Conductors and Leader
Roderick Dunk - Music Director and Conductor
Roderick Dunk is one of Britain’s most versatile conductors, with a repertoire ranging from the symphonic, through opera and ballet to musical theatre, film and light orchestral music. Roderick first conducted the RTWSO as a guest conductor in 1994. The relationship developed over many years and he became the orchestra’s Music Director in 2012.
The many British orchestras Roderick has conducted have included the Hallé Orchestra, the RPO, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, the Manchester Camerata, the Northern Chamber Orchestra, the RLPO, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, the CBSO, the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO), the Ulster Orchestra, the Orchestra of Opera North, the Royal Northern Sinfonia and Sinfonia Viva. For 25 years Roderick was a frequent guest conductor with the BBC Concert Orchestra for the BBC’s Friday Night is Music Night and during that time conducted around 200 broadcasts and concerts with the orchestra.
Abroad, he has conducted the RTÉ Concert Orchestra in Dublin, the MDR Chamber Orchestra in Leipzig, the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra in Norway, Sinfonia Lahti in Finland, the Hong Kong Sinfonietta, the Bangkok Symphony Orchestra and the Orchestra Teatro Bellini in Catania, Sicily. Roderick has made commercial recordings with the LSO, the RPO, the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the Philharmonia, the Prague Symphony Orchestra, the Vienna Symphony Orchestra, the Performing Arts Symphony Orchestra and the BBC Concert Orchestra. He has also recorded a wide range of repertoire for the Reader’s Digest Record Label with a variety of orchestras and ensembles. His studio and recording work has been broad and varied, covering all styles from the standard symphonic repertoire with the LSO, to the last ever recordings of the world-renowned harmonica virtuoso Larry Adler for Decca Records in 1999 and, more recently, the album A Christmas Cornucopia with Annie Lennox.
Away from the concert platform and the recording studio, Roderick has conducted numerous theatre productions for Travelling Opera, London City Opera, Northern Ballet and Birmingham Royal Ballet and, in London’s West End, he conducted the award-winning production of Carmen Jones. A prolific arranger and orchestrator, his work is performed by orchestras and artists all over the world.
Julian Leaper - RTWSO Leader
In 1978 Julian won a Junior Exhibition Scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music where he studied violin with Emanuel Hurwitz and piano as joint first study with Hamish Milne. He was awarded several prizes for solo performance and chamber music, including the prestigious Gerard Heller Award for which he won first prize for quartet playing. In 1982 he continued his studies with Alberto Lysy at the Yehudi Menuhin Academy in Gstaad, Switzerland, and with Tomatada Soh and Kenneth Sillitoe in London.
He made his London debut performing a programme of British music at the Purcell Room. He has since performed as leader and soloist with many British orchestras including the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (CBSO), Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, City of London Sinfonia and the New London Orchestra. He has worked regularly with all the major chamber orchestras and ensembles including the Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, English Chamber Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra of Europe, London Mozart Players and the Orchestra of St John’s Smith Square.
His solo and concerto performances include the complete Brandenburg concertos at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, Vivaldi’s Four Seasons at the Purcell Room, Mozart’s Violin Concerto in D major at St John’s Smith Square, Beethoven’s Triple Concerto and Vaughan Williams’ The Lark Ascending, together with a number of other solo performances at venues across the UK. He has recorded a large number of sound tracks for film and TV, including Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings and James Bond, and has recorded the solo violin tracks for Ridley Scott’s Tristan and Isolde and TV blockbusters such as Upstairs Downstairs, Cranford and Downton Abbey.
Julian plays on a J B Vuillaume violin made in 1860.