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Grace Davidson

Grace Davidson is an English soprano who specialises in the performance and recording of Baroque music. Winner of the prestigious Early Music Prize whilst studying singing at London's Royal Academy of Music, she has since carved a successful international career working with the leading Baroque vocal ensembles of our day under the batons of Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Paul McCreesh, Philippe Herreweghe and Harry Christophers. As a Baroque soloist Grace has appeared on many of the world's most famous stages, from Purcell's Come Ye Sons of Art at London's Barbican to his Ode to St Cecilia and Bach's Magnificat at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw to Bach's St Matthew Passion at the Lincoln Centre, New York. Her discography includes a decade of CDs with The Sixteen, many of which feature her as a soloist: Handel's Jephtha (as "Angel") and Dixit Dominus, Monteverdi's 1610 Vespers and Pianto Della Madonna and the Lutheran Masses of Bach; she is also the soloist for a recording of Fauré's Requiem by Tenebrae and the LSO.