In 1973, the Academy of Ancient Music was revived by the British conductor and harpsichordist, Christopher Hogwood, for the purpose of playing 18th- and early 19th-century music on
period instruments. For choral works, it is joined by the Academy of Ancient Music Chorus or by other external choruses. The AAM was the first orchestra to record all of
Mozart's symphonies on period instruments. The AAM has since recorded the complete
Mozart's piano concertos, with
fortepianist Robert Levin, the complete
Beethoven's piano concertos, with fortepianist
Steven Lubin, and symphonies, and has recorded numerous
Haydn's symphonies. The AAM has also recorded
Purcell's
Dido and Aeneas, Handel's
Orlando and
Rinaldo, Mozart's
La clemenza di Tito, Haydn's ''
L'anima del filosofo'' and over 200 other recordings for a range of different labels. The commissioning of new works under
Paul Goodwin represented a new development for the AAM. The first commission and recording,
John Tavener's ''Eternity's Sunrise
, met with enthusiastic critical acclaim and led to a second new Tavener work and recording, Total Eclipse/Agraphon''.
David Bedford's
Like a Strand of Scarlet followed in 2001 and, in 2003, the AAM premiered
John Woolrich's
Arcangelo, written to mark the 350th anniversary of the birth of
Arcangelo Corelli. The next commission in 2006 celebrated the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth with a work from the Scottish-American composer
Thea Musgrave,
Journey into Light, which was written as a companion piece to Mozart's
Exsultate, jubilate. Recently, this trend has been revived with commissioning the harpsichordist, conductor, and scholar
Mahan Esfahani to write a new orchestration of Bach's
The Art of Fugue, which was premiered at the BBC
Proms in July 2012. Both Tavener recordings are on
Harmonia Mundi (France), for whom the AAM has made a large number of CDs: Mozart's
Zaïde and Christmas music by
Schütz and his contemporaries (conducted by Paul Goodwin); violin concertos by
J.S. Bach and
Vivaldi and
concerti grossi by
Handel and
Geminiani (directed by Andrew Manze). Choral recordings include works by Bach, Handel, Purcell and Vivaldi, with
King's College Choir under
Stephen Cleobury, and several recordings with
New College Choir under
Edward Higginbottom, including
Pergolesi's
Marian Vespers and Handel's
coronation anthems, a collection of music from 17th and 18th-century English coronations. With Richard Egarr, the orchestra has released Handel's instrumental music Opp. 1–7, as well as
Bach's six
Brandenburg Concertos, four
orchestral suites, seven
single harpsichord concertos and his
St Matthew and
St John Passions. In 2013, the orchestra announced the opening of its own record label, the AAM Records, whose first album was released in October of the same year. The AAM is Orchestra-in-Residence at the
University of Cambridge. In January 2020, the Teatro San Cassiano announced that the AAM is to become its first associate ensemble. ==Leadership==