Gareth Williams (composer)

Last updated
Williams Headshot.jpg

Gareth Williams
Birth nameGareth Williams
Origin County Armagh, Northern Ireland
Occupation(s)Composer
Years active2000–
Website http://www.garethwilliamsmusic.com/

Gareth Patrick Williams (born 1977) is an Irish composer based at Edinburgh College of Art. He was the first composer in residence for Scottish Opera from 2012 to 2015. His work spans from opera and music theatre to chamber music.

Contents

Career

Originally from Armagh, Williams moved to Glasgow after studying music at Queen's University, Belfast. In 2008 he was awarded his doctorate from the University of St Andrews. [1] He taught composition at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland until 2012, and since then works as a freelance composer. His work has been featured in the Edinburgh Festival, St Magnus Festival, Tête à Tête (opera company), Opera to Go, and the York Late Music Festival.[ citation needed ] His music has been broadcast on BBC Scotland, BBC Radio Scotland, BBC Radio Ulster, RTÉ Television, BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4, and CBC Radio 2 in Canada.

In 2009, he was on residency at the Centre Culturel Irlandais in Paris, where he wrote two large music theatre pieces -A Short Treatise on Love and Miracle for the Sound Festival in Aberdeen, [2] and Gethsemane for the 2010 Plug Festival. [3] In August 2009 and 2010, he took part in the LibLab at Tapestry New Opera Works in Toronto, [4] to create short operas in collaboration with Canadian writers, and these were performed in the Opera Briefs festival in Toronto in both years. [5] In Scotland, NOISE (New Opera in Scotland Events) commissioned and premiered ‘the Sloans Project’ (with libretto by David James Brock). [6]

Williams has been Composer in Residence at Scottish Opera, [7] where he created several works for the company. Elephant Angel (with libretto by Bernard McLaverty) [8] toured Scotland and Northern Ireland in Autumn 2012. Another opera, Last One Out (with libretto by Johnny McKnight), [9] was premiered at the Sound Festival in 2012 in Fraserburgh Lighthouse, both works receiving five star reviews from The Herald (Glasgow) and The Scotsman . Hand (with libretto by Johnny McKnight) was created for the 2013 Opera Highlights tour. The Song, the Stars and the Blossom (text from an interview with Dennis Potter) appeared in 2014 and Rocking Horse Winner by D. H. Lawrence (Librettist Anna Chatterton) in 2015. [10] Rocking Horse Winner, chamber opera with libretto by Anna Chatterton, was premiered by Tapestry Opera in Toronto in 2016, and was shortlisted for nine Dora Mavor Moore Awards in 2017, winning five, including best operatic production. The piece was re-staged at Saratoga Opera Festival in 2018, at Opera Louisiane, Baton Rouge, in 2023, at Opera Maine in 2023, and again by Tapestry Opera in Toronto in 2023. In 2020, Tapestry Opera recorded and released the opera.

With the support of The Wellcome Trust, he created Breath Cycle (with libretto by David James Brock) at the Respiratory ward at Gartnavel Royal Hospital, where he made songs and opera specifically for patients with cystic fibrosis. The material was bespoke to lung capacity, range, and ability, and the effects of singing on respiratory health are being monitored and measured. [11] Breath Cycle was shortlisted for a Royal Philharmonic Society Award in 2013. He returned to Scottish Opera in 2021 to create Breath Cycle II, working with people with Long Covid. Together they created A Covid Songbook - a collaborative, ongoing collection of songs written for/with people living with Long Covid. In 2015, Hirda, A New Opera for Shetland, co-composed with Shetland Fiddler, Chris Stout, and produced by NOISE, toured Shetland and performed in Glasgow and Edinburgh [12] [13]

From 2016 to 2018, with writer Oliver Emanuel, Williams created the 306 Trilogy, a set of three music theatre works about the British men shot for cowardice in World War 1, commissioned and produced by National Theatre of Scotland, 14 - 18 Now, Horsecross Theatre, Stellar Quines, Red Note Ensemble. Part 1, 306 Dawn, and part 2, 306 Day were shortlisted for CATS awards for best music and sound. A compilation of the songs from the 306 Trilogy was recorded and released in 2021, called "Lost Light, Music from the 306."

