Philip Pickett (born 17 November 1950) is an English musician.[1] Pickett was director of early music ensembles including the New London Consort,[2] and taught at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. He played recorders, shawms and similar instruments. In February 2015, Pickett received an 11-year prison sentence for the rape and sexual assault of pupils at the school.[1]
In 1993 he became artistic director of the Purcell Room Early Music series, and in the same year was appointed director of Early Music at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre. The Musicians of the Globe ensemble specialised in English music from the 16th and 17th centuries. Pickett simultaneously led the New London Consort, which had a wider repertoire covering English, Spanish, Italian and German medieval and Renaissance music. From 1994 to 1997 he was founder and director of the Aldeburgh Early Music Festival.
Pickett taught freelance, mainly at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, London, from 1972 to 1997. His time at Guildhall later came under scrutiny after his 2013 arrest.[4]
Sexual abuse conviction
After the revelations in 2012–13 of the Jimmy Savile sexual abuse scandal, a former student was referred by Suffolk Police to the specialist investigation team within the City of London Police. The woman, who was 16 in 1978, later testified that during a lesson Pickett told her to take her top off and lie down in a darkened practice room to "improve her breathing", on later occasions sexually assaulting and raping her.[4] Police arrested Pickett on 4 December 2013,[5] after which further victims came forward. His arrest was not part of the high-profile sex crime investigation Operation Yewtree. It was said at his trial that allegations against Pickett dated back to 1984, when a family complained to the school about him attacking their 17-year-old daughter; they were allegedly told by the school that she should have her lessons elsewhere as no one else had complained. Police discovered evidence within the archives of the school that in 1984 the then principal John Hosier had written to Pickett, asking him to discuss the allegations.[4] Hosier passed police a letter regarding the allegations and his frustrations, but the following year the Guildhall School made Pickett a fellow.[6]
On 10 February 2015 Pickett was found guilty of two rapes and two indecent assaults carried out in soundproof rooms at the Guildhall School between 1979 and 1983. After his conviction, Pickett's defence team tried to delay sentencing to accommodate Pickett's commitment to arrange three music festivals.[4] Judge Charles Wide sentenced Pickett on 20 February 2015 to a total of 11 years,[1] and ordered that two further indictments in relation to allegations by two women dating back to the 1970s lie on file. Pickett was cleared of six further counts of indecent assault.[4][6]
Discography
With the Albion Band
Albums
Dancing Days Are Here Again (2007, recorded 1976)
The Prospect Before Us (1977)
Rise up Like The Sun (1978)
The BBC Sessions (1998, recorded 1973–1978)
Stella Maris (1987)
Singles
"Hopping Down in Kent"/"Merry Sherwood Rangers" (1976)
"The Postman's Knock"/"La Sexte Estampie Real" (1977)
"Poor Old Horse"/"Ragged Heroes" (1978)
"Pain and Paradise"/"Lay Me Low" (1979)
With the New London Consort
Elizabeth and Jacobean Concert
Music from the Time of Columbus
Ars Subtilior
Llibre Vermell
Biber and Schmelzer Trumpet Music
Biber Requiem
O Primavera
Trionfi
Las Ensaladas
Mad Songs
The Songs of Oswald von Wolkenstein
Telemann Concertos
Pilgrimage to Santiago
Monteverdi Vespers (1610)
L'Orfeo
Anonymous, Carmina Burana, Vols. 1–4 (L'Oiseau Lyre, 4 CD, 1994)
Sinners and Saints, a compilation of previous recordings
Bach: Brandenburg Concerti (complete)
The Feast of Fools
Praetorius: Dances from Terpsichore
Vivaldi: Gloria RV 588 and Dixit Dominus RV 595
The Sylvan and Oceanic Delights of Posilipo
Tielman Susato, Dansereye 1551, Éditions de l'Oiseau-Lyre, 1993
John Blow: Venus & Adonis, A Masque for the entertainment of the King