Thursday, August 22, 2013
We've moved to newdots.org.uk
We've moved our blog to a new permanent home on our website - newdots.org.uk. Please visit us there
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Composition competitions
Heather Roche and Lauren Redhead have written posts in the
last couple of days about composition competitions, with some interesting
insights from the point of view of an ensemble and a composer as well as posing
a number of thought provoking questions. And it definitely got us thinking.
As an organisation, we’re trying to get new music out to
broader audiences and give opportunities to emerging composers and musicians
and we organise a small number of events to do that. We find composers to work
with by running two calls/competitions a year which are structured around
creating concert programmes. Really the calls define the model for what we do so
we definitely want to make it attractive to composers (and musicians who we
work with too of course).
For each call we’re looking for 6 emerging composers to
either write a new piece or support the performance of an existing piece for a
set instrumentation and duration to create a concert programme. So far, we’ve
asked composers to submit 2 existing pieces, ideally for similar
instrumentation that we’re programming, so that a selection panel can chose the
“best” 6 composers. Only the successful composers have then been asked to write
a new piece by a particular date about 4 months in the future. We don’t charge
an entry fee and we currently don’t give a commissioning fee (we hope to be
able to do this in the future once we are in a more stable financial position).
We don’t ask composers to write about why they want this opportunity or to
describe their music or anything like that - the selection is based on the music
only so the selection panel only have the scores and recordings/midi files (we
ask for recordings because we include an audience member on the panel and they
generally can’t read scores). CVs are requested for the admin in the background
to check against our eligibility criteria (not published, not an undergraduate
student etc). We change the members of the selection panel for each call so
that we minimise any biases (towards individuals or a particular aesthetic) as
much as we can.
In return, composers receive a performance opportunity in a
public concert, a recording, photos and promotion for the months running up to
the concert. But what we really want is for it not to be a one off thing. We hold
a collaboration work shop where each composer gets time with the ensemble to
work on their piece and the other composers are welcome to attend too. We also encourage
the composers to attend additional rehearsals, when they can, to start
developing a relationship with the ensemble. Aside from a great concert, success
is also when a composer and an ensemble click and the ensemble incorporates a
piece into their repertoire or chose to work with a composer again in the
future. This is a bit tricky for us - we can’t force that to happen, at the
moment it feels a bit like we play match-maker and sometimes the chemistry
works, often it doesn’t or practicalities get in the way.
Michael Cutting (composer) and Richard Uttley (pianist) in our January collaboration work shop |
So that’s what we do at the moment.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Our first birthday
We’ve
just celebrated our first birthday (with a couple of glasses of bubbles of
course) and got quite excited about everything we’ve done in our first year.
We’ve come from not even having a name last Easter to having worked with 11
emerging composers, 12 emerging musicians and being described by Bachtrack as
having “found an effective formula for presenting its new works”.
The 2
concerts have been hugely enjoyable - they’re the culmination of everything we
do and what we’re all about - seeing the results of composers and musicians
collaborating and also talking to the audience about the inspiration and the
challenges behind the pieces. Every piece that we’ve programmed feels special,
some were written specifically for us and some were second or third (or tenth)
performances. Both things are important - providing a platform for new works to
be heard but also to give composers the opportunity to have repeat performances
of existing works. Excerpts from the first concert are on soundcloud and the second concert is coming soon.
Particular
highlights for me were Bill Dougherty eloquently describing the effect of light
on water that inspired his piece The Aureole Effect and then the audience
reaction to it - it seemed to be a marmite piece, some people loved it and some
people didn’t quite love it but everyone could hear the effect he had
described. Similarly, Piers Tattersall talking about the love triangle in the
story behind his piece At a distance of less than a yard… and hearing the
different characters in the instruments. Oh, and Josh Batty from the Atea Quintet talking about the technical challenges in Yuko Ohara’s
Double Helix, which was right at the edge of what’s possible and then playing amazingly. And and and….. I
could go on for some time….
Bill Dougherty talking about his inspiration with Matt Downes and Anna Patalong |
We’ve
been lucky to have great audiences at The Forge, they (you!) were attentive and
appreciative. Pretty vocal about their thoughts on the music as well, which is
great - I love talking to people in the bar afterwards and everyone has a different
favourite piece and had different reactions and experiences to the music.
