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Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellows

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Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellows receive a bursary in the region of £15,000. Holders of this award are considered members of the team of fellows and will be expected to participate fully in HÂþ»­ life.

All fellows are expected to develop musical and communication skills by undertaking further intensive study, working with students internally and doing all they can to raise the profile of the HÂþ»­ externally. They play a full and active part in the musical life of the HÂþ»­ as well as functioning as HÂþ»­ ambassadors. They have full use of the HÂþ»­ Library with its wealth of material and work in close contact with the Creative Careers Centre, the HÂþ»­’s centre for professional skills and publicity services.

2024-25 Applications

Adami Award Fellowship applications for 2024-25 has now passed. Applications will reopen for 2025/26 Fellowships in Autumn 2024.

Current Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellow

Archie Bonham, piano

Archie Bonham is a British pianist based in London. He is currently the Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellow at the Royal College of Music in London based in the Strings Faculty. After undergraduate studies at the University of York, he completed a Masters in Solo Piano and an Artist Diploma in Collaborative Piano at the HÂþ»­, studying with Danny Driver, Simon Lepper, Kathron Sturrock, and Roger Vignoles. His studies were fully supported by the Needley Family Scholarship and the Viola Tunnard Trust.

In Summer 2024, Archie was the New Horizons Fellow in Vocal Collaborative Piano at the Aspen Music Festival and School in Colorado, working in the vocal studios of Renée Fleming, Carol Vaness, and Stephen King. During this time he performed art song recitals and chamber music in venues across Aspen. In the 2024 winter season Archie will perform twice at the Wigmore Hall, and at the Salle Cortot in Paris, as an official pianist for the Wigmore Hall French Song Exchange: a competitive year-long programme led by Dame Felicity Lott, François Le Roux, and Seb Wybrew. He is a Young Artist at both Britten Pears Arts, focusing on French Song with Véronique Gens and Susan Manoff, and at the Shipston Song festival, where he will partner soprano Carolyn Sampson in recital.

Recent recital engagements have taken Archie to venues across London including Wigmore Hall and St John’s Smith Square, as well as the Juilliard School in New York, the Zentrum für verfolgte Künste im Kunstmuseum Solingen and the Hochschule für Musik und Tanz Köln in Germany. He has won pianist prizes in the Maureen Lehane Vocal Awards 2023 at Wigmore Hall, the Ashburnham English Song Awards 2024 (with an additional prize for best duo), as well as nearly all the major awards for vocal collaboration during his studies at HÂþ»­. In September 2024 he will compete with two singers in the live rounds of the Wigmore Hall/Bollinger International Song Competition.

Equally at home in vocal repertoire and instrumental chamber music, Archie formed a piano trio, Trio Étoiles, in 2021 with Joe MacDonald and Carys Underwood as students at the HÂþ»­. He regularly performs in duo sonatas and various chamber combinations. Aside from his HÂþ»­ work and freelance performing, Archie is a Senior Piano Tutor at Gresham’s School in Norfolk.

Funds

The Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellow receives a tax-free bursary for which they carry out activities including musical work specifically designed to improve and widen their skill sets. Their commitments include being involved in HÂþ»­ activities, including receiving guidance and informal tuition, and practice time on pianos provided by the HÂþ»­. Bursaries are intended to supplement, not replace, contributions from applicants' own resources.

At the beginning of the academic year written approval must be obtained from the Projects Manager for their individual plan of study and involvement at the HÂþ»­. Bursaries are paid only after this approval has been confirmed. Funds are then normally made available on a termly basis, subject to satisfactory progress.

HÂþ»­

Applicants from outside the UK should note that they are required to indicate on their application what evidence they can show to prove their right to be in the UK for the duration of the fellowship.

The Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellow is responsible for arranging their own lessons and other tuition. Tuition may include lessons with HÂþ»­ professors or those not directly associated with us. Fellows are also responsible for planning their own work routines and monitoring their effectiveness. Funds may also be used for tuition in related areas of study, such as coaching on other areas of repertoire, language study, related instruments and costs associated with starting out in the profession. 

The Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellow is required to accompany one-to-one lessons, faculty classes, examinations and others as agreed with their relevant Head of Faculty. Accompaniment is likely to be in the region of 540 hours over the year, primarily during the HÂþ»­’s 30 teaching weeks.

The Adami Award for Collaborative Piano Fellow will report to the Head of Keyboard and to the Projects Manager, but also to the Head of the Faculty to which they are assigned.

