Professorial Staff - Cello
Learn about Derek Aviss OBE

Derek Aviss OBE
Former Executive Director of Trinity Laban and Former Principal of Trinity College of Music, Professor Derek Aviss was educated at Trinity College of Music and his teachers included Vivian Joseph, Benjamin Zander and William Pleeth.
Subsequently Derek Aviss became known as the ‘Cellist of the Ariosti Piano Trio and the Cantilena Soloists Ensemble.
Appointed as a teacher of ‘Cello at Trinity College of Music, at the age of 28, he went on to hold many senior posts at the College including: Head of the String Department, Head of Performance Studies, Deputy Principal and, after the merger with Laban, Principal of Trinity and Joint Principal of Trinity Laban.
After retiring from the Conservatoire as Executive Director in 2012, he was appointed Professor Emeritus of Higher Education.
In 2013 Derek Aviss was awarded the OBE for services to Higher and Music Education.

Dr David Baker
Professorial Staff - Academic Studies (Guest Lecturer)
Learn about Dr David Baker

Dr David Baker
David Baker is a trumpeter and Associate of the Royal College of Music, London. He taught brass instruments in primary and secondary schools for a Local Education Authority music service for over 10 years. In 1999, Peters Edition published Fast Track Trumpet, two volumes of his educational music for trumpet.
Biography
David was Course Tutor for the MA in Instrumental Teaching at the University of Reading, where he supervised the practitioner research of instrumental and singing teachers and also MA dissertations on various areas of music pedagogy. He has also been Lucy Green’s Research Officer for the Ear Playing Project at the University College London Institute of Education; this was an Esmée Fairbairn Foundation venture that grew from Musical Futures. At UCL, David was Honorary Senior Research Associate and Principal Investigator for an Arts and Humanities Research Council project entitled ‘Visually-impaired musicians’ lives’, again working with Lucy. This has led to pedagogical training for students from the Royal Academy of Music in partnership with the Royal National Institute of Blind People, and also opportunities to lecture in the UK, USA, Australia and Norway. David is currently programme leader of the MA in Music Education at the UCL Institute of Education.
David’s research interests are: musicians’ life histories, visual impairment and music-making, music service provision, conceptions of musical ability in the primary school, pedagogical training in the conservatoire, and playing by ear. He has published articles in the British Journal of Music Education, the International Journal of Music Education and Research Studies in Music Education. He has also contributed chapters to the Ashgate book, Developing the Musician, the new Oxford Handbook of Community Music and also coauthored a book with Lucy Green on visually-impaired musicians, Insights in Sound: Visually Impaired Musicians’ Lives and Learning.

Neil Baker
Professorial Staff - Voice
Learn about Neil Baker

Neil Baker
Neil Baker studied at the Royal Northern College of Music, where he was the recipient of all the major song prizes. He continued his studies in London at the Royal College of Music and subsequently with Margreet Honig in Amsterdam.
Neil began his professional singing career in the Glyndebourne Festival chorus and went on to make his international operatic debut with Marc Minkowski and Les Musiciens du Louvre in the role of Harald in Wagner’s Die Feen at the Châtelet Theatre, Paris. Other performances with Maestro Minkowski include Le nozze di Figaro at the Aix-en-Provence Festival, Baden Baden and Tokyo. His many operatic roles include Aeneas (Dido and Aeneas), Demetrius (A Midsummer Night’s Dream), Araspe (Tolomeo), Melisso (Alcina), Escamillo (Carmen), Marco (Gianni Schicchi) and Count Almaviva (Le nozze di Figaro).
Biography
Neil continued his collaboration with Marc Minkowski and Les Musiciens du Louvre, appearing in major venues around Europe including the Salle Pleyel (Paris), Palais des Beaux-Arts (Brussels), the Barbican (London), and Grenoble as a soloist in Purcell’s Hail Bright Cecilia, which culminated in a critically acclaimed performance at the Salzburg Festival. An accomplished concert performer, Neil’s notable appearances include Handel’s Messiah with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Britten’s Cantata Misericordium at St John’s Smith Square, London, Mozart’s Requiem, which was performed throughout Portugal under the direction of Jaap ter Linden, and recitals at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam.
Alongside his performing career, in 2003 Neil began teaching fellow singers who sought his advice. He has since enjoyed a successful career as both a singer and a voice teacher, but his reputation as a voice teacher has grown so rapidly that he now devotes his time primarily to his teaching. Neil has acquired a formidable and important list of students both from the UK and abroad many of whom can be found performing on the world’s greatest stages: the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (London), The Metropolitan Opera (New York), La Scala, (Milan), Chicago Lyric Opera, Seattle Opera, Santa Fe Opera, Glyndebourne Festival Opera, Welsh National Opera, Opera North, Scottish Opera, Opera Australia, Polish National Opera (Warsaw), La Monnaie (Brussels), Opera National de Paris, Opéra de Lille, the Staatsoper Berlin and the Bregenz Festival. While Neil enjoys his work with established and experienced singers, he also felt a desire to work with young singers at the beginning of their studies when the development of a strong technique is absolutely vital. In light of this, Neil became a member of the professorial staff at Trinity Laban in 2013.

