Showing posts with label OPUS2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OPUS2015. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 November 2015

Edward Nesbit - our OPUS2015 winner's story

I have had the pleasure of working with Britten Sinfonia for almost twelve months.  Back in December, the twelve composers who had been shortlisted for Britten Sinfonia’s OPUS2015 scheme enjoyed a workshop with the horn player Richard Watkins, where we discussed every aspect of the horn, from extended techniques to, if I remember correctly, the treatment of the horn in Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition.  

Most of us were at that stage in the middle of composing extracts of music for horn trio, all of which were workshopped by Jackie Shave, Huw Watkins and Carys Evans in January this year.  Over the course of an intense weekend, we heard what everyone had produced – which amounted to the best part of an hour of music.  It was a very interesting – and very diverse – selection of pieces, and made for a lively and fascinating couple of days.

I was delighted to be chosen as the winner, and as a result have extended my original three-minute miniature into a full-length piece.  The resulting work, Lifesize Gods, was workshopped again more recently, and following that workshop I have given it a final few tweaks in advance of the premiere.  From here on in it will be the most exciting part of the process, and, for me at least, the easiest: I can now more or less simply sit and listen to the results.

One of the interesting challenges of writing a horn trio is the small number of previously written horn trios which have entered the repertoire.  While I have come across a number of very fine horn trios while writing my own, there are only two works which have firmly entered the repertoire: those by Brahms and Ligeti.  As a composer this situation brings both advantages and disadvantages.  There are fewer models to which I might turn for inspiration – but, on the other hand, there is not the weight of history that one has to deal with when writing, say, a string quartet.

It is interesting, then, that I will be sharing a programme with another new horn trio, by Huw Watkins.  I was, as it happens, at the premiere of Huw’s Horn Trio in 2009, and vividly remember the impression it made on me then; it will be a great pleasure to have the chance to hear it again live – three times, no less!  It really is a fantastic piece, and is an important addition to the repertoire which will doubtless continue to be performed for many years to come.   Huw and I are very different composers, however, which is probably no bad thing, given that we will be appearing in the same programme.  While Huw’s piece is lyrical, contrapuntal and full of contrast, my new work is, for the most part, transparent, almost obsessively single-minded, and extremely quick.

Britten Sinfonia have generously invited me to continue my involvement in the scheme, and next week I will be working with Julian Philips to choose the ten composers who will be shortlisted for OPUS2016.  This is something very new to me, but something that I am looking forward to immensely.  A total of 287 composers have submitted applications.  It’s a daunting number, but is testament to the fantastic nature of the opportunity that Britten Sinfonia are offering – and I’m sure it will be much harder to leave people out than to find people to shortlist.

Another aspect of my involvement with  Britten Sinfonia has been being a part of Musically GiftedMusically Gifted is a scheme which facilitates philanthropic donations to help fund commissions.  People can donate anything from £10 to £1,000, and all donors receive rewards, from thank you cards all the way up to invitations to rehearsals and social events with performers and composer.  The issue of how to fund contemporary music is a complex one, and many composers are unable to earn anything like a living from their composition work.  Musically Gifted is an imaginative and valuable contribution towards improving this difficult situation.

Lifesize Gods is being performed at Britten Sinfonia’s At Lunch Series in St. Andrew’s Hall, Norwich, on 27 November; West Road Concert Hall, Cambridge, on 1 December; and Wigmore Hall, London, on 2 December.  It promises to be a fantastic concert! 

Edward Nesbit - OPUS2015 winner

Click here for more details and booking for At Lunch One, which features Edward's new work, Lifesize Gods.

Wednesday, 3 June 2015

Edward Nesbit on compostion

Edward Nesbit won Britten Sinfonia's OPUS2015 competition for unpublished composers. His new Horn Trio, Lifesize Gods, commissioned by Britten Sinfonia and Wigmore Hall, as a result of winning OPUS2015 will be premiered during the At Lunch 1 tour on Friday 27 November in Norwich with further performances in Cambridge (1 Dec) and at London's Wigmore Hall (2 Dec). In this blog post Edward answers a few questions about his work and life.

How would you summarise yourself in one sentence?
I like music.

What do you like most about composing?
The excitement of it: to get to the end of a day’s work and think ‘that passage of music didn’t exist this morning’ is a real thrill. Especially when things are going quickly, and I am pleased with and even surprised by what I am writing, this feeling can be one of the most exciting things I have ever experienced.

How do you start a new work?
This varies hugely from piece to piece.

Occasionally I know what the title of a piece will be before I start writing, and this can help to clarify my ideas hugely. I have, for example, recently been working on a piece called Like Some Forgotten Music, which is a quotation from Anne Enright’s novel The Forgotten Waltz. It is a phrase I find extremely evocative, and that has shaped the rather archaic sound-world of the piece.

Sometimes I sit down to start a piece with no pre-conceptions at all, and I just see what happens. Sometimes this leads to disaster and I have to scrap what I have written and start again multiple times; sometimes, however, this approach can lead to the most interesting results, and I produce work which I could never have imagined in the abstract.

Before I started Lifesize Gods, my horn trio for Britten Sinfonia, I knew that everything I wrote would be repeated – literally every phrase has repeat marks around it. This semi-arbitrary restriction has far-reaching implications for the syntax and structure of the piece: nothing can ever be a surprise, for example, as the second time that material appears it would cease to be surprising. I quite commonly employ this kind of procedure to help get me started with a piece, and to help me push my imagination in new directions.

Sharps or flats?
Actually, I’m pretty keen on white notes.

Tea or coffee?
Strong black coffee. A lot of it.

