Small, Far Away

I’ve just released the fruits of a Moog Sound Lab residency back in June, at the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire in partnership with Supersonic Festival. It consists of 3 tracks recorded during this residency, as well as 2 tracks recorded on a plane over the Atlantic Ocean between Dublin & Connecticut in 2017.

I made it on a Moog System 55, Sub 37, Sub Phatty, Mother 32, TE-OP1, TE-PO12, and a Hologram Infinite Jets, all running through a Strymon BlueSky.

The last track is a little tribute to Mika Vainio who died in 2017. While I never met him, his music continues to have a profound impact on me, and playing on these exact instruments that he played on himself in 2016, enabled me to make some sort of connection with him, tentative as it may be…

You can stream or download the release over here.

An Ornamental Light Glows Beneath the Tinted Window

Today, I re-released a collection of music from October and December of 2017 entitled An Ornamental Light Glows Beneath the Tinted Window. The original release was more or less made from stuff recorded over the summer of 2017. I made it using a Make Noise 0 Coast, TE-OP1, a Yamaha DX, TE-PO12, Strymon BlueSky, and a Tascam DR-44WL. There are also samples of a gamelan, a piano, and a photocopier, and each track was more or less performed and recorded live. I wasn’t particularly happy with the original master so I redid it over the past few days, and also streamlined two releases into one. If you are interested in the sounds of synthsizers, pianos, photocopiers, drum machines, or gamelan, then you can stream or download the thing for free over here.

Post-Paradise (11)

I’m very happy to be performing two new works for synthesizers & text projection called ‘Morton Feldman Philip Guston’ & ‘Pauline Oliveros Jenny Holzer’ at the next Post-Paradise concert in Birmingham’s Centrala Space, on 23 February 2018 at 8pm.

These works, for me, present a new way of scoring pieces for synthesizers and also relate to the personalities in the titles, whom have impacted upon my practice in some way.

Post-Paradise (11) also features the fascinating work of  Ryoko Akama and Marta Forsberg.

 

Post Paradise

Seán Clancy: Schematics – Book I (2016)

‘Ireland England’ featured as part of Culture Ireland’s GB18 Programme of events.

I’m very happy to announce that a large scale piece I’m working on for synthesizers and text projections entitled Ireland England  is to be featured as part of Culture Ireland‘s GB18 Programme of events.

The piece will be toured around England in a number of diverse venues from April through to November 2018, and is a scored drone composition with texts that explore reasons why Irish people travel to the UK.

More info on my culture Ireland page is available here.

Some electronic music here.

The Summer 2017 Collection

Apologies if you have been visiting this site expecting the latest and most exciting in new music news. I’ve been super busy these past few months between teaching, writing, performing, and recording that this part of the Internet has developed one or two cobwebs. If you are interested, please see below some of the things I have been up to over the past while.

Electronic Music

My repertoire of electronic music is ever-expanding! You can hear some of my recent pieces here.

There are some older pieces that are the results of me just buzzing around with the hardware, but things are becoming clearer in my mind now, (as I become a more experienced synthesist)  and I’m more sure about what I’m doing and why I am doing it (these things take time). My more recent pieces are realisations of notated scores and there are a number of different guises they can take. They can also be performed by any number of other musicians with or without me, which can lead to a multiplicity of interesting results. I’m becoming more and more interested in this way of working and it’s doing wonders in relieving my anxiety!  Feel free to leave comments if you think it is good/useful/bad/useless.

ConTempo Quartet

A few months ago in March the ConTempo Quartet gave the first performance of my latest string quartet, Four Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop. The ConTempo Quartet gave a fantastic performance, and the piece got stronger and stronger as they toured it throughout the month of March. What a difference it makes to have one’s music performed repeatedly, allowing the musicians to settle into the piece and become familiar with all of its eccentricities. If only every commission could be like this! I hope to be able to post a recording of one of the performances here soon. In the interim, if you are interested you can read a review of the piece here.