Some of
the other highlights for me this year have also been when the musicians have
particularly liked one of the pieces or how one of the composers writes and so
have performed the piece again or another of their pieces - Elizabeth Rossiter
recently performed Ed Nesbit’s A Pretence of Wit again (with soprano Francis Israel) and
the Ligeti Quartet performed Steve Hicks’ trumpet quintet last October and plan
to perform it again later this year. A part of what we’re trying to do is for
composers and musicians to form relationships for the future, so it’s not just
a one off thing and it’s exciting that it’s starting to happen already.
None of
this would be possible without some fabulous people and while trying to avoid
sounding like a Oscar’s speech, there’s a few people that it wouldn’t feel
right not to mention. Firstly Steve Cook and Matt Downes, who are the other 2
trustees, who put a huge amount of time and effort in to make this a success.
You’ll have seen Matt on stage presenting (slightly irreverently!) at the
concerts and the results of Steve’s fabulous creativity in the concert curating
and programmes. The estate of Chris Bull and the Fenton Arts Trust have both
believed in what we’re doing and offered us financial support, without which
nothing would be possible. Lots of lovely people have generously helped us with
their skills, time and facilities: Jeremiah Crawley, Brett Cox, Ed Davison, Marc
Dooley, Chrissie Ganjou, Anthony Ganjou, Andrew Kurowski, Andrew Mellor,
Melissa Mellor, Cathy Pyle, Sinan Savaskan and Robert Saxton
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Audience review - Coaxing interesting sounds from a flute
It’s been a long time since I was asked to pay close attention to a piece of music. Some 20 years, in fact. I was studying for a GCSE in music and we thought our teacher was pretty contemporary when he asked us to discuss pop classic Alone by the big-haired, big-voiced band Heart. This was the late 1980s after all.
But I suspect when it came to our discussions on the more traditional notion of classical music, the closest we got to contemporary was Gabriel Fauré. And he died in 1924.
So, as I listened to four world premieres and one UK premiere at the latest New Dots event at The Forge in Camden, I realised just how little I knew about this area of music. Classical means Mozart, Bach and Wagner, right?
New Dots was founded in June 2012 to dispel exactly this myth. The charity brings together emerging composers and musicians to collaborate on and perform new works. Clearly, there is a thirst for this sort of partnership with 40 submissions for the May concert and 70 already submitted for the next one in November.
In the end the New Dots team had to whittle 40 down to five, selecting a range of international rising stars to compose music for wind and piano. The result was an hour and a half of fascinating work, ranging from Yuko Ohara’s flute solo inspired by human DNA, to Michael Cutting’s piece for piano, flute and clarinet inspired by the E.E. Cummings poem [in Just-], to a full-blown wind quintet about the way we experience spaces in our day-to-day lives by Aaron Holloway-Nahum.
As well as the collaborative part, New Dots is also determined to bring this vibrant contemporary music scene to a broader audience. So, as well as the performances – in this instance courtesy of the Atéa Wind Quintet and Richard Uttley on piano – the composers and musicians shared their inspirations while composing and their experiences of playing this technically demanding music. I’ve never seen anyone coax such interesting sounds from a flute as Joshua Batty; at one point he sounded exactly like a violinist plucking their strings pizzicato-style.
Yuko Ohara and Josh Batty talking about Double Helix for solo flute
Monday, May 27, 2013
Audience review - In need of some Beethoven?
Some years ago whilst at university, I attended a terrific (and rather liquid) dinner party at which the music of Frank Sinatra was played without respite. Eventually, a wonderful Bavarian lady in attendance stood up and declared "That’s it! I must go home. I just cannot listen to any more Frank Sinatra.....I must listen to some Beethoven". Some of those attending the New Dots concert of new classical music, may well have felt they needed to do the same after such angular and often dissonant compositions.
But hang on, I reckon these New Dots folk are onto something....
We heard five new pieces from already accomplished young composers, performed by excellent young musicians at the start of their own careers. Added to this, an audience willing to take the plunge into this often strange sound world (mainstream classical audiences please take note: new music doesn’t bite).