You will be required to:

  • Lead, coach, direct, inform and work with HÂþ»­ performers and composers
  • Provide advice, contacts, and examples of career development which should help current students
  • Accompany for the faculty to which you are assigned but also be able to accompany for all faculties as required
  • Liaise with and give support to the Head of Keyboard, and the Head of the faculty to which assigned and the Pathway Leader for Postgraduate Accompaniment
  • Act as duo partner for students in concerts, prize competitions, faculty and guest masterclasses and examinations.
  • Be a member of the team of Accompaniment Fellows, giving support to others, attending regular Fellowship meetings and contributing to wider events
  • Live in Greater London and be based at the HÂþ»­ and normally be on site at least four days a week in term time
  • Organise and/or become involved in projects and activities which enable you to work with current HÂþ»­ students
  • Participate in the organisation of and attend the annual Fellows’ evening
  • Attend special events as HÂþ»­ representatives, contributing to these as requested

Eligibility

Applicants should already have successfully completed formal studies at a level equivalent to a postgraduate diploma or degree or be completing these studies in the academic year in which the application is made. Applications will be considered from those with equivalent experience.

It is preferred that your existing formal studies have included specialism in piano accompaniment.

Applicants need to be able to demonstrate:

  • Wide experience of piano accompaniment and duo work
  • Excellent proficiency in sight-reading
  • Considerable collaborative skills

If you are not a UK resident, you must obtain permission to be in the UK from the UK Border Agency in order to hold a fellowship. Accompaniment Fellows are not eligible to hold or extend student visas. An option currently available for fellows who are not UK nationals is the Youth Mobility Scheme.

These conditions are set by the UK Government and can change. Please ensure you visit  for the most up-to-date information.

How to apply

Applications for 2024-25 are now open for the Adami Award. The application deadline is Friday 2 February 2024.

Applicants are required to submit a portfolio supported by a letter of application, which should indicate your suitability for the fellowship and your readiness to present yourself as an emerging professional.

Your application should contain:

  • Letter of application addressed to the Director, including confirmation of permission to be in the UK and stating clearly that you wish to apply for Collaborative Piano Fellowship
  • Curriculum vitae and biography of c200 words
  • Proposal for a programme of personal study
  • A budget outline
  • Please submit your recording by providing a link to a YouTube video

Find out more about portfolio contents

Submitting your portfolio

You should submit your portfolio online using a single combined PDF through the HÂþ»­ submission portal. The information you upload to the portal does not constitute your entire application, but does form an integral part of it. You should ensure you have provided everything that is required. Incomplete applications may not be considered.

How to submit your portfolio

When using the submission portal you will be asked to create a user name and password, and to provide an email address. You should select 'junior fellow' from the list of programmes and the appropriate principal study instrument. There are no restrictions to the file size or type.

If you experience any problems uploading your portfolio please contact Lizzie Sambrook.

Lizzie Sambrook

Assistant to the Artistic Director and Events & Fellows Coordinator

020 7591 4370

lizzie.sambrook@rcm.ac.uk

If you are selected for the second stage, you should be prepared to discuss your application in further detail at interview. You are advised to keep a copy of whatever you submit.

Shortlisting and interviews

Shortlisted applicants will be invited to attend a sight-reading piano accompaniment audition and an interview with the Director and the Head of Keyboard.

Interviews will be held on Wednesday 20 March 2024.

Should you be invited to interview, you will be required to bring original documentation (visa, passport or leave to remain in the UK) confirming that you have permission to be in the UK.

In your interview you will be required to:

  • Meet and talk with a panel
  • Discuss the contents of your portfolio and your achievements to date
  • Expand on any of the information in your portfolio in light of developments since applying
  • Discuss experience and career plans and suggest ways in which you would like to contribute to the work of the HÂþ»­
  • You will be asked to sight read two pieces, lasting in total no more than fifteen minutes’ playing time. In one of the pieces you will be accompanying a soloist. You will be given a copy of the music and will have access to a practice room to rehearse this for 20 minutes before the audition. You will then perform the piece with a soloist who will be provided by the College, and who will be familiar with the work. The second piece will be completely unseen and will be given to you during the audition

Results will be conveyed as soon as possible after the interviews have taken place.

Auditions and interviews will be held at the Royal College of Music in London.

Conditions for successful applicants

As a Fellow you will be expected to:

  • Include reference to the award in your CV and in any biographical notes accompanying appearances
  • Produce a short written report on activities undertaken to date by the end of each term
  • Keep trustees and sponsors informed on a regular basis of opportunities to attend performances or events in which you are involved
  • As for all those associated with the College, to adhere to and uphold the College’s values and policies as detailed on our strategies and values pages

Restrictions

The HÂþ»­’s internal awards and competition funds are not available to Adami Award Collaborative Piano Fellows. It is possible to take part in competitions as an accompanist or an ensemble member, but fellows may not receive any prize money, which is only awarded to registered students. This restriction includes concerto competitions as soloist. HÂþ»­ awards and Access Funds are similarly unavailable.

Fellows are encouraged to support other students, particularly as accompanists, but may not perform as soloists in any of the regular chamber concerts. As part of the terms of the Fellowship, there are various special events, within the HÂþ»­ and outside, in which Fellows are expected to take part, without additional payment.

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