Tim Parkinson (born 7 July 1973) [1] is a British experimental composer, pianist and curator. His music has been commissioned and performed by ensembles including Apartment House, the Basel Sinfonietta and the London Sinfonietta, and soloists including Anton Lukoszevieze and Rhodri Davies. [2] [3] It has been broadcast on BBC Radio 3, Resonance FM, WDR3 (Germany), and Radio SRF 2 Kultur (Switzerland). He is co-curator (alongside composer John Lely) of the concert series Music We'd Like to Hear, which has run since 2005, [4] [5] having previously organised concerts at the British Music Information Centre in London from 1997 onwards. [6]
Parkinson attended Bedford School [7] before studying at Worcester College, Oxford and privately in Dublin with Kevin Volans, and participating in the Ostrava Days 2001. In 2011 he was visiting Professor of Composition at the Janáček Academy of Music and Performing Arts in Brno and has taught at Ashmole Academy. In 2018 he was appointed a creative fellow at the Samuel Beckett Research Centre at the University of Reading. [8]
His music has also been described as consisting of "melodious, somewhat Sixties sounds", [9] inspired by an older generation of British experimental composers, such as Michael Parsons. [10] His music exhibits a collage approach, often juxtaposing the sounds of found objects, various kinds of musical material, or snippets of speech. [11] Parkinson himself has described his compositional methods as follows:
What I want beforehand for myself is a large and unforeseen diversity of pitches and intervals – randomness, patterns, shapes – and of course there are countless ways to generate pitches… I’m quite inclusive about what pitches or intervals are presented – I like consonance and dissonance – so sometimes a sequence of notes might be reminiscent of other music, and of course it might not be reminiscent of anything to me, but it might to others… Often I have used the page as a structural unit, like a movement or a panel, and allowed the players to choose their own order of pages for a performance. [12]
Parkinson has also written music for installation art projects, such as sixty eight sounds for Welborne (2005), untitled installation (for Sound 323) (2003), for a London record shop, and ten brass for St. George's Gardens, Bloomsbury, commissioned by the London Borough of Camden. [4]
Much of Parkinson's music has utilitarian titles, such as orchestra piece (2012) or is untitled, such as untitled violin and piano (2000) [13] and untitled (winter 2002) [14] and his official website has the domain name www.untitledwebsite.com.
Since 2003, he has been one half of a duo, Parkinson Saunders, with composer James Saunders, performing mostly indeterminate music, using "any sound-producing means" (objects not usually considered musical instruments, such as cardboard boxes, paper cups or wind-up toys), [15] seated at two tables "like newsreaders". [6] [12] Parkinson also performs as solo pianist and occasionally plays (as pianist) with ensembles Apartment House, and Plus-Minus, at venues that have included Tate Modern, the Barbican Centre, and the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival. [2]
Recordings of Parkinson's music have been released on labels including Edition Wandelweiser, Another Timbre, Metier and Lorelt. [4]
His album Pleasure Island was released by the label Slip Imprint in May 2019. This is Parkinson's first work explicitly conceived as an album and is titled after the 'Paese dei balocchi' (Land of Toys) in Carlo Collodi's The Adventures of Pinocchio (1883), translated in the 1940 Disney film adaptation as 'Pleasure Island'. [16]
Parkinson's second solo album Here Comes A Monster was released in May 2020 on Cafe Oto's Takuroku imprint, founded to distribute music made during the COVID-19 pandemic. It features guest vocals by a wide range of artists and musicians, including John Lely, Juliet Fraser, Angharad Davies, Dominic Lash, Laurence Crane, Mira Benjamin, Steve Beresford, Rhodri Davies, James Saunders, JG Thirlwell, and Richard Dawson.
Parkinson's opera, Time With People (2012–13) has been widely staged by various international companies, and received performances in London, Huddersfield, Los Angeles, Chicago, Oberlin, Ohio, New York (by Object Collection) and Brussels. A French translation has been staged in La Chaux-de-Fonds and a German language version is in preparation for 2019. [17]
The opera is largely performed without typical musical instruments, on a stage strewn with rubbish, which is also used as a sound source, alongside the sounds of walking, speech, clapping, humming, and musical recordings. [18] [19] It has been described by reviewers as "robotic incantations... [and] scenes of meaningless actions enacted amongst piles of garbage", [20] "theatre of the absurd in eight scenes" [21] and "what opera might be like if you removed music and orchestra". [22]
Lisa Dwan is an Irish actress, director, and writer. She is best known for her work in theatre, performing in Samuel Beckett adaptations among other works. She began her career in the Fox Kids series Mystic Knights of Tir Na Nog (1998–1999). More recently, she stars in the Netflix series Top Boy (2019–). She also appeared in the RTÉ soap opera Fair City (2006–2007) and the ITV drama Rock Rivals (2008).