We started with Piers Tattersall's "At a distance of less than a yard…" performed for horn, clarinet and piano. A feisty tale of marital angst based on a theme of jealousy, with the 'bit on the side' represented musically by the French horn (keep it clean). A long, languid clarinet introduction led to a more frenetic ensemble in which one could picture the fur-flying antics of an arguing couple. As the pieced moved on, the wife (clarinettist Anna Hashimoto) led us back to a calmer section; did the wife have some resilience; some strength underlying the unhappiness? The piece continued through some dissonant pairings between horn and clarinet, eventually leading to a calmer section and finally a move into the major key with a quiet sustained final chord. Arguments over, one suspected. Jealousy remains but maybe each learning to live with it.
Moving from the sad to the positively sombre, the composition "caught on the corner" by Emma-Ruth Richards. This dark tale of an immigrant woman forced into sex work was never going to have a happy ending. Yet the wind quartet taking us through this ordeal began with a Roma-themed folk sound, complete with slurred tonality, pointing to the ethnic origins of the main character. Underlying the piece we had a near-constant pulse which had the effect of moving the story on or possibly simply representing the inexorable path of the poor woman in question. Dissonant fanfare-like moments could have been her cries for help. Difficult scoring and syncopated rhythms seemed not to phase this excellent quartet of players.
Moving next to a solo piece by flute "double helix" (composer Yuko Ohara), we entered a more scientific phase with the sounds aimed at representing the evolving complexities of DNA. A composer would struggle to do that with a full orchestra, much less with the typically sweet-voiced flute. More sound than music; more experimentation than exposition, never did I think the flute could be classed as a percussion instrument. Yet the accomplished technical skills of Joshua Batty took us on a journey of staccato, breathy and alien sounds combined with shrill attacks right throughout the range. If the audience were left bereft of any sense of musical line or direction from this piece, we were certainly left in no doubt as to how these sounds reflected the chaotic and complex nature of DNA itself.
Next we had “Barkham fantasy” by Mark Simpson, performed by Richard Uttley which offered a more familiar and shapely music line. Less adventurous maybe, but a welcoming and warm sound nonetheless. A slow alberti bass-style accompaniment underpinning a calming rain-like ornamentation in the right hand, provided quite the atmospheric opening. Increased movement and volume provided this short piece a natural arc of sound, before building to a fierce crescendo at the top range of the instrument, and then a return to the original theme. Uttley knew exactly where this music was going and took us with him.
The penultimate piece was “when the world is puddle-wonderful” by Michael Cutting which offered a view into the sense of playfulness encapsulated within the text of In Just by E.E. Cummings. This mischievous theme was captured immediately with pianist Richard Uttley placing an impromptu mute in the form of a scarf no less, over the strings within the piano... almost as if the game of hide and seek was already underway. From then we had interlinked mysterious snippets from piano, flute and clarinet: breathy sounds; sharp jolts and surprise flourishes of sound. Lighter moments did convey a sense of children in their games, whispering and causing merry mayhem. No children’s playtime would be complete without some tantrum or other, and an aggressive crescendo from the trio certainly made their point known. What fun.
Finally, we had the bustling and cosmopolitan melee of “How to avoid huge ships” by Aaron Holloway-Nahum, which began with a neatly conceived, but possibly overpowering, musicology class outlining harmonic and rhythmic intentions. As with wine tasting, sometimes you just want to skip the theory and get stuck into the practical. Yet, once it did start, this piece for wind quintet brilliantly portrayed the pulse of a busy city; people swept along in the same direction yet each with their own voice and intention. The players kept a tight grip on complex and syncopated entries with occasional moments of bassoon and clarinet breaking away as if to re-establish their own place in this busy cityscape. The frenetic soundwaves from this city-scape suddenly gave way to a quiet, almost nonchalant final motif.
Mainstream classical music venues in London are often seen as the heartbeat of the genre. Yet the important work that New Dots and others are doing to champion new music and its next generation of performers is, like those stimulating flute sounds we heard in Double Helix, part of music’s very DNA.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Audience review - From the front row
For our concert on 21st May we asked 3 audience members to write short reviews of the concert for us. We didn't give them any guidance or constraints about what to write - just that we wanted to know what they thought/felt/liked/didn't like. Here's the first of the 3 reviews, the other 2 will follow in the next couple of days.
I wasn't sure at first that my front row seat at Tuesday night's Sounds Of The New event at The Forge in Camden was such a good idea, I had planned on a cosy seat at the back where I could relax, close my eyes and just listen to the music. But I soon realised I had one of the best seats in the house to appreciate all the finer details of the experience; the physicality of the instruments and the challenges of the music. Just inches away from the stage I was fascinated by the pianist's super-fast fingers and transfixed by every button and lever of the flute as both instrument and player were tested to the limit by a seriously complex score. And who knew that much saliva could come out of a french horn?