Frontiers Festival, Birmingham

At the very end of March I gave the first performance of Schematics Book I in Centrala in Birmingham as part of Frontiers Festival. This was my first solo show as a synthesist, and I was incredibly happy with how the gig went. It is a nerve-racking experience to perform for 70 minutes on your own on instruments that you’ve only been learning for a short period of time, but I think it was a great success from the concept to the soundworld, and execution. You can find a video of the piece here and an audio only recording here. I have really taken to this way of working and am excited of the potential of future engagements, and more and more pieces.

Workers Union Ensemble

In April Workers Union Ensemble gave two performances of my 2016 piece Seven Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop as part of NonClassical in London and Playlist in Southampton. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to make the concerts owing to geographical location, but Workers Union are a fabulous group of musicians and I have no doubt that they did a wonderful job.

Katie Kim & Crash Ensemble

Also in April, Katie Kim & Crash Ensemble performed again my arrangements of Katie’s album Salt as part of the Musictown Festival 2017. This collaboration has been one of the highlights of my career, not only because Katie’s music is so utterly brilliant, but because it also afforded me the opportunity to work with people in a completely different way than I’m used to. Things are less fixed and the music comes together more collaboratively, a lot more like being in a band. I’m appreciating this way of working more and more these days, especially with top rate musicians. Katie and Crash continued with this project with another performance at Body & Soul Festival. I hope there are many more performances in the future, and maybe another opportunity to work collectively together again. If you’re interested, there’s a video here, and you can read a review of the Grand Social gig here.   

Coda Festival, Birmingham 

In June, I had two pieces featured in the Coda Festival in Birmingham. One of my students Daniel Blanco Albert performed a new solo trumpet piece called Blanco Slows Down and Eventually Stops, which he did a wonderful job on, and I also performed as a synthesist with the violinist Simon Goff in new piece with flexible instrumentation called Twenty-Six Minutes of Music on the Subject of Coming and Going. This piece was the last performance I gave in Birmingham Conservatoire’s old building before it was demolished and was based around Frederic Rzewski‘s seminal piece Coming Together (The first piece I ever saw performed in Birmingham Conservatoire). We didn’t always see eye-to-eye on every detail of the piece’s realisation, but it was good to work with Simon, who made me think about certain things differently. We plan to do more together in the future and this will hopefully lead to some recordings. I also hope to be able to post a video of the performance soon.

Incidentally, Simon has a very nice record out at the moment which you can hear or buy here.

Crashlands

Last week in mid-July, Crash Ensemble performed my recent piece Eleven Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop as part of their ambitious Crashlands project, where they are presenting 20 new pieces (in celebration of their 20th anniversary) in remote parts of Ireland. It such a great honour to be included in this project as I am featured amongst some of my favourite composers, and Crash are just the best musicians to be working with. They were sounding absolutely fantastic during rehearsal last week, though I unfortunately had to miss the concert at the Carrick Water Music Festival owing to a hospital appointment. I’ll be very much looking forward to the complete performance of all 20 pieces in November! If you are interested, you can watch a video detailing the whole project here.

Oilbag

I have recently been playing with an improvised noise band called Oilbag, lets see if anything comes of it.

Recording

In the next couple of weeks I will be going into Guerrilla Studios in Dublin to make a studio recording of Schematics Book I. This will hopefully be released by the end of 2017 or early 2018.

Promotion

Finally, I’m delighted to say that I have been promoted to senior lecturer at Birmingham Conservatoire!

Other Stuff

Here is a list of some things I have found interesting over the past few months or so: The work of my Students at Birmingham Conservatoire, Golden Oriole/Staer, IMMA, The city of Rome, Supersonic Festival, Generative Compositions 1998-2006 by Dave Noyze, and everything that Mika Vainio did.

Till soon…

The February 2017 Collection

Below you can find a list of some things that I have done recently, and some things I will be doing in the future:

Electronic Music

You can hear some of my recent electronic music here.