In 2018, Navigate the Blood, an opera, co composed with indie band Admiral Fallow, was commissioned and produced by NOISE Opera. A site specific work, it toured whisky distilleries of Scotland.

In 2022, Scottish Opera premiered Rubble, a chamber opera written to include their young company, written by Gareth Williams and Johnny McKnight, that explores stories of violence and abuse in a fictitious Glasgow children's carehome in the 1980s, The libretto was written in contemporary Glasgow dialect.

In 2022, as part of Event Scotland's Year of StoriesWilliams created 'Songs from the Last Page' - a singing/songwriting project that transformed/repurposed the final lines of classic and contemporary Scottish novels into new songs written for the composer's own voice. This project toured Book Festivals and libraries of Scotland in 2022, and was part of the Made in Scotland Showcase at Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2023. 11 of the songs were released as an album,Songs from the Last Page, in 2023, and featured a Gaelic song by singer, Dierdre Graham.

Prizes and awards

Prizes include the Dinah Wolf Prize for Composition, [14] and his piece Search Engines was winner of the 2000 Great British Conservatoire Composers Forum. [15] [ citation needed ] His opera 'Rocking Horse Winner' was nominated for nine Dora Mavor Moore Awards Archived 20 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine in 2017, winning in five categories, including best opera production, best ensemble and best director.

Selected works

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scottish Opera</span> National opera company of Scotland

Scottish Opera is the national opera company of Scotland, and one of the five national performing arts companies of Scotland. Founded in 1962 and based in Glasgow, it is the largest performing arts organisation in Scotland.

Thomas Wilson CBE FRSE was an American-born Scottish composer, a key figure in the revival of interest in Scottish classical music after the second world war.

Sir Alexander Drummond Gibson was a Scottish conductor and opera intendant. He was also well known for his service to the BBC and his achievements during his reign as the longest serving principal conductor of the Scottish National Orchestra in which the orchestra was awarded its Royal Patronage.

Edward ("Eddie") McGuire is a Scottish composer whose work ranges from compositions for solo instruments and voice to large-scale orchestral and operatic works. McGuire studied composition with James Iliff at the Royal Academy of Music in London from 1966 to 1970 and then with Ingvar Lidholm in Stockholm in 1971.

Jonathan Dove is an English composer of opera, choral works, plays, films, and orchestral and chamber music. He has arranged a number of operas for English Touring Opera and the City of Birmingham Touring Opera, including in 1990 an 18-player two-evening adaptation of Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen for CBTO. He was Artistic Director of the Spitalfields Festival from 2001 to 2006.

James Simon Rolfe is a Canadian composer of contemporary music.

Michel van der Aa is a Dutch composer of contemporary classical music.

Chris Stout is a Scottish fiddle/violin player from Shetland, now based in Glasgow. Stout grew up in Fair Isle and lived there until 8 years of age before moving to Sandwick on the Shetland Mainland, then on to Glasgow in the 1990s.

<i>Oberon Old and New</i>

Oberon Old and New or Oberon Past and Present is a book containing a new libretto written by Anthony Burgess in 1985 for Carl Maria von Weber's last opera Oberon (1826). The libretto was commissioned by Scottish Opera, and first used in Glasgow on 23 October 1985, in a performance conducted by Sir Alexander Gibson and directed by Graham Vick, with production design by Russell Craig.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martin Green (musician)</span> English musician and composer

Martin Green is an English musician and composer. He is the accordionist in the folk trio Lau, who won a Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award for Artists.

Greek is an opera in two acts composed by Mark-Anthony Turnage to a libretto adapted by Turnage and Jonathan Moore from Steven Berkoff's 1980 verse play Greek. The play and the opera are a re-telling of Sophocles's Greek tragedy Oedipus Rex with the setting changed to the East End of London in the 1980s. The opera was first performed on 17 June 1988 in the Carl-Orff-Saal of the Gasteig, Munich, in a co-production by the Munich Biennale, the Edinburgh International Festival and the BBC.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lyell Cresswell</span> New Zealand composer (1944–2022)

Lyell Richard Cresswell was a New Zealand composer of contemporary classical music. He was the younger brother of philosopher Max Cresswell. Cresswell studied in Wellington, Toronto, Aberdeen and Utrecht and lived and worked in Edinburgh from 1985 on. Although he lived more than half his life away from New Zealand, he regarded himself as a New Zealander.

