The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline .(July 2022) |
Keyna Wilkins is an Australian/British composer-musician. Her compositions are published and distributed by Wiripang Music. [1]
Wilkins was a finalist in the Australian Music Centre and APRA AMCOS 2021 Art Music Awards [2] in the category Award for Excellence in Experimental Music, for "recording and developing new projects in 2020". [3] She was also a finalist in the 2018 Art Music Awards, [4] in the category Award for Excellence by an Individual, for her "activities in original art music throughout 2017 as a composer-musician including releasing three original albums". [5]
Wilkins is passionate about supporting refugees being detained in Immigration Detention. In 2021 she collaborated with visual artist and poet Jalal Mahamede, who is currently being held in Brisbane's immigration detention centre. [6] They have released an album, featuring original music by Wilkins and poetry by Mahamede. [7]
Wilkins holds a Master of Music Composition from the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Her thesis is titled Astronomical Phenomena in Music Composition and explores "the astronomical phenomena in music composition". [8]
Prior to moving to Australia, Wilkins studied at Bristol University (UK) where is obtained a MA Flute Performance (2008) and BA Mus (2003). [9]
Wilkins has written over 60 art music compositions are published/distributed by Wirripang Music [1] and five tunes in the Australian Jazz Real Book. [10]
Her music has been featured as part of the ABC Ausmusic month. [11] She has also been included on Making Waves. [12]
Wilkins is an Associate Artist represented by the Australian Music Centre.
Wilkins' compositions have been commissioned and/or performed by artists and ensembles including The Metropolitan Orchestra, Syzygy Ensemble, Kammerklang, and Elysian Fields.
Wilkins is an active performer, who has been described as "unconstrained by labels and is constantly exploring new ways to express herself musically" [13] and as "a powerhouse player – with taste". [14] In her performances, she explores stream-of-consciousness improvisations alongside her composed pieces and re-interpretations, often using loop pedal and visual projections. She has a range of musical themes in her shows from human rights to astronomy to nature, and she tailors her shows to the venue and audience.
Outer space is a major inspiration for her music and she often uses open source NASA footage to accompany the performance. Her improvisations are spontaneous musical ideas inspired by her myriad of music experiences with the aim of synthesizing into one voice, creating emotional connection and attaining a meditative state.
She performs her own notated music, as well as being an improviser. Wilkins often improvises with First Nations didgeridoo player Gumaroy Newman as an indigenous-jazz fusion duo, Yulugi. In 2019 they were interviewed by Andrew Ford, on the ABC Radio National program The Music Show. [15]
Wilkin's is also a founding member of the Ephemera Quartet. [16] Their 2021 album Blackholes and Modulations was reviewed by the Sydney Morning Herald as "the end result is music of peculiar depth and mystery that somehow evades the laws of gravity". [17]
There have been other collaborations with other high profile Sydney musicians, including Emily Granger [18] and Jeremy Rose. [19]
Her debut album is titled Air in motion was launched at the Flute Tree in Sydney, Australia. [20]
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
2021 | Set Me Free | with Jalal Mahamede. |
2021 | EPHEMERA: Blackholes and Modulations | Compositions inspired by astronomy and ensemble improvisations. With Elsen Price (double bass), Will Gilbert (trumpet), Carl St Jacques (viola). |
2021 | Guluu | Solo violin suite performed by Airena Nakamura. |
2020 | YULUGI - Chasing Stars to the Mother Tree | Improvisation duo with didgeridoo player Gumaroy Newman. |
2020 | So What Bach | Solo piano improvisations on Bach classics. |
2017 | EPHEMERA: Orbits and Riffs | Compositions inspired by astronomy and ensemble improvisations. With Elsen Price (double bass) and Will Gilbert (trumpet). |
2017 | Keys Across the Sky | Solo piano compositions and improvisations. |
2017 | Air in Motion | Solo flute compositions and improvisations. |
2011 | Jazz Reverie | Solo piano improvisations. |
Christopher Robert Lionel Abrahams is a New Zealand-born, Australian-based musician. He is a founding mainstay member of experimental, jazz trio the Necks (1987–present), collaborated with Melanie Oxley as a soul pop duo (1989–2003), and has issued ten solo albums.
Catherine Anne "Cat" Hope, is an Australian composer, musician and academic. She started her music and academic careers in Perth and relocated to Melbourne in 2017. Her opera, Speechless, was first performed in 2019 at the Perth Festival. At the Art Music Awards of 2020 she won Work of the Year: Dramatic for Speechless. Steve Dow of The Age described the opera, "fuelled by outrage over the imprisonment of asylum seeker children, which features growling and screaming to an unconventional score without musical notation." Hope has also won the Art Music Award for Excellence in Experimental Music in 2011 for Decibel's 2009–2010 Annual Programs and in 2014 for her Drawn from Sound exhibition.