There are some older pieces (that have led me to what I’m thinking about now), as well as some music that I have been working on in February. They are all realisations of notated scores. Feel free to leave comments if you think it is good/useful/bad/useless.

Hello YouTubers

I set up a YouTube channel to host some of my older pieces that deal with projected texts. As this has now become one of my primary concerns as a composer, I hope to be adding many more pieces in the future.

You can access it here if you are interested. As above, feel free to let me know if it is good/useful/bad/useless.

Talks Etc.

I am also working on some lectures that I will be giving on my own music in the University of Maynooth and the music of other composers in University College Dublin. If they end up being good enough, I may publish the better points on this site.

ConTempo Quartet

In just over a week the ConTempo Quartet will give the first performance of my latest string Quartet, Four Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop on 4 March 2017. This piece will appear in a concert alongside works by Linda Buckley and Thomas Adès. The concert is part of the wider New Music Dublin Festival which focuses on the music of Gerald Barry and Thomas Adès. I’m also very much looking forward to hearing new work by my Birmingham colleagues Ed Bennett and Andrew Hamilton.

Throughout the month of March, the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet will continue to perform my new piece, touring it around the country on the following dates:

16 March 2017, 1800: City Gallery, Limerick 
19 March 2017, 1500: St Mary’s Cathedral, Kilkenny 
23 March 2017, 2000: Triskel, Cork
26 March 2017, 1500: Kevin Barry Room, National Concert Hall, Dublin

These concerts will also feature music by Joseph Haydn and Béla Bartók.

More info and tickets available here.

Frontiers Festival, Birmingham

On 30 March 2017 I will be performing a solo show called A Live Performance on Multiple Synthesisers with Text Projection of a Piece Called Schematics Book I. This will take place in Centrala as part of Birmingham’s Frontiers Festival. This is my first solo show as a synthesist, and I’m very much looking forward to it. If you are interested in going, the details can be found here.

Workers Union Ensemble

on the 11th & 12th of April 2017 Workers Union Ensemble will give repeat performances of my 2016 piece Seven Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop as part of NonClassical. Details available here.

Other Stuff

Here is a list of some things I have found interesting over the past month or so: The work of my Students at Birmingham Conservatoire, Rolling Blackouts by Sarah Glidden, Joy Gerrard’s  shot crowd in the RHA, Stephan Mathieu’s Feldman and To Have Elements Exist in Space, the music of Kevin Drumm (which was new to me), visible Cloaks’s Reassemblage, Gerald Barry’s new work for orchestra and choir Humiliated and Insulted,  Jim O Rourke’s Steamroom collection (this was also new to me), and Unfold by the Necks.

Till soon…

 

At the Janus Point

To the best of my knowledge it is generally considered that January takes its name from Janus, the Roman God of beginnings, gates, transitions etc. So like everyone else that writes about stuff (their own, or others) on the internet, I’m taking this early January opportunity to describe both what I’ve done in 2016 and what I hope to do in 2017.

January – April

img_8915The middle of nowhere in Iceland

Last January (or a little before) I started getting into synthesisers in a big way, both as something that was sonically interesting, and as a means of being able to create music myself outside of traditional networks for little or no money. I’ve spent the year more or less learning modular and FM synthesis, and am now at a point where I think I can start putting on some serious shows. For anyone interested in hearing me learn, you can hear some things here, but where I’m at now is a lot more advanced, and I’m looking forward to sharing some of these things in 2017.

In February, composer Ed Bennett curated a really beautiful concert of music for bass clarinet, cello, and electronics in Dublin’s James Joyce Centre as part of the Association of Irish Composers Directions series. It was very nice to have my piece Three Lines of Music on the Subject of Sitting included in this wonderful programme which was performed delicately by Kate Ellis. She brought a real sensitivity to this little piece, and you can hear a recording of her performance here.