Nicolas Hodges is a pianist living in Germany.
The Wandelweiser Group is a collective for composers and performers of contemporary classical music. Inspired by the work of John Cage, the Wandelweiser Group writes experimental music, which is typically of a very quiet nature and often incorporates performance art. The musicologist Tim Rutherford-Johnson describes them as a "significant feature of art music in the 21st century."
Gnarly Buttons is a composition for solo clarinet and chamber ensemble by the American composer John Adams. The London Sinfonietta and Present Music co-commissioned the work. The work received its premiere at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London on October 19, 1996, with the London Sinfonietta, Michael Collins as solo clarinetist and the composer conducting. The work received its first Proms performance on 23 July 1998, conducted by Markus Stenz. The New York City premiere was in October 1997, with David Shifrin as the clarinet soloist and Ransom Wilson conducting musicians of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center.
Paul Newland is a composer, musician, and founding member of the group [rout], and the electric guitar duo, exquisite corpse.
David Sawer, is a British composer of opera and choral, orchestral and chamber music.
Simon Bookish is the stage name of Leo Chadburn, a British musician and composer known for his work in experimental, electronic, pop, and classical music. His music has been broadcast on BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 6 Music, and Resonance FM. Originally from Coalville, Leicestershire, he moved to London and trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama from 1997 to 2001.
Rebecca Saunders is a London-born composer who lives and works freelance in Berlin. In a 2017 Classic Voice poll of the greatest works of art music since 2000, Saunders' compositions received the third highest total number of votes (30), surpassed only by the works of Georg Friedrich Haas (49) and Simon Steen-Andersen (35). In 2019, writers of The Guardian ranked Skin (2016) the 16th greatest work of art music since 2000, with Tom Service writing that "Saunders burrows into the interior world of the instruments, and inside the grain of Fraser's voice [...] and finds a revelatory world of heightened feeling."
Emily Hall is a composer of classical music, electronica and songs. Her music has been performed by the Duke Quartet, the London Symphony Orchestra, the Brodsky Quartet, the London Sinfonietta, and the Philharmonia; it has been broadcast on BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4 and France Culture. Roxanna Panufnik said of her : "Hip young things like Tansy Davies and Emily Hall will exert a great influence on the new music scene in the next ten years."
Paul Whitty is an England-based experimental composer and sound artist born in Northern Ireland.
James Saunders is a British composer and performer of experimental music. He is Professor of Music and Head of the Centre for Musical Research at Bath Spa University.
Taylan Susam is a Turkish-Dutch composer of experimental music. He is a member of the Wandelweiser group, which has been described by The New Yorker as "an informal network of twenty or so experimental-minded composers who share an interest in slow music, quiet music, spare music, fragile music."
Cassandra Miller is a Canadian experimental composer currently based in London, England. Her work is known for frequently utilising the process of transcription of a variety of pre-existing pieces of music.
Juliet Fraser is a British soprano, based in London and specialising in contemporary classical music. She has commissioned more than 20 solo vocal works and premiered several hundred new works, many written for her. Fraser is the artistic director of eavesdropping, an experimental music festival in East London, and co-director of all that dust, the record label she founded in 2018 with Mark Knoop and Newton Armstrong. She was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music by the University of Southampton in 2023.
Bryn Harrison is a British experimental composer. His works have been widely performed by international ensembles and he was a recipient of the 2013 Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award for Composers. He is currently Reader in Composition at the University of Huddersfield.
Anton Lukoszevieze is a British-Lithuanian cellist, composer and visual artist. He is the director of the ensemble Apartment House, who are known for their advocacy of experimental and avant-garde music and frequent international performances. He is an alumnus of the Royal College of Music.
Linda Buckley is an Irish art music composer and musician. Her work has been performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra, RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, Crash Ensemble, Icebreaker and Iarla Ó Lionaird. She has received a Fulbright Scholarship and the Frankfurt Visual Music Award.
John Lely is British experimental composer, improvising musician and curator based in London, UK.
Another Timbre is a record label, based in Sheffield and known for its releases of free improvisation, experimental and contemporary classical music. It was founded by television sound recordist Simon Reynell, who also engineers and produces most of the label's recordings.
Martin Arnold is a Canadian composer of experimental music. His music has been widely performed and commissioned by ensembles including the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Quatuor Bozzini, the pianist Eve Egoyan, the violinist Mira Benjamin and the cellist Anton Lukoszievieze.
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