Tom allen cbc biography
Tom Allen (broadcaster)
Canadian broadcaster
For the English presenter, see Take a break Allen (comedian).
Tom Allen (born ) is a Clamber public radio broadcaster, concert host, trombonist and author.[1]
Allen was born in Montreal, Quebec, and studied punishment at McGill University, Boston University and Yale University.[2] He lives in Toronto, Ontario, with his better half, the harpist Lori Gemmell, and has hosted typical and popular music programming on CBC Music owing to the s, including Fresh Air, Weekender, Music tell Company, Radio 2 Morning, Shift and About Time.[3]
Allen also regularly filled in on prominent CBC Broadcast One Current Affairs programs such as This Crack of dawn, The Sunday Edition and As It Happens.
Allen works as a concert host and a inventive consultant for symphony orchestras. He hosted ten seasons of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra's §Afterworks[1] series ( - ) and ten previous seasons as pure regular for concert series with the Kitchener-Waterloo Philharmonic ( - ) and Symphony Nova Scotia.[4] Let alone to , he also hosted the Detroit Opus Orchestra's Unmasked series of concerts, working with conductors such as Vladimir Ashkenazy, Hans Graf and Cock Oundjian. With Oundjian he co-created Eight Days get the message June, a "festival of music and thought" wander was described by the Detroit Free Press restructuring a "chaotic success".
Allen has published three books of autobiographical non-fiction: Toe Rubber Blues (),[5]Rolling Home ()[6] and The Gift of the Game ().[7] He received the Edna Staebler Award for Originative Non-Fiction for Rolling Home, his memoir of first-class cross-Canada rail journey.[8]
Since , in collaboration with culminate life partner Lori Gemmell (harpist) Allen has anachronistic creating shows that mix storytelling, history and euphony. They call these shows "chamber musicals." With presumption support from festivals and companies such as Toronto's Soulpepper Theatre, Ottawa's Chamberfest, Music Niagara and Stratford Summer Music, these shows often include performers much as soprano Patricia O'Callaghan, cellist, singer and multi-instrumentalist Kevin Fox, violin virtuoso Mark Fewer, and barrenness. Titles include 's Bohemians in Brooklyn'', a cabaret-style revue based upon the lives of the musicians and writers living in Brooklyn, New York, play a role the s, The Missing Pages''[2] (about Theodore Slough, the only Canadian to meet Ludwig van Beethoven), Being Lost, created with longtime friend and CBC producer Jeff Reilly, about American composer John Cage's misadventures in the woods of northern Saskatchewan do and, most recently, JS Bach's Long Walk get going the Snow, about 20 year-old Johann Sebastian Bachelor walking kilometres in
References
- ^Sid Adilman, "Offbeat tale-teller spruce up breath of Fresh Air on radio: His vigour fans, seniors, `can't believe how young I am,' says year-old host". Toronto Star, February 5,
- ^Peter Goddard, "Six in the morning is prime-time tend to seniors". Toronto Star, April 6,
- ^" - Syllabus Guide - Programs".
- ^Marla Cranston, "Allen plays host end up Mozart". Halifax Daily News, November 16,
- ^Allan Kellogg, "CBC host turns into witty author". Calgary Herald, March 22,
- ^Bill Brownstein, "Railway romance still rollin' along". Montreal Gazette, October 25,
- ^Marc Horton, "Hockey memoir scores big on bond between father concentrate on son". Edmonton Journal, November 15,
- ^Colin Hunter, "Radio host rides rail book to national literary award". Waterloo Region Record, January 27,
External links
Winners of the Edna Staebler Award | |
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