In March we had our annual Frontiers Festival in Birmingham Conservatoire, and I had two new pieces performed. Six Lines of Music for Seven Players for Gamelan explored the differences in the two tuning systems found in Javanese Gamelan and Five Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop performed by Thallein Ensemble conducted by Richard Baker was part of the last Thallein concert (alongside the work of my wonderful colleagues) in the Adrian Boult Hall, shortly before the hall was demolished.

April was quite busy and early in the month I was fortunate enough to have a piece included in the MATA Festival in New York City, so I traveled to the Big Apple to work with the wonderful Ensemble neoN who performed Fourteen Minutes of Music on the Subject of greeting CardsEnsemble Neon played my piece fantastically and were an absolute pleasure to work with. I also met so many lovely and inspiring people and heard many, many incredible pieces. This experience will be etched in my minds eye for many years to come, and I hope to cross paths with those I met there sometime in the future.

In addition to this, my piece was given a little mention in The New Yorker as well as getting very favourable reviews in The New York TimesFeast of MusicNew York Music Daily, and New York Classical Review. Thanks for all the kind words!

Also in April, R. Andrew Lee performed some of my piano music in Regis University, Colorado. I have long been a fan of his piano playing, particularly his performances of Jürg Frey’s music, and I am incredibly grateful for him taking the time to programme some of my music. It was also a wonderful pleasure to be able to invite Andy to Birmingham to give a lecture recital to our students later in the year. He gave a really fantastic talk and performance and it was really nice to be able to hang out a bit for a day or two. Hopefully our paths cross many times in the future.

Again in April, after returning from New York, I travelled to Southampton University to rehearse with Workers Union Ensemble conducted by Ben Oliver on a new piece, Seven Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop as part of the New Dots concert series. The following day (16 April) we travelled to London for the piece’s first performance at the Warehouse. I was Composer-in-Association with Workers Union Ensemble for the past year, and I loved every minute of it. They are a fantastic group of musicians and wonderful, wonderful people, with whom I have a great rapport. This combination makes for brilliant music making, and I was immensely impressed with their performance on 16 April. They brought at first a real energy to the piece, and as it unfolds, incredible sensitivity. I hope that our relationship can continue long into the future. The concert was given some nice audience reviews here and here.

If you are interested, you can hear a recording of the piece here.

Finally at the end of April, I travelled back to Dublin to work with the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland conducted by Gavin Maloney, who performed my 2012 orchestral piece Changing Rates of ChangeThis is the third time in four years that Gavin and RTÉ have performed this piece and they are now really making it their own. They perform with so much energy and are making lots of interpretive decisions that are making the piece really exciting! It was also a joy to have my work performed alongside two stunning pieces by Kevin Volans, and Enda Bates.

Just after the concert, Faith No More Followers got interested in the piece and did a wee interview with me. If you’re interested, you can read it here.

May -August

img_9912The Forbidden City, China

In May, I travelled to Beijing and Tianjin in China with Thallein Ensemble (conducted by Daniele Rosina) and Birmingham Conservatoire colleagues Joe CutlerEd BennettAndrew Toovey and Fang Fang. It was an incredibly action packed trip with two performances, the first in Tianjin Conservatory of Music, and the second in the Central Conservatory of Music as part of the Beijing Modern Music Festival. The students played fantastically, doing Birmingham Conservatoire proud, and the group were very well received with huge, huge audiences! In addition to these concerts, we also gave talks and masterclasses at Tianjin Conservatory of Music, Central Conservatory of Music, Beijing Normal University and the China Conservatory. We were also treated to performances of some fantastic and incredibly disciplined traditional music in the two later institutions. During the three hours I had off, I managed to sneak into the Forbidden City, which was mind blowing! We made some real lasting connections in Beijing and Tianjin and I’m sure I will return to China sometime in the future.

The majority of the summer months were spent both preparing classes at Birmingham Conservatoire (where I have now become the BMus composition coordinator), organising projects for students, and also composing work to be performed in 2017 (more details on this below).

