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Alan Bullard : ウィキペディア英語版 | Alan Bullard :: ''Not to be confused with Alain Bouillard, investigator at the BEA with 25 Years of Experience,〔Mayday - S12E13 - Vanished:AirFrance Flight 447〕 AFR447 and AF4590 chief investigator Alan Bullard (born 4 August 1947) is a British composer, known mainly for his choral and educational music. His compositions are regularly performed and broadcast worldwide, and they appear on a number of CDs. ==Early career and education==
He was born in Norwood, South London on 4 August 1947, son of artists Paul Bullard and Jeanne Bullard, and lived as a child in Blackheath, South-East London. He attended St. Olave's and St Saviour's Grammar School, where he learnt music with Desmond Swinburn, while studying piano with Geoffrey Flowers and John Allen at the Blackheath Conservatoire of Music. He then studied with Herbert Howells, Ruth Gipps and Antony Hopkins at the Royal College of Music, and took postgraduate study with Arnold Whittall at Nottingham University. For the next few years he taught music part-time in several art schools and at the London College of Music (from 1970 to 1975). Apart from a short song written in 1967 when he was a student of Herbert Howells, the earliest work that Alan Bullard now acknowledges is his ''Three Poems of W B Yeats'' of 1973. This work, and a cluster of other choral works, (several of which found publishers such as Banks and the RSCM) written at about the same time, are almost the only pieces to survive this period.
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