Biography


Conor Biggs, Bass-Baritone

Conor Biggs studied voice with Evelyn Dowling (Dublin) and John Cameron (Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester). He also studied piano with Mabel Swainson and organ with Prof. Gerard Gillen in Dublin. In 1983, with the help of a German government scholarship, he continued his organ studies with Ludwig Doerr (Freiburg). In 1982 he graduated with a degree in musicology from Trinity College, Dublin. Since 1992 Conor Biggs has lived in Belgium. He has performed as soloist with groups such as The Fires of London, Het Nederlands Kamerkoor, The BBC Northern Singers, Opera Theatre Company, Transparant, Nua Nós, Ex Tempore, Christ Church Baroque, Ricercar, Walpurgis, Currende, Huelgas, Psallentes, Brussels Philharmonic Orchestra, La Cetra d'Orfeo and Les Agrémens. Operatic performances include Il Commissario in Madama Butterfly, the Speaker in Die Zauberflöte, Vitellius in Massenet's Hérodiade, Dr Bartolo and Antonio in Le Nozze di Figaro and Don Alfonso in Così fan Tutte. Other opera rôles include Ben In Menotti's The Telephone, Caronte in Monteverdi's Orfeo, l'Ami in Milhaud's Le pauvre mâtelot and several rôles in stage works by Peter Maxwell Davies, notably Eight Songs for a Mad King. He also took part in the 1995 Banff International Festival (Canada), where he sang the bass solos in Stravinsky's Les Noces, as well as the ground-breaking Walpurgis production of the same work, with forty five performances in Antwerp, Charleroi , Tarbes and Ostend. Conor Biggs has sung the standard oratorio repertoire in Ireland, Britain, France, Germany, The Netherlands and Belgium.

He enjoys particular renown for his interpretation of art song. His performances of the art song repertoire with pianist Pádhraic Ó Cuinneagáin and Michel Stas in Ireland and Belgium have received critical acclaim. Conor Biggs's repertoire of more than eight hundred songs includes song cycles by Schubert, Schumann, Beethoven, Mahler, Shostakovitch, Mussorgsky, Poulenc, Brahms, Copland, Milhaud, Ravel and Eliott Carter. In addition he has commissioned and given the first performances of cycles by Irish composers such as Kevin O'Connell, James Wilson, Martin O'Leary and Michael McGlynn. In 2007 Conor Biggs pioneered the "What Makes a Great Song?" series of lecture recitals in order to make the song repertoire more accessible, and gave a total of fifteen such recitals, covering German, French, Russian, English and Italian repertoire in Ireland and Belgium, to critical acclaim. 

In 2011 Conor Biggs embarked on his monumental complete songs of Schubert project, Schubertreise, together with Belgian pianist Michel Stas. The series of thirty seven recitals takes place in the National Concert Hall, Dublin, and lasts thirteen years. A further twenty five recitals took place in Bever and Jodoigne (Belgium).

Conor Biggs has made solo recordings for Sony, Eufoda, (Buxtehude's Membra Jesu Nostri), Vox Temporis, Cyprès (Campra's Requiem) and Ars Sonor. His CD of Tchaikovsky songs with accompanist Pádhraic Ó Cuinneagáin was released on the Heliopolis label in March 2005 and is available on Spotify. He has also made solo broadcasts for BBC Radio 3, RTE radio and television, Dutch television and Flemish and Walloon radio (Klara and Musiq3). He is a member of The Vlaams Radio Koor.

Conor Biggs is the author of 'My Little Book of Stamps', in which he examines the role played by the postage stamp in propping up colonial regimes. It is available (print on demand only) from Waterstones, Barnes and Noble and other major bookshops.

©Conor Biggs