September – December

img_1131The Grand Place, Belgium 

In September I had the great pleasure of hearing  my 2013 String Quartet Neue Kraft Fühlend performed by the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet as part of the Composing the Island Festival. They did a superb job on the piece and played with great energy. This was the first time that I had worked with the quartet and we will go on to do more concerts in 2017 with a new piece that I have recently completed for them. It was also great to hear really superb pieces by David FennessyEnda Bates, and Gráinne Mulvey in this concert. It was very nice to have been included in this festival, and it afforded me the opportunity to hear the best piece of orchestral music I have heard in a long time courtesy of Andrew Hamilton. This was really a stunning piece full of Joy and a little melancholy, and for me undoubtedly the highlight of the festival.

In addition to this festival, it was lovely to be given a little mention by music writer Liam Cagney in the The Invisible Art, 100 years of Irish classical musicThe publication that surrounded the festival.

Also in September, I had the immense fortune of working with Katie Kim and the Crash Ensemble on arrangements I made for them of Katie’s latest album SaltThese were  performed for the first time at the Engage Arts Festival in Bandon Co. Cork. Katie’s music is incredibly beautiful and resonates quite strongly with me, and the whole process from writing, to rehearsing, to the gig was one of the highlights of my career. We have plans to do this show again, and I hope more and more people get to hear this wonderful music.

At the same festival, my acousmatic piece Six Minutes of Music Created from Sound Around My Home was defused in a 1960s kitchenette. This piece, which I wrote in 2015, was the first piece of electronic music I had written since around 2008, and it is very nice to hear it being defused in different environments. Through this music I developed a renewed interest in electronic sound and it has led to many fruitful results.

In October, the above mentioned piece, Six Minutes of Music Created from Sound Around My Home was defused in Salerno in Italy at the 2016 AumentAzioni Festival alongside some of my Birmingham colleagues James DooleySimon HallEdmund Hunt, and David Revill. As mentioned above, I’m very happy that this piece is being heard in different spaces, and it was particularly nice to be featured in a festival alongside two heroes of electronic music John Chowning and Jean-Claude Risset.

November was a very busy month, particularly around Birmingham Conservatoire. We auditioned potential students, had Ensemble Paramirabo over from Montreal doing both a student workshop and a wonderful concert of contemporary Canadian music, and also in the space of three weeks we welcomed Richard AyresKevin Volans and finally Michael Oesterle. It was wonderful having these three amazing composers around and hearing their insights into new music. A particular highlight for me was hearing our Thallein Ensemble conducted by Richard Baker perform a new piece by Michael Oesterle California, which was beautifully conceived, crafted and full of joy. The same concert contained fantastic new pieces by two of our students Peter Bell, and Patrick Ellis, and a really beautiful performance of my 2015 violin & Piano piece Five to Forty Seconds which was played magnificently and full of tenderness by Lieva Starker & Eric Mcelroy. There is a nice little review of the concert here, courtesy of The Birmingham Review. I really enjoyed having Michael Oesterle around Birmingham, he is such a remarkable composer with a remarkable mind. I think both the composition and performance students got a lot out of his visit, and I hope our friendship continues long into the future.

In December I was fortunate enough to accompany Birmingham Conservatoire’s Thallein Ensemble to Brussels in Belgium, performing a brilliant concert of music from our students Christopher Cresswell and Emily Levy, who both wrote wonderful compositions for the event. These pieces were performed alongside an International Rostrum of Composers piece by Peter Kerkelov, and a beautiful solo piano work by Samuel Carl Adams. This event was curated by Christopher Cresswell and was part of the Rostrum + programme. Everywhere we take Tallein and our composition students, they always make us immensely proud, and this trip was no exception, with both superb compositions and and fantastic performances, it was a joy to be able to share this music with audiences outside the UK. The rest of December was spent finishing up some pieces for 2017, and finishing up term at Birmingham Conservatoire and preparing for the new year.