Elana Stone is an Australian singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and bandleader. Her debut solo album, In the Garden of Wild Things, was released in 2005 on the Jazzgroove label. Its follow-up, Your Anniversary, was released in 2009, and her third Kintsugi was released independently in 2015. She is also a member of the ARIA award–winning folk quartet All Our Exes Live in Texas, in which she provides vocals and accordion.
The APRA Music Awards in Australia are annual awards to celebrate excellence in contemporary music, which honour the skills of member composers, songwriters, and publishers who have achieved outstanding success in sales and airplay performance.
Megan Alexanda Washington is an Australian musician, songwriter and voice actor who has worked mononymously as Washington. Originally performing jazz music, her style shifted to indie pop and alternative rock. She has released four studio albums, I Believe You Liar, There There, Batflowers, and Hot Fuss (2022). Both I Believe You Liar and There There reached the top 5 on the ARIA Albums Chart and Batflowers peaked in the top 25. Outside of music, she also voices primary school teacher Calypso in the animated series Bluey.
Sandy Evans is an Australian jazz composer, saxophonist, and teacher. Recognition of her work has included receiving an Order of Australia Medal in 2010 for services to music.
Judith Mary Bailey is a New Zealand-born pianist, jazz musician and composer who has lived in Australia since 1960.
Genevieve Lacey is an Australian musician and recorder virtuoso, working as a performer, creator, curator and cultural leader. The practice of listening is central to her works, which are created collaboratively with artists from around the world. Lacey plays handmade recorders made by Joanne Saunders and Fred Morgan. In her collection, she also has instruments by David Coomber, Monika Musch, Michael Grinter, Paul Whinray and Herbert Paetzold.
The Australasian Performing Right Association Awards of 2016 are a series of related awards which include the APRA Music Awards, Art Music Awards, and Screen Music Awards. The APRA Music Awards of 2016 was the 34th annual ceremony by the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) and the Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society (AMCOS) to award outstanding achievements in contemporary songwriting, composing and publishing. The ceremony was held on 5 April 2016 at the Carriageworks, Sydney. The host for the ceremony was Brian Nankervis, adjudicator on SBS-TV's RocKwiz.
Gordon Kerry is an Australian composer, music administrator, music writer and music critic.
Peter Knight is an Australian musician, composer and producer. He was the Artistic Director and co-CEO of the Australian Art Orchestra from 2013 to 2023 and founding member of Melbourne group Way Out West., 5+2 Brass Ensemble, and Hand to Earth
The Australian Art Orchestra (AAO) is one of Australia's leading contemporary ensembles. Founded by pianist Paul Grabowsky in 1994, it has been led by composer/trumpeter/sound artist Peter Knight since 2013 and led by pianist/composer/producer Aaron Choulai since 2023. The Orchestra explores relationships between musical disciplines and cultures, imagining new musical concepts that reference how 21st century Australia responds to its cultural and musical history.
Vanessa Tomlinson is an Australian percussionist, composer, artistic director and educator. She is Director of Creative Arts Research Institute and Head of Percussion at Griffith University and has produced 150 publications. She is the co-founder and co-artistic director of Clocked Out, along with Erik Griswold.
Andrea Keller is an Australian pianist and composer. She won three ARIA Award for Best Jazz Album with Thirteen Sketches, Mikrokosmos and Footprints and was nominated in 2013 for the album Family Portraits.
Marc Hannaford is an Australian jazz pianist. He was nominated for the ARIA Award for Best Jazz Album at the ARIA Music Awards of 2011 and at the AIR Awards of 2011 for Shreveport Stomp in 2011.
Mark Isaacs is an Australian classical and jazz composer and pianist.
Claire Olivia Edwardes is an Australian classical percussionist, artistic director, composer and advocate for change in the classical music sector. Edwardes is the co-founder and artistic director of Ensemble Offspring, roles she shared with composer Damien Ricketson until his retirement from the group in 2015. In 2016, she won two APRA Art Music Awards, with one going to Ensemble Offspring for "sustained services to Australian music for 20 years", and Edwardes receiving an individual award "for performance, advocacy and artistic leadership”. She is the only Australian to have won the Luminary Art Music Award for an Individual 3 times. In 2019, Edwardes created and performed the music and dance theatre work RECITAL with dancer Richard Cilli and director Gideon Obarzanek for Dance Massive 2019. Edwardes composed the music and sound design for RECITAL in collaboration with Paul Mac. In 2011 and 2017, Edwardes was a member of the Australian World Orchestra. In 2015-216, Edwardes was the Vice President of the New Music Network. Edwardes has appeared on television as an occasional host of Play School, and as a panelist on Spicks and Specks. In 2021, Edwardes created The Australian Marimba Composition Kit and a comprehensive list of percussion works by female composers. Additionally, Edwardes has composed numerous works for solo waterphone. She is currently on staff as a percussion teacher at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music.
Sally Greenaway is a composer and pianist based in Canberra, Australia.
Nat Bartsch is a pianist and composer based in Melbourne, Australia who creates lyrical, meditative work that explores the space between classical and jazz genres.
Melody Eötvös is an Australian composer of classical music.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)