RJB

Biography - Robert J Burgess

Robert Burgess began playing the piano at the age of four and was immediately captivated.  By the time he left Kimbolton School in Cambridgeshire, he was a Grade 8 pianist with many school concerts and local performances under his belt.  One highlight was a concert at Chequers for the then Prime Minister, John Major.

After studying Actuarial Maths and Statistics at Heriot Watt University in Edinburgh, he decided to return to music and launched himself as a professional musician.  Realising that he thrived particularly in the role of the collaborative pianist, he initially formed a partnership with a professional tenor and developed a touring programme of Victorian and Edwardian ballads and songs from the music hall.  This grew over five years into a larger professional ensemble, Upstairs Downstairs, a dramatic musical presentation  comprising tenor, bass, soprano and mezzo soprano, of an Edwardian evening, with drawing-room ballads and popular arias ‘upstairs’ and Gilbert and Sullivan and music hall songs ‘downstairs’.

After two years studying piano accompaniment under Eugene Asti at Trinity College of Music in London, he was awarded the Trinity/Guildhall Performance Diploma in Piano Accompaniment (ATCL) with Distinction.  During his time at Trinity and since, he has performed extensively in public concerts and competitions as an accompanist to both vocal and instrumental musicians. Performances have included the ‘Schumann Dichterliebe’, Cezar Franck Violin Sonata in A, Schubert’s Shepherd on the Rock and the Haydn Cello Concerto in C.

He regularly accompanies pupils and participants in competitive festivals. As a talented soloist, Robert has twice won the Cheltenham Festival Open Piano Solo competition. As principal accompanist for the prestigious Dursley Male Voice Choir, a particularly notable occasion was providing accompaniment at a packed charity concert at Cheltenham Town Hall when the eminent Welsh tenor Wynne Evans was guest soloist.

He currently plays the organ at a local church and regularly accompanies pupils for their practical music exams. He has enjoyed being involved in local amateur dramatic/operatic productions, including providing XVIth century incidental music for a particularly memorable, award-winning production of Robert Bolt’s ‘A Man for All Seasons’ in the annual Arts Festival at Painswick in Gloucestershire.