Small Atlas @ Centre Acanthes 2011

This evening, Small Atlas will be premiered at the Arsenal in Metz, France, by Mario Caroli, Pierre-Stéphane Meugé, Donatienne Michel-Dansac and Vincent Leterme. This fant­astic quartet of mu­si­cians (pic­tured below) has been ex­cel­lent to work with so far and I look for­ward to hearing the piece take shape in performance.

For those not in Metz, here is a fla­vour of what’s in store from the re­cording made during our workshop-rehearsal yesterday:

L-R: Donatienne Michel-Dansac, Vincent Leterme, Pierre-Stéphane Meugé & Mario Caroli

Posted in Performances | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Small Atlas @ Centre Acanthes 2011

Centre Acanthes 2011

Centre Acanthes Poster 2011I’m in Metz, France, for two weeks for the Centre Acanthes series of work­shops and lec­tures, which will in­clude work­shops of my new piece for flute, sop­rano sax­o­phone, voice and piano, Small Atlas, the first of which is to­morrow morning. The players are Mario Caroli (flute), Pierre-Stéphane Meugé (sax­o­phone), Donatienne Michel-Dansac (voice) and Vincent Leterme (piano). Unsuk Chin, Philippe Hurel and Oscar Strasnoy are on the com­pos­i­tion fac­ulty, while Mario Caroli and Andrew Zolinsky are giving flute and piano mas­ter­classes re­spect­ively. Tonight, Alexandre Tharaud gives a piano re­cital of works by Domenico Scarlatti, Thierry Pécou, Oscar Strasnoy, Gérard Pesson and Mauricio Kagel.

My stay in Metz is sup­ported by a bursary from ADAMI and SACEM.

Posted in Workshops | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Centre Acanthes 2011

June Unfolding @ KEMS Barnaby Concert

Two weeks ago King Edward Musical Society premiered my or­ches­tral piece, June Unfolding, written for the oc­ca­sion — a spe­cial con­cert marking the 750th an­niversary of Macclesfield’s Royal Charter. The result was re­corded by BBC Radio 3 and will be broad­cast later this year, but in the mean­time, here is a short ex­cerpt from the first half of the piece (which is around 12 minutes long in total) from a ‘bootleg’ re­cording by a friend. While listening, get a feel for the concert’s sights with photos taken by Gareth Hacking on the night, some of which I’ve also in­cluded below. Thanks again to everyone in­volved in making the night such a great suc­cess, from mu­si­cians to fire stewards.

June Unfolding (ex­tract) by Chris Swithinbank on Soundcloud

KEMS - Barnaby Concert

KEMS - Barnaby Concert

KEMS - Barnaby Concert

KEMS - Barnaby Concert

Posted in News | Tagged , , | Comments Off on June Unfolding @ KEMS Barnaby Concert

Richard Rijnvos Matthijs Vermeulen Award Acceptance Speech

Richard Rijnvos accepting the Matthijs Vermeulen Award, 22 June 2011Last night, Richard Rijnvos was awarded the Matthijs Vermeulen Award, a bi­en­nial prize for a Dutch com­poser con­sidered to have ‘com­posed an im­portant piece in the field of con­tem­porary music’. As you can hear below, his ac­cept­ance speech was a fiery af­fair, at­tacking the cur­rent Dutch government’s policy of swingeing cuts to arts and music funding in the country. For non-Dutch speakers I have trans­lated the text of his speech below. (You can find the ori­ginal as a PDF here.)

While you’re here, the Muziek Centrum Nederland, which I think is prob­ably the best music in­form­a­tion centre in the world, faces 100% cuts to its gov­ern­ment funding. They are run­ning a pe­ti­tion asking for sup­port against the cuts that I would urge you to sign.

*

Acceptance Speech Richard Rijnvos

Upon re­ceipt of the Matthijs Vermeulen Prize, awarded during Toonzetters on 22 June 2011 in the Muziekgebouw aan ’t IJ.

The or­gan­isers have po­litely asked me not to speak for longer than three minutes. I’ll just start my stop­watch. (Starts stop­watch) So!

