Biography

Nancy Ambrose King, oboe, is the first-prize winner of the Third New York International Competition for Solo Oboists, held in 1995. She has appeared as soloist throughout the United States and abroad, including performances with the St. Petersburg, Russia, Philharmonic, the Janacek Philharmonic, the Tokyo Chamber Orchestra, the Puerto Rico Symphony, the Orchestra of the Swan in Birmingham, England, the Festival Internacionale de Musica Orchestra in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the New York String Orchestra, Cayuga Chamber Orchestra, and Sinfonia da Camera. She has performed as recitalist in Weill Recital Hall and as soloist at Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall. She has recorded three CDs for Boston Records, two for the British label Cala Records, and one with Naxos Records. She will soon be releasing recordings of the Jennifer Higdon Oboe Concerto with the University of Michigan Symphony Band, and the works of Dutilleux for oboe. She can also be heard in performances on the Athena, Arabesque, Centaur, and CBS Masterworks labels. She was a finalist in the Fernand Gillet Oboe Competition held in Graz, Austria, and has been heard as soloist on WQXR radio in New York City and NPR’s “Performance Today”. She has taught and performed in the Sarasota Music Festival, Idyllwild Music Festival, Bowdoin Music Festival, Marrowstone Music Festival, Strings in the Mountains of Steamboat Springs, and the Hot Springs Music Festival, has appeared as a recitalist throughout the world and was a member of the jury for the esteemed 2009 Barbirolli Oboe Competition. Ms. King's performances are featured on XM Satellite radio and Accuradio.com.

Her playing has earned high praise from a variety of critics, including the American Record Guide: “Marvelously evocative, full of character, sultry and seductive, with a soft-spoken, utterly supple tone, and as musically descriptive as any I have heard…a fine exhibition of thoroughly musical oboe playing”, "...a lovely player with a tone that surpasses that of most other American oboe soloists. It defines delicacy, yet is strangely assertive, like a soft-spoken woman who nonetheless speaks up strongly when her mind is made up. Ms. King's technical ability far overshadows the considerable demands of the music. Unquestionably qualified...", Fanfare: “Nancy Ambrose King is clearly a skilled musician of great promise, with a sterling technique”, and The Double Reed: “…thoughtful, expressive, and perfectly controlled performance of consummate accuracy. It’s not that she makes it sound easy—she makes it sound perfect”..."Ms. King's fluid technique, combined with clean and accurate articulations, makes the most complex passages flow and sounds effortless. Combine these aspects with a beautiful tone and a sensitive touch in the lyrical passages, all oboists have a new level to which to strive. "

Currently Professor of Oboe at the University of Michigan, she was previously Associate Professor and University Scholar at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and served as the first female President of the International Double Reed Society. She has also served on the music faculties of Indiana University, Ithaca College, University of Northern Colorado, and Duquesne University Schools of Music. She has performed as principal oboist in Sinfonia da Camera, Michigan Opera Theater Orchestra, Pine Mountain and Hot Springs Music Festival Orchestras, Heidelberg Opera Orchestra, Colorado Symphony, Greeley Philharmonic, Indiana University Festival Orchestra, and the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra, as well as performing in the Los Angeles, Boston, Detroit, and Rochester Philharmonic Symphony Orchestras.

A graduate of the University of Michigan with a Bachelor of Music degree, Ms. King was the recipient of the school’s prestigious Stanley Medal, and has been honored with the 2010 Hall of Fame Award by the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre and Dance. She received her Doctor of Musical Arts, Master of Music, and Performer’s Certificate from the Eastman School of Music. She lives in Ann Arbor with her husband Bill, a clarinetist, and their two sons, Ryan and Trevor.