In addition to all of these activities, myself and Jaime managed to travel to Iceland in March where I found the landscape and weather infinitely beautiful and inspiring. I can see why people fall in love with the place. We also traveled to the US in July and took in, as we always do, Connecticut, Philadelphia, and New York. Some of my best times are experienced in these places…

Stuff in 2017

ConTempo Quartet

I am delighted to be included in the 2017 New Music Dublin Festival which focuses on the music of Gerald Barry and Thomas Adès. My new String Quartet Four Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop will be premiered by the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet on 4 March 2017, alongside works by Linda Buckley and Thomas Adès.

Throughout the month of March, the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet will continue to perform my new piece, touring it around the country on the following dates:

16 March 2017, 1800: City Gallery, Limerick 
19 March 2017, 1500: St Mary’s Cathedral, Kilkenny 
23 March 2017, 2000: Triskel, Cork
26 March 2017, 1500: Kevin Barry Room, National Concert Hall, Dublin

These concerts will also feature music by Joseph Haydn and Béla Bartók.

More info and tickets available here.

Crash Ensemble

Also for 2017, I have completed a piece for Crash Ensemble’s 20th Birthday, as part of the Arts Council of Ireland’s Making Great Art Work Funding Scheme. More details available here soon.

Frontiers Festival, Birmingham

On 30 March 2017 I will be performing a solo show called A Live Performance on Multiple Synthesisers with Text Projection of a Piece Called Schematics Book I. This will take place in Centrala as part of Birmingham’s Frontiers Festival, and will be my first solo show as a synthesist. It is both incredibly exciting and daunting for me. I am also hoping to record some of this material for release later in the year.

Katie Kim and Crash Ensemble

in 2017 we also have plans to give repeat performances of Katie Kim’s album Salt arranged by me for Katie and the Crash Ensemble. Details to be confirmed.

Workers Union Ensemble

on the 11th & 12th of April 2017 Workers Union Ensemble will give repeat performances of my 2016 piece Seven Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop as part of NonClassical. Details available here.

840 Series, London

There are also plans from the 840 series in London to feature Neue Kraft Fühlend in their Manon Quartet event on Saturday 6 May 2017 in St James’ Church, Islington. Details soon to be confirmed.

Finally, in September 2017, I’m really looking forward to moving into a new building with the rest of Birmingham Conservatoire. It is a very exciting chapter in our history!

If you have gotten to the end of this post fair play to ye, and thanks for your attention! As always, if you happen to be at any of my events, do come and say hi!

Till Soon

 

Propaganda From The Islands

I’ve had a busy few months island hopping between the +353 and +44, but have been involved in many wonderful projects with fantastic musicians…

September

In September I had the great pleasure of hearing  my 2013 String Quartet Neue Kraft Fühlend performed by the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet as part of the Composing the Island Festival. They did a superb job on the piece and played with great energy. This was the first time that I had worked with the quartet and we will go on to do more concerts in 2017 with a new piece that I have recently completed for them (see details below). It was also great to hear really superb pieces by David FennessyEnda Bates, and Gráinne Mulvey in this concert. It was very nice to have been included in this festival, and it afforded me the opportunity to hear the best piece of orchestral music I have heard in a long time courtesy of Andrew Hamilton. This was really a stunning piece full of Joy and a little melancholy, and for me undoubtedly the highlight of the festival. I hope you can hear a recording of it soon!

Also in September, I had the immense fortune of working with Katie Kim and the Crash Ensemble on arrangements I made for them of Katie’s latest album Salt. These were  performed for the first time at the Engage Arts Festival in Bandon Co. Cork. Katie’s music is incredibly beautiful and resonates quite strongly with me, and the whole process from writing, to rehearsing, to the gig was one of the highlights of my career. We have plans to do this show again, and I hope more and more people get to hear this wonderful music.