What and/or who inspires you?
It’s always listening to music for me. Composing is a very abstract and cerebral activity – after all, you don’t actually hear a note of what you’ve written until after you’ve finished the piece! This is a very odd situation in some ways, I find that the extreme disconnect between what I spend my days doing and what I am ultimately trying to achieve can occasionally be disheartening. In this situation, listening to music I love – above all, Sibelius – reminds me what is possible for music to do, and that all the hours of hard work are worth it.

What’s your advice for budding composers, or anyone considering entering OPUS2016?
Work tirelessly at honing your craft – and I use the word ‘craft’ deliberately – and never be satisfied with what you have written.

What would you like to be recognised for?

Although, of course, having a ‘big’ career would be nice, I’m really not driven by recognition at all, and it is the profound satisfaction of being proud of a piece of music I have written which drives me. Having said that, I do hope that I have something individual to say musically, and I would like that to be shared with as many people as possible.

Any embarrassing music-related moments?
No comment! I do, however, have an irrational fear of misreading the details of the ensemble for which I’ve been asked to write and submitting a piece written for the wrong instruments. That would be pretty embarrassing…

The last concert you saw?
Carolin Widmann giving the world premiere of Julian Anderson’s poem for violin and orchestra In Liebliche Bläue with the LPO at the Royal Festival Hall. An amazing piece and performance!

What’s your musical guilty pleasure?
Rachmaninov.

If you turned your iPod on now, what would be playing?

Schnee by Hans Abrahamsen.

If you hadn’t been a musician…?
I’d love to have been a novelist. I love composing due to the joy I feel at creating things, and I’m pretty sure that writing novels would give me the same satisfaction – although I’m less sure that anyone would want to read my books!

The best gift you’ve received?
I love being given books across which I haven’t come before, and being directed towards reading material which it wouldn’t have occurred to me to read.

Is there anything else you want to share with the world?
As a composer who is interested in literature, my biggest dream is to write opera. I always have ideas for operas floating around in my head, and I hope to have the chance to write one as soon as possible!


You can help support the development of Edward Nesbit's new work, Lifesize Gods, through Britten Sinfonia's Musically Gifted campaign. Click here for more details.

For full details of the world premiere tour of Edward's Horn Trio click here.

Are you an unpublished composer living in the UK? Why not apply for OPUS2016? Click here for full details.

Monday, 16 June 2014

Patrick John Jones on Composition


A new work by Patrick John Jones opens Britten Sinfonia's 2014-15 At Lunch series which sees performances in Cambridge, Norwich and at London's Wigmore Hall in November and December 2014. Patrick won OPUS2014 our open submission competition for unpublished composers and is on the roster of Musically Gifted composers you could help support. In this blog Patrick answers questions about himself and his music.


How would you summarise yourself in one sentence?

Imagine a cross between a less good-looking Jarvis Cocker (minus the singing ability), a better-looking T.S. Eliot (minus the way with words), and a less funny Simon Amstell (minus the big curly hair).

That may or may not be almost, but not quite, entirely unlike me.

What do you like most about music and composing?
One of the most enjoyable parts of composing is when the ideas for a piece gather momentum and I can lose myself in shaping and refining the sound world that I am trying to create. Similarly, the music I like has a compelling power that can completely absorb my attention. I live for the moments when my mind is engaged with that kind of intensity.

What inspires you?

Original, potent ideas that are realised with passion and dedication. (This can apply to anything that involves human creativity, not just music.)

How do you feel about new music and what we’re trying to do with Musically Gifted?

About new music: optimistic. One thing I am particularly excited by is the fact that we have almost immediate access to a profusion of different kinds of music. It makes it so easy to ignore any canon that is thrust at you, and allows the creation of your own canon of music and musical figures that are important to you. That can only be a good thing for creativity.

However, there is such an overwhelming amount being written now that it is impossible to keep up, and I am more interested in pursuing music that is new to me rather than staying on top of what is current. Every so often, though, I will hear something I think is really special in this vast mass of creative activity, and that is where my optimism comes from.

Ultimately, it is extremely important to allow composers to keep trying, and I’m very glad Britten Sinfonia is playing a part in that.

What was your reaction when Britten Sinfonia commissioned you?

Delighted! It was amazing to hear Britten Sinfonia's wind players so deftly tackle the scores given to them at the OPUS2014 workshop, and I’m really looking forward to working with them more.

What would you like to be recognised for?
Ideally: original, potent ideas that are realised with passion and dedication. Or streaking at a major sporting event.

What’s your musical guilty pleasure?
I like what I like unashamedly, as should everyone.

If you turned your iPod on now, what would be playing?
Currently the Bach Brandenburgs, played by Il Giardino Armonico. At the moment I keep obsessively coming back to the middle movement of number six.

At the end of a long day, how do you relax?

My mind can be very hyperactive after a long day, so I’ll often be in bed listening to something on headphones that will help clear my head before going to sleep. Perhaps some music with a mesmeric quality or an audiobook. I usually have a novel on the go too, as it's easy for my ears to get fatigued if I've been working on music all day.

If you hadn’t been a musician, what might have happened?

If my seven-year-old self had his way, I’d be a paleontologist. But because my close family is exclusively comprised of literature nerds, I’d probably be attempting to write a novel or an English thesis right now. Or clandestinely googling TEFL courses whilst working a nine-to-five.

Is there anything else you want to share with the world?

A pot of tea. Or two. Maybe a vat.


Patrick is writing a piece for wind quintet which will be premiered during our At Lunch 1 tour on Friday 28 November at St Andrew's Hall, Norwich, Tuesday 2 December at West Road Concert Hall, Cambridge and Wednesday 3 December at Wigmore Hall, London. Click here for more information and booking details

You can support Patrick John Jones new work via Musically Gifted. Click here for more information.

Submissions for OPUS2015 are now open - click here to find out more.