It is — I think — fairly ob­vious when I say that I am de­lighted to re­ceive the Matthijs Vermeulen Prize. It is — I think — fairly ob­vious when I say that I am de­lighted to re­ceive the Matthijs Vermeulen Prize for the the second time.

Some of you will know that for a while now I have been living and working in Durham; Durham, a small pic­tur­esque town in the shadow of Newcastle in the North of England.

We know England as the country of good man­ners, as the country where tra­di­tions are held in high re­gard, and where na­tion­alism is not a dirty word. I usu­ally keep my dis­tance from any kind of sen­ti­mental chau­vinism, but in light of the dis­astrous de­cisions re­garding art and cul­ture policy of the cur­rent [Dutch] gov­ern­ment, I will gladly make an ex­cep­tion here:

I am proud of this award. I am proud of every note that sounds in Die Kammersängerin. I am proud of Marije van Stralen and the Ives Ensemble who bring my song cycle to life with as much en­thu­siasm as ultra pro­fes­sional pre­ci­sion. I am proud of the fact that I am an artist.

Yes, ladies and gen­tlemen, you heard me right: I am proud of my­self. Why?
Because the gov­ern­ment isn’t but should be.
Don’t get me wrong: the arts are also having their funding cut in Great Britain, but not with the cyn­ical, vin­dictive, hateful un­der­tones that are cur­rently em­ployed by many a politi­cian in the Hague, un­doubtedly driven by the ap­par­ently in­erad­ic­able apathy that the Netherlands loves so much.

We, artists, have re­cently been suc­cess­ively por­trayed as left-wing hob­by­ists, subsidy-spongers, and re­cently politi­cians can’t resist taking an­other shot, making artists look like subsidy-enslaved idiots. We are junkies. It seems as if the polit­ical lords and ladies have no in­terest in good man­ners. And no in­terest in cul­tural tra­di­tions. And also have no shred of cul­tural chauvinism.

I am proud of my­self. Why?
Because the gov­ern­ment isn’t. But it should be.

Rita Verdonk once thought the time right for yet an­other pop­u­list party.
T.O.N. Trots op Nederland [Proud of the Netherlands].

It is high time for a new polit­ical party:
T.O.N.K.
Trots op Nederlandse Kunstenaars [Proud of Dutch Artists].

(looks at stop­watch) My time is up. Thank you for your attention.

Posted in Odds & Ends | Tagged , , | Comments (2)

June Unfolding in Macclesfield

This Saturday sees the first per­form­ance of June Unfolding by the or­chestra of King Edward Musical Society in Macclesfield as part of the Barnaby Festival marking the 750th an­niversary of the Royal Charter of Macclesfield. It seems like only yes­terday that I first met the or­chestra, but months down the line, here we are and re­hearsals have been going very well. Alongside my piece the pro­gramme in­cludes Shostakovich’s Festive Overture, Beethoven Violin Concerto (per­formed by the orchestra’s leader, Melissa Court), the Apotheosis/Triumphal March from Berlioz’s Grand sym­phonie fun­èbre et tri­om­phale, and A New Song’s Measure for choir and con­cert band by Irish com­poser Fergal Carroll.

You can find out more about June Unfolding on the Adopt a Composer blog. Many thanks go to the or­gan­isa­tions that sup­ported this com­mis­sion — Sound and Music, PRS for Music Foundation and Making Music — but also to all the mem­bers of the or­chestra, con­ductor Tony Houghton and KEMS chairman Tim Ward.

Listings: Barnaby Festival / Facebook / Songkick

Chris Swithinbank looking at the score for ‘June Unfolding’. Photo © KEMS / Roger Dowling

Posted in Performances | Tagged , , | Comments Off on June Unfolding in Macclesfield
  • Microbiography

    Chris Swithinbank is a British-Dutch com­poser who works with both acoustic in­stru­ments and elec­tronic sounds. He is cur­rently a stu­dent at Harvard University with Chaya Czernowin.
    Full Biography »

  • Hear