I wasn't sure at first that my front row seat at Tuesday night's Sounds Of The New event at The Forge in Camden was such a good idea, I had planned on a cosy seat at the back where I could relax, close my eyes and just listen to the music. But I soon realised I had one of the best seats in the house to appreciate all the finer details of the experience; the physicality of the instruments and the challenges of the music. Just inches away from the stage I was fascinated by the pianist's super-fast fingers and transfixed by every button and lever of the flute as both instrument and player were tested to the limit by a seriously complex score. And who knew that much saliva could come out of a french horn?
This was the second New Dots event I have been to and once again their clever formula of combining on-stage conversation between the composers and musicians along with world or UK premieres of their contemporary classical music worked brilliantly and provided much-needed context to the six works. I am possibly the least musical person I know but with help from New Dots I am finding enlightenment. Particular highlights were pieces by Emma-Ruth Richards, Yuko Ohara and Piers Tattersall dealing, respectively, with the tricky subjects of sex-slavery, the double helix structure of DNA and adulterous jealousy.
Emma-Ruth and Piers talking about their inspiration with Matt Downes
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
An interview with Richard Uttley
Please tell us a
little about who you are and your background
I'm from Yorkshire and I play the
piano. I studied at Cambridge then the Guildhall School of Music & Drama
and I now live in London. I play lots of different kinds of music - old and new
(borrowed and blue too I suppose!) - and a mix of solo stuff and chamber music.
What inspires or
motivates you?
Creating amazing experiences with
sound. I can remember discovering chord inversions when I was young: I bought
the sheet music for World in Union, which we used to sing at school, and I
managed to decipher it - at this stage I hadn't started proper lessons, and
couldn't really read bass clef - but I was so excited to have unlocked the
mystery of this particular bit I loved. I still get that kind of feeling a bit
today when a composer does something really special. That's why I prefer
playing other people's music to writing my own - I like to be surprised by
something I couldn't or wouldn't have done. So I guess I'm inspired by what
composers can create and that motivates me to practise and bring the piece to
life in performance.
What have been the
most exciting performances you've given recently?
The one I most enjoyed recently was a
recital in the Sage Gateshead. It was in Hall 2, which is a tall tube shape
like a chimney (with seats all the way up) so it's got a great intimate feeling
at the stage level but you're also aware of the space above you which gives it
this fantastic acoustic. I'd never seen a hall like that before and they've got
a gorgeous piano in there too. I had a lot of fun in that concert and
particularly remember some fiendish Britten going very well!
Credit: Sage Gateshead
How would you
describe your style?
I wouldn't.
What are the
challenges with performing newly written pieces?
The main challenge is that the
emphasis is on the first performance. When you play traditional repertoire you
usually play it a lot - wherever and whenever you can - working towards a big
performance, but with a new piece the big attention is on the première so you
don't have the same chance to get comfortable with it. Also, much of the music
written today is extremely hard! Composers can be quite evil.
Are there any
particular composers that you like performing?
In terms of living composers, I love
Mark Simpson's music; I've played the piece he wrote for me (Barkham Fantasy) a
lot and am recording it later this year. His music combines sophistication and
directness, which is something I really admire. In terms of the dead composers,
there are too many greats to choose from but some of my favourite moments
onstage have been with Bach and Beethoven.
What does the
future hold?
Later this year I'm making my third
recording and I'm extremely excited about the pieces going on it - a particular
highlight is the first recording of a piano paraphrase on Berg's opera Lulu by
Marvin Wolfthal - so that will probably shape a lot of what I do over the next
couple of years. I'm also going to be collaborating with a video artist for
some concerts in 2014; I don't know exactly what kind of direction that is
going to take yet so that's going to be interesting.
What makes you smile?
Larry David.
@richard_uttley
Friday, May 10, 2013
An Interview with Chris Beagles
Please tell us a little about who you are and your
background
My name is Chris and I'm the Horn player with the Atéa Wind Quintet. We as a group have been making music together in varying formations for
the last 5 years or so. Aside from the
Quintet, each of us are busy forging our own freelance careers in the
Orchestral world along with budding solo careers.
