We are extremely pleased to welcome Ann Cleare as one of five senior composers working with the participant composers at the 2023 edition of June in Buffalo. Ann will be joining us at UB for the first time, and we’re delighted to have her voice and perspective at the Festival this year!
Ann Cleare is an Irish artist
working in the areas of concert music, opera, extended sonic environments, and
hybrid instrumental design. Described as “an altogether different artform that
draws from musical traditions, but pushes against and beyond them, articulating
something that is at once about sound, but that is equally concerned with
energy, motion, space, and the world itself”, her work explores the static and
sculptural nature of sound, probing the extremities of timbre, texture, colour,
and form. Exploring poetries of communication, transformation, and perception,
she creates highly psychological and corporeal sonic spaces that encourage a
listener to contemplate the complexity of the lives we exist within and “to
hear the world differently”.
A recipient of a 2019 Ernst von Siemens Composer Prize,
her work has been commissioned and presented by major broadcasters such as the
BBC, NPR, ORF, RTÉ, SWR, WDR for festivals such as Gaudeamus Week, The
Wittenertage fur Neue Kammermusik, International Music Institute Darmstadt,
Bludenzer Tage zeitgemäßer Musik, IMATRONIC Festival of Electronic Music at
ZKM, MATA Festival, Taschenopernfestival, Sound Reasons Festival in India,
Shanghai New Music Week, Transit Belgium, GAIDA, Totally Huge New Music in
Perth, Trattorie Parma, Rainy Days in Luxembourg, Huddersfield Contemporary
Music Festival, and Ultraschall. Through working with some of the most
progressive musicians of our time, she has established a reputation for
creating innovative forms of music, both in its presentation, and within the
music itself. She has worked with groups such as Ensemble SurPlus, 175 East,
The Crash Ensemble, The Callithumpian Consort, Quatuor Diotima, The
International Contemporary Ensemble, The Chiara String Quartet, Collegium Novum
Zürich, ELISION, The National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland, Divertimento
Ensemble, JACK Quartet, Ensemble Apparat, Ensemble Nikel, The Curious Chamber
Players, Yarn/Wire, ensemble mosaik, The Experimental Ensemble of the SWR
Studios, Talea Ensemble, österreichisches ensemble für neue music, The BBC
Scottish Symphony Orchestra, ensemble recherche, TAK, Vertixe Sonore, Ensemble
Garage, Argento Chamber Ensemble, The Fidelio Trio, oh ton-ensemble,
Distractfold, Longleash Trio, Riot Ensemble, Ekmeles Vocal Ensemble, Vortex
Ensemble, Ensemble Contrechamps, Ensemblekollektiv, WasteLAnd, and soloists
such as Carol McGonnell, Richard Craig, Heather Roche, Bill Schimmel, Benjamin
Marks, Patrick Stadler, Carlos Cordeiro, Ryan Muncy, Richard Haynes, William
Lang, Laura Cocks, Lina Andonovska, Samuel Stoll, and Callum G’Froerer.
Recent projects have focused on creating experiential
environments where sound is given a visual as well as sonic dimension, such
works include eyam i-v, a series of five attacca pieces, centred around clarinet
and flute writing in various solo, ensemble, electronic, and orchestral
settings, spanning just over two hours of music that is continuously
transformed in shape, time, and motion around the listener; rinn, a time travel
chamber opera involving a multichannel sonic sculpture that the singers and
actors wear, interact with, and are amplified by; spatially choreographed
chamber pieces such as I should live in wires for leaving you behind, anchor me
to the land, and on magnetic fields; a newly-designed instrument that a
musician simultaneously wears and plays in eöl; surface stations, multi-layered
theatre involving the staging of extended brass instruments, vocal ensemble,
and visuals.
Current and future projects include a chamber piece &
curated concert with Musikfabrik for the National Concert Hall of Ireland’s
Beethoven 2022 celebrations, a solo flute work for Claire Chase, an opera for
Munich Biennale 2022, a large scale work for soloists, chorus, orchestra, and
electronics for New Music Dublin 2023, a DVD of filmed works released by
Kairos, and the creation of outdoor sonic sculptures with Lay of the Land,
Crash Ensemble, and Fionnuala Conway.
Ann studied at University College
Cork, IRCAM, and holds a Ph.D. from Harvard University. In October 2019, she
received an Honorary Doctorate from the National University of Ireland for her
contribution to music. Her scores are published by Project Schott New York and
she is represented by the Contemporary Music Centre, Ireland (CMC). She is
Assistant Professor of Music and Media Technologies at Trinity College Dublin
and is one of the first 40 members of the Young Academy Ireland (YAI) network.
Ann is an artist-in-residence with Crash Ensemble.
(Source: https://annclearecomposer.com/about-2/)
We will hear [Switch~ Ensemble] perform Ann Cleare’s 93 million miles away, along with her
alto saxophone solo, luna (the eye that opens the other eye), on Friday, June 9th at 7:30 p.m. in Lippes Concert
Hall.
Ann Cleare’s work can be found here: https://annclearecomposer.com/works/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.