Gabriele Baldocci
Professorial staff - Piano, Chamber Music and Collaborative Piano
Learn about Gabriele Baldocci

Gabriele Baldocci
Gabriele Baldocci’s unique style, visionary programming and versatile artistic personality have garnered him worldwide critical acclaim and a wide following on the world stage.
Described by Jed Distler on Gramophone as a “A pianist of formidable capabilities”, Baldocci has given concerts at such distinguished venues as Tonhalle in Zürich, Musikverein in Vienna, Auditorium Parco della Musica in Rome, Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, Auditorio Nacional in Madrid, Palau de la Música Catalana in Barcelona, Ceramic Crystal Hall in Seoul, Teatro Sala Verdi in Milan, Teatro Ghione in Rome, Politeama Rossetti in Trieste, Teatro Comunale Ponchielli in Cremona, Parnassos Hall in Athens, Teatro Lirico in Cagliari, Poisson Rouge in New York.
Biography
A passionate advocate for live classical improvisation, Baldocci’s eclectic personality made him develop innovative events where he tastefully breaks boundaries of genres and styles. Among his successful recordings, a live recital in duo with Martha Argerich, Nino Rota’s complete works for piano and violin and piano and viola with Marco Fornaciari, Chopin’s Complete Ballades and Impromptus. His latest recording, Sheer Piano Attack, rapidly became a best-seller after being promoted by the rock band Queen on all their media outlets. His performances are regularly broadcasted on TV and radios internationally and he was featured in a very successful documentary produced by Sky Classica.
A child prodigy of the piano, he started giving public concerts at the age of nine, and he maintained a successful career since then, winning prizes in numerous piano competitions such as the The Alessandro Casagrande International Piano Competition in Italy and the Martha Argerich Competition in Buenos Aires. After his studies at Imola with Franco Scala, he studied at the prestigious International Lake Como Piano Academy with William Grant Naboré, Lèon Fleisher, Alicia De Larrocha, Dmitri Bashkirov, Fou Ts’Ong, Charles Rosen, Andreas Staier and Claude Frank. He completed his studies at the Santa Cecilia Academy in Rome with Sergio Perticaroli.
A very active educator, he is a professor at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance and of The Purcell School. He is also the founder of the London Piano Centre and of the Milton Keynes Music Academy and he is often invited to give masterclasses at some of the most important universities and academies worldwide.

Chris Batchelor
Professorial Staff - Jazz Trumpet, Jazz Combos

Brigitte Beraha
Professorial Staff – Jazz Voice
Learn about Brigitte Beraha

Brigitte Beraha
Brigitte Beraha, improvising vocalist and composer, is one of the leading talents on the UK jazz scene. Embracing a wide variety of influences and genres, Beraha’s sound is free and spontaneous with an emphasis on exploration, expression and fearlessly testing the limits of the voice as instrument. Alongside original contemporary jazz and the core jazz and latin repertoires, she is increasingly involved in exciting cross-genre projects, such as the recreation of Basil Kirchin’s music as part of Hull City of Culture 2017 or Raising Hell with Henry Purcell led by Ethan Iverson at Kings Place in 2018.
Beraha has recorded a number of critically acclaimed albums, both as leader and as part of collaborative projects such as Babelfish, Solstice and Red Skies Trio. The latest under her name, Lucid Dreamers, introduced a new electronic dimension to her work proving once more the agility, adventurous spirit and limitless imagination that have marked her out as a truly exciting and versatile artist with a huge range of experience and creative scope.
‘One of the most adventurous vocalists around, a musical explorer…’ The Jazzmann
‘Brigitte is someone who concentrates on the music’s core values: imagination, individuality, improvisation.’ Jazz Review
‘Possessed of Norma Winstone-like subtlety and precision.’ The Guardian
‘Beraha scats with a daydreaming quality that is both engaging and never distracting.’ John Fordham