What have been the most exciting performances you've given
recently?
As a Quintet we did a great concert for Southend Council a
month or so back which went fantastically well and both us and the audience
seemed to come away with a real buzz.
Do you have a distinctive sound?
I think that we do, yes.
As a group we work really hard on blending our individual instrument
sounds to try and create one unanimous voice, something that comes incredibly
naturally to our string quartet friends but requires a little more work from
us.
Who makes the artistic decisions? Or is it team work?
We really try and incorporate everyone's thoughts and ideas
in the process of exploring and performing music. Some of us are slightly more verbose than
others in the process though!
What are the challenges with performing newly written
pieces?
Often, a big hurdle is trying to understand exactly what a
composer wants from us, frequently they use notation that can be ambiguous. Thankfully
for this project, the composers are just a short email away so is not such an
issue and actually they have all been very clear in notating their intentions
thus far.
What do you talk about in breaks in rehearsals?
Varying topics from gossip to big ideas for the
group, although we always have things to eat whilst we discuss thanks to our oboist-cum-resident-Chef,
Philip, baking many, many cakes for us
@ateaquintet
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
An interview with Yuko Ohara
Please tell us a little about who you are and your
background
I was born in Yokohama, Japan and studied musicology and
composition for a BA and MA in Ferris University. In London I graduated from a
diploma in advanced composition at the Royal College of Music and have finished
a PhD at Brunel University recently
What/who inspires or motivates you?
Since I knew a piece by Xenakis, I have been listening to
contemporary music.
What is your favourite piece of your own work and why?
I like a piece for mixed ensemble called The Butterfly
Effect because I could hear instrumental sound effects and sound colours.
How would you describe your style?
I always find a concept and try to write a piece. How to
represent the concepts into my pieces is very important and also the connection with structures and the process of composition.
What is your composing routine. When do you like to
write?
I should work at day time but it is necessary for me to
concentrate at night, especially before composition deadlines.
What were the challenges in writing the piece for the
New Dots concert?
I had a premiere with the piece by Michael Schmid at the
Tzlil Meudcan Festival in Israel and then revised a few parts for the New Dots
Project.
What does the future hold?
I hold a fellow at Institute of Musical Research and will
attend seminars and keep researching there. A piece for chamber orchestra is being performed by ensemble mise- en in October and a performance with Tokyo Ensemble Factory in December
What makes you smile?
If performers play my pieces very well and I felt lots of
energy from them, it makes me happy and a big smile.
Saturday, May 4, 2013
An interview with Piers Tattersall
Please tell us a little
about who you are and your background
I was born in Salisbury where I studied piano and 'cello. In 2008 I graduated from the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester having studied with Gary Carpenter. I then studied composition and orchestration with Joseph Horovitz and Kenneth Hesketh at the Royal College of Music generously supported by the Countess of Munster Musical Trust. In addition to studying music I have also written on aesthetics for the Thomas More Institute as well as organising seminars on 20th Century aesthetics.
Usually I will spend a few days at the start of a project
testing my material and finding out what works and what doesn’t. This can be
quite slow-going at times and quite frustrating as it invariably involves
scrapping ideas that are no good even if they’ve taken a long time to create.
After this is over I find that a piece can progress fairly swiftly and I can
compose in between doing other things or early in the morning.
I was born in Salisbury where I studied piano and 'cello. In 2008 I graduated from the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester having studied with Gary Carpenter. I then studied composition and orchestration with Joseph Horovitz and Kenneth Hesketh at the Royal College of Music generously supported by the Countess of Munster Musical Trust. In addition to studying music I have also written on aesthetics for the Thomas More Institute as well as organising seminars on 20th Century aesthetics.
What/who inspires or motivates you?
The three composers who have had the strongest influence on
my music are William Byrd for his control of melodic line, and Beethoven and
Gerard Grisey for being so consciously modern while so immediately
intelligible. I would like to make the music of these composers more
intelligible and I think the best way is to write more music developing the
culture that they helped to establish but working in the present.
What is your favourite piece of your own work and why?
I find this a difficult question to answer as however I
answer I will always be missing something out. I think my most complete piece
is a short passacaglia for flute and piano that I wrote for my wife. It
contains everything I could say in a melody. I have other pieces that are quite
different; this one (written for New Dots), for example is very good.