This is a summary of 1956 in music in the United Kingdom, including the official charts from that year.

Elena Langer is a Russian-born British composer of opera and other contemporary classical music. Her work has been performed at the Royal Opera House, Zurich Opera, Carnegie Hall, Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, Stanislavski and Nemirovich-Danchenko Moscow Academic Music Theatre, Shakespeare's Globe, Wigmore Hall, Opera national du Rhin, Strasbourg, and Milton Court, Barbican Centre. She studied piano and composition at the Gnessin State Musical College in Moscow and composition at the Moscow Conservatoire; in 1999 she moved to London and studied composition at the Royal College of Music (1999–2000) with Julian Anderson and the Royal Academy of Music (2001–03) with Simon Bainbridge.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Opera in Scotland</span>

Scottish opera is a subgenre of Scottish music. This article deals with three separate, but overlapping subjects:

Ghost Patrol is a one-act chamber opera composed by Stuart MacRae to an English-language libretto by Louise Welsh. A co-commission by Scottish Opera and Music Theatre Wales, it premiered on 30 August 2012 at the Edinburgh Festival.

Feargus Hetherington is a violinist and violist based in Glasgow. He has performed from an early age throughout Scotland and abroad. He arranges music, teaches and presents music workshops and seminars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Classical music in Scotland</span>

Classical music in Scotland is all art music in the Western European classical tradition, between its introduction in the eighteenth century until the present day. The development of a distinct tradition of art music in Scotland was limited by the impact of the Scottish Reformation on ecclesiastical music from the sixteenth century. Concerts, largely composed of "Scottish airs", developed in the seventeenth century and classical instruments were introduced to the country. Music in Edinburgh prospered through the patronage of figures including Sir John Clerk of Penicuik. The Italian style of classical music was probably first brought to Scotland by the cellist and composer Lorenzo Bocchi, who travelled to Scotland in the 1720s. The Musical Society of Edinburgh was incorporated in 1728. Several Italian musicians were active in the capital in this period and there are several known Scottish composers in the classical style, including Thomas Erskine, 6th Earl of Kellie, the first Scot known to have produced a symphony.

Nigredo Hotel is a chamber opera in one act composed by Nic Gotham to a libretto by Ann-Marie MacDonald. It premiered on 13 May 1992 at the Tarragon Theatre in Toronto in a production by Tapestry New Opera Works who had commissioned the opera. The production won two Dora Awards and the work was nominated for the Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award. Subtitled "an operatic thriller", it is set in Room 7 of a run-down hotel which takes its name from the Jungian concept of Nigredo or "dark night of the soul". The story involves an encounter between the beautiful but crazed woman who runs the hotel and a brain surgeon forced to take refuge there after crashing his car.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul Bentley</span>

Paul Richard Bentley is a British stage, film and television actor, perhaps best known for playing the High Septon in the television series Game of Thrones. He is also a writer.

References

  1. "Dr Gareth Williams". Edinburgh College of Art. University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  2. "A Short Treatise on Love and Miracles". The Contemporary Music Centre of Ireland. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  3. "Choral Concert in Restored West Church in Thurso". Northings. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  4. "About: What We Do". Tapestry opera. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  5. Everett-Green, Robert (11 November 2011). "Opera in a Pub: Tapestry raises a glass". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  6. "NOISE (New Opera in Scotland Events): The Sloans Project". Made in Scotland. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  7. "SCOTTISH OPERA APPOINTS FIRST COMPOSER IN RESIDENCE" (PDF). Scottish Opera. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  8. Telegrah, Belfast. "Elephant Angel". Scottish Opera . Retrieved 6 February 2016.
  9. Kettle, David. "A non-traditional opera featuring text from Johnny McKnight and music from Gareth Williams". The List. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  10. Katz, Dahlia (28 May 2016). "Rocking Horse Winner". Opera News.
  11. "Breath Cycle – Singing and Cystic Fibrosis". Breath Cycle. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  12. Molleson, Kate (29 November 2015). "Hirda Review". The Guardian . Retrieved 5 February 2016.
  13. Bruce, Keith. "Hirda Review". The Herald . Retrieved 5 February 2016.
  14. "noise opera" . Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  15. "Gareth Williams". Contemporary Music Centre of Ireland. Retrieved 25 February 2016.