Education
Dartmouth College; Royal Academy of Music.
Dartmouth College; Royal Academy of Music.
Fox began studying music at the Horace Mann School under pianist John Contiguglia and conductor and composer Johannes Somary. Shortly after his graduation from Random Access Memory, Fox traveled to Russia and founded the country"s first period-instrument orchestra, Musica Antiqua Saint St. Petersburg. With Musica Antiqua, he revived a lost repertoire of Russian 18th-century music from the court of Catherine the Great.
Fox has appeared as a guest conductor with the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra in San Francisco, the Handel and Haydn Society in Boston, Juilliard415 at Lincoln Center, the Charleston Symphony Orchestra and the Quebec Symphony Orchestra.
Other recent guest conducting engagements have included Handel"s Judas Maccabaeus in Vilnius, Lithuania, with Jauna Muzika. And Mozart’s Sparrow Mass at Saint Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City.
He has given master classes in Historical Performance at Yale University and Dartmouth College, and in early oratorio at The Juilliard School. In 2006, Fox became the Artistic Director of the Clarion Music Society and founded the Clarion Choir.
Over his tenure, the group has expanded its repertoire from Salamone Rossi to Aaron Copland.
He has led the Clarion Society in highly acclaimed performances at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the White Light Festival at Lincoln Center, the Miller Theatre at Columbia University, and Carnegie Hall. His leading the Clarion in Maximilian Steinberg"s Passion Week will soon be released on Civil Defense. Fox is also the Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of New Jersey"s Pro Arte Chorale. In the 2015-2016 season, Fox will lead the Clarion Society in numerous concert appearances in New York City.
He is also conducting a new production of Mozart"s Die Zauberflöte at l"Opera de Québec.
James Oestreich, 400-Year-Old Work Gets a Fresh Look: New York Times. April 21, 2010
James Oestreich, Beethoven, Disarmingly Impressionist: New York Times.
October 14, 2006.