How would you describe your style?
Overall I would say my music is fairly abrasive but
essentially melodic. I began singing in church choirs towards the end of my
studies in Manchester where we regularly sang Gregorian Chant and Renaissance
Polyphony. This has had a strong influence on my approach to writing individual
parts, so whatever crashes and bangs may be happening there is always something
melodic underneath it all.
What is your composing routine. When do you like to write?
What were the challenges in writing the piece for the New
Dots concert?
Where all of the instruments have such different ways of
making sound I found it a challenge to create material that allows them all to
operate as a coherent unit. However this is also a constant source of
expressivity where instruments produce the same sounds (usually pitches) but in
different ways.
What does the future hold?
I have a couple of projects lined up – a collaboration with
Christopher Guild in a piece for piano and electronics and an opera with the
Librettist Katherine Longworth.
What makes you smile?
My son
@PiersTattersall
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
An interview with Michael Cutting
Please tell us a little about who you are and your
background
After studying piano and violin from an early age, I
gradually became more interested in composing my own pieces than practicing
scales. After discovering The Rite of Spring with my youth orchestra, as well
as being introduced to works by Ligeti, Benjamin and Grisey by my hugely
encouraging A-Level music teacher, a composer in his own right, I realised this
was the kind of music I wanted to write and subsequently applied to the Royal
Northern College of Music to study composition. Having completed both my undergraduate
and masters at RNCM, I am currently living and working in Manchester whilst
undertaking a PhD at Kings College London supervised by George Benjamin. Aside
from composing, I direct ACM Ensemble, a new music group currently working in
association with Ensemble 10/10.
What/who inspires or motivates you?
Nothing is more inspiring for me than witnessing the
performance of a masterpiece by great musicians. One such vivid memory was
travelling last minute to Birmingham just to watch BCMG's performance of Gerard
Grisey's Quatre Chants pour Franchir le Seuil. Incredible experiences like this
inspire me to write and organise more performances of new music.
What is your favourite piece of your own work and why?
Difficult to say, as there are moments in all of my works I
am proud of as well as those which could have been more refined. I guess the
work which I feel is the most successful is a suite for violin and piano called
Winter Visions, in which each movement creates its own distinct musical world but
together form a set of complimentary pieces. However, my language has changed
so much since then I would probably write something very different now.
How would you describe your style?
I wouldn't say I write in a particular 'style', the word
seems contrary to most composers' desire to be innovative and push boundaries.
However, some features remain common in all of my works, namely an interest in
intricate musical colours, a sense of drama, and a striving for bold and
original sounds.
What is your composing routine. When do you like to write?
My routine seems to consist of a lot of sitting, thinking
and listening and not much writing! Composing for me is always a challenge, as
I am constantly striving to do something new and original in each piece, which
requires lots of re-working of material. Ideas are easy to find but it's what
you do with them that determines the work's success.
What were the challenges in writing the piece for the New
Dots concert?
The combination of flute, clarinet and piano offers lots of
possibilities but also numerous limitations, particularly the lack of lower
register. It also suggests a specific sound, which although I wanted utilise,
hopefully in a slightly more surprising way than expected.
What does the future hold?
It depends what opportunities open up for me. I have
numerous works in the pipeline, such as a large theatre work, string quartet,
and other ensemble pieces. I look forward to getting stuck into some
larger-scale works, having been refined to chamber works in this last year or
so. I am also enjoying directing ACM Ensemble, which has some really exciting
projects coming up and seems to be gaining recognition for its ambitious
programs.
What makes you smile?
Saturday, April 27, 2013
An interview with Emma-Ruth Richards
Please tell us a
little about who you are and your background
I am currently completing my
PhD in composition at the Royal Northern College of Music whilst studying
privately with Alexander Goehr and I completed my undergraduate degree and
Masters in composition at Cardiff School of Music under the supervision of
Arlene Sierra and Judith Weir. During my time in both Cardiff and
Manchester I have studied in seminars and workshops with
Pierre Boulez, Henri Dutilleux, Simon Bainbridge, Julian Anderson, James
MacMillan, Frederic Rzewski, Howard Skempton and in the Cardiff BBC
Studios with Michael Berkley and Jac Van Steen.
I have been commissioned and
performed by Opera North, London Philharmonia, BBC NOW Chamber Players,
Håkan Hardenberger, Colin Currie, Nicholas Daniel, Paul Silverthorne, The
Rhodes Piano Trio, Ebor Singers, Navarra Quartet, Dudok Quartet, Ligeti
Quartet, Aurora Percussion Duo, HM Royal Marines Windband, Camerata Pacifica,
Manchester Camerata, and The Absolution Saxophone Quartet amongst
others.
I am a Royal Northern Gold
Medal composer and have been featured in festivals including Music of
Today 2009, James MacMillan 2009, RNCM Chamberfest 2011, Sounds New
Canterbury 2010, HCMF 2011, Queen’s Belfast 2012, North West 2012, St.
Magnus 2012, IC Hong Kong 2012, Internationaal Kamermuziekfestival Den
Haag 2012 and Banff 2012.
I am a member of the LSO's
composer soundhub; the composer in residence with Milton Keynes
City Orchestra and London Arte Chamber Orchestra; a co-director of
Collectives and Curiosities; and a member of the Chetham’s International
Summer School Faculty.
My string quartet has recently
been published by Donemus in Amsterdam.
What/who inspires
or motivates you?
For me, music is clarification and I always try to refine and almost
purify an idea so that it has as much authority and impact as possible. I love to write music that
musicians want to play and communicate with and therefore each project has a
different motivation / inspiration depending on who I am working with. For
example, over the last 2 years I have been working on an opera with librettist
Nic Chalmers and therefore there has been a strong collaborative drive as well
a wonderful opportunity to share ideas in the form of texts, images, dance and
theatre.
It is also true, however, that
I am deeply disturbed by the dissolution of the human condition and across
most of my work my inspiration is drawn from painful reflections on the state
of humanity all over the world in every type of society and race. I think
of sonority metaphorically carving out shapes within a space / cutting through
a space / defining a particular type of space within a piece of music and it is
from this starting point that I try to, metaphorically, create a space
that I feel that best resonates with the magnitude of the
subject matter.
Proprioception – [kinesthesia (sense of body motion) is sometimes used
interchangeably with proprioception (sense of body within an
environment / a particular space)] – links to my choice of instruments
and my approach to writing for them, for example, for me the trumpet timbre is
a powerful sonority and I am drawn to it because it is textured, “rough” around
the edges, direct, physical, unpredictable, visceral, potent, and immediate.
How would you
describe your style?
I have long since been obsessed
with the concept of space in the temporal art form, music. In my practice
I approach this by taking something concrete in an architectural structure, and
translating it – or filtering it – through the specific notion of timbre. The
way that I conceive of line, space, light and direction is through the medium
of a particular instrument creating a space within a composition; a kind of
aesthetic synaesthesia perhaps not too dissimilar to Messiaen’s medical
synaesthesia. Music that draws on register and timbre of instruments in order
to ‘represent’ or draw a concept of space into music has been considered by
several contemporary composers. Brian Ferneyhough’s Carceri d’Invenzione
I provides an example of fluent, translucent and extreme registral
lines and was conceptually based on Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s etchings of
Rome and imagined surrealist prisons (Carceri d’Invenzione) from
the mid Eighteenth century where the lines of the paintings appear to travel
beyond the page itself. However, in the music that I write I have set out to
explore the particular timbre of the trumpet. I aim to capture and create an
audible darkness and light that represents a particular visual and / or spatial
awareness of striking shapes or acoustics of particular buildings and
structures that make an impact on me.
What is your
composing routine. When do you like to write?
I write whenever I can -
sometimes, especially early on in the creation of the piece, I have
to block out complete days to work from early morning right through into the
night - sometimes, if I have already worked out a plan and know my material
well then I know where I am going with a piece and it is much easier to fit in
a few hours here and there in between other engagements and private teaching
etc.
What were the
challenges in writing the piece for the New Dots concert?
It was my first wind quartet! I
also wanted to work, a little, with multiphonics - this is also an area that I
haven't had any experience with previously so I needed lots of time to work
with the players on the first movement of the quartet in particular.
What does the
future hold?
I am currently working on a few
chamber music / solo commissions as well as my first chamber opera. I also
co-direct Collectives and Curiosities and this year we have a residency with
LSO on their soundhub scheme so we are working hard on
curating our main event for the 21st June.
What makes you smile?
Children; young
animals; deliberate kindness; any expression of innocencehttp://emmaruthrichards.wordpress.com
https://soundcloud.com/errichards
@err_composer
Sunday, April 21, 2013
An interview with Aaron Holloway-Nahum
Please tell us a little about who you are and your
background
I was born in Chicago in 1983 and began my life in music as
a singer. I sang in choirs and played
the piano throughout school and it was only when I was 17 that I discovered
composition. I entered Northwestern
University, actually, as a voice major -
but within the year had changed to study composition and an ad-hoc orchestral
conducting degree. I moved to England in
2005 to do my Mmus in composition at the Royal Academy, stayed to do my Dmus
(which I finished in 2012 at Guildhall) met my wife (we were married in July
2011) and have settled here!
What inspires or motivates you?
In terms of motivation, I find it takes very little to get
me to the drafting table. I have so much
music I want to write and so many other things that I need to do in a day that
I'm out of bed most days by 6am and composing for as long as I can before the
other requirements of the day kick in.
Even starting at that time it's hard to get more than 3 or 4 hours in
before I need to be heading on to the next thing, and so it's always a real joy
to wake up and come back to it the next day.
There are many things that inspire me – all the normal
answers like painting, film, poetry, travel, listening…these all apply – but
the most inspiring things for me are actually people. I just love musicians. These people have dedicated their entire
lives to being able to create the exact sound they want from an instrument – to
the point where the instrument just becomes an extension of their will – and
this is just not something that happens overnight. It's every day, day after day, year after
year and they just keep going to the point where they are capable of creating
this incredible beauty. And that's what
I aim for, in composing. Music that will
challenge and reward them, will draw them into new ideas, and will bring us
together as collaborators in creating something new.
What is your favourite piece of your own work and why?
I'm not really sure I can answer this question
directly. Pieces of music that I compose
are very personal, and close to me. I
don't (yet) have children myself but I've heard many older composers describe
the feeling as being similar to that of a parent. I spend a lot of time making a piece of music
– for How to Avoid Huge Ships one could conservatively estimate I spent about
50 hours composing for each minute of music – and so every single note in the
work is precious to me at the time I create it.
Then I'll go back, five years later, and its like somebody else wrote
the piece entirely!
So each piece becomes a sort of frozen statement about what
music is at that particular time in your life.
And they're each precious. I
suppose the one thing I could say is that – as a young composer – I think you
learn more and more to be an honest version of yourself. And in my recent work, in particular, I see
more of myself and less of the other composer(s) I hoped I would be. So the
music gets more honest and I think that its scary, but I do like it more and
more.
How would you describe your style?
I think style is a really hard thing to describe from the
inside-out. My immediate response is to
want to tell you about my technique, but technique is a far thing from
style. I guess one of the things that
you can really hear in my music is the voice – I sing all the time when I compose,
improvising lines and rhythms and then transcribing them as I get them closer
and closer to what I want. So whatever
the instruments in the piece, you hear a lot of this in the music I write.
What is your composing routine? When do you like to write?
I've already kind of touched on this – I have to write, have
to write, first thing in the morning. If
I'm not at my desk by 6:30am it's a very unusual morning. I find this is the time when I can most
clearly find the music – without the hundreds of other things that constantly
come up during the day – and it's a really precious time to me.
What were the challenges in writing the piece for the New
Dots concert?
Well I set myself a very pressing challenge in choosing the
write for the Wind Quintet itself, because it is a very traditional ensemble
with a long history – and a long history of causing composers insurmountable
problems! But the truth is that this
piece came very easily to me as I know a number of players in the Atea Quintet
(we spent time at the Academy together), so I was aware of their very high
quality, and there's nothing more exciting than writing music for players who
inspire you.
What does the future hold?
I'm headed to France for the Etchings Festival with the East
Coast Contemporary Ensemble and Georg Friedrich Haas in July, have a premiere
of a new orchestral work (The Deeper Breath to Follow) with the BBC Symphony
Orchestra in November, and have been commissioned by the Britten Pears
Foundation & RVW Trust to write a Clarinet Quintet for Timothy Orpen. I'm also the Artistic Director of The Riot
Ensemble, and we have four concerts left this year along with establishing a
new series of educational concerts and a full concert schedule we're planning
for 2014 so it's shaping up to be a very busy year!
What makes you smile?
My wife's laughter.
@aaronhnahum
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