At the same festival, my acousmatic piece Six Minutes of Music Created from Sound Around My Home was defused in a 1960s kitchenette. This piece, which I wrote in 2015, was the first piece of electronic music I had written since around 2008, and it is very nice to hear it being defused in different environments. Through this music I developed a renewed interest in electronic sound and it has led to many fruitful results.

October

In October, the above mentioned piece, Six Minutes of Music Created from Sound Around My Home was defused in Salerno in Italy at the 2016 AumentAzioni Festival alongside some of my Birmingham colleagues James DooleySimon HallEdmund Hunt, and David Revill. As mentioned above, I’m very happy that this piece is being heard in different spaces, and it was particularly nice to be featured in a festival alongside two heroes of electronic music John Chowning and Jean-Claude Risset.

November 

November was a very busy month, particularly around Birmingham Conservatoire. We auditioned potential students, had Ensemble Paramirabo over from Montreal doing both a student workshop and a wonderful concert of contemporary Canadian music, and also in the space of three weeks we welcomed Richard Ayres, Kevin Volans and  finally Michael Oesterle. It was wonderful having these three amazing composers around and hearing their insights into new music. A particular highlight for me was hearing our Thallein Ensemble conducted by Richard Baker perform a new piece by Michael Oesterle California, which was beautifully conceived, crafted and full of joy. The same concert contained fantastic new pieces by two of our students Peter Bell, and Patrick Ellis, and a really beautiful performance of my 2015 violin & Piano piece Five to Forty Seconds which was played magnificently and full of tenderness by Lieva StarkerEric Mcelroy.

Around this time, it was also an immense pleasure to hear two brand new pieces by Kevin Volans performed by BCMG and the The Signum Quartet. Both pieces were largely based around the same material, but realised in different ways. The String Quartet was incredibly clear, focused, refined and perfectly composed, like a beautiful black & white photograph. This was executed brilliantly by the Signum Quartet. The Piano Concerto displayed the same material handled in different ways; however, this time it was full of colour and antiphonal dialogue between the ensemble, all the while the piano steadfastly held everything together, performed amazingly by Barry Douglas and BCMG.

Forthcoming projects

I am delighted to have been included in the 2017 New Music Dublin Festival which focuses on the music of Gerald Barry and Thomas Adès. My new String Quartet Four Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop will be premiered by the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet on 4 March 2017, alongside works by Linda Buckley and Thomas Adès.

Throughout the month of March, the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet will continue to perform my new piece, touring it around the country on the following dates:

16 March 2017, 1800: City Gallery, Limerick 
19 March 2017, 1500: St Mary’s Cathedral, Kilkenny 
23 March 2017, 2000: Triskel, Cork
26 March 2017, 1500: Kevin Barry Room, National Concert Hall, Dublin

These concerts will also feature music by Joseph Haydn and Béla Bartók.

More info and tickets available here.

Also, towards the end of March, I will be performing a new hour-long piece on modular and FM synthesisers with some projected conceptual literature. This will be my first outing as a solo synthesiser performer and will take place during Birmingham’s Frontiers Festival. We are living in troubled times, and I hope that this performance will be in some way a response to these times, which will make people think…

Top Tips

Finally, I listen to a lot of new music, but I’d like to single out two recent releases which you should really check out. The first is Hubris by Oren Ambarchi  which is frankly one of the best things I’ve heard in a long, long time. The second is Thought Withdrawal by Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe, who is one of my favourite musicians on the planet, and as far as I can tell, can do no wrong… Both are stunning records, get them if you can.

Till soon!

Forthcoming Stuff

I am involved in a few events over the coming months. See below for details if you are interested.

Composing The Island Festival 

My 2013 String Quartet Neue Kraft Fühlend will be performed by the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet on Saturday 24 September 2016 at 1305 in the Kevin Barry Room at the National Concert Hall, Dublin. This is part of the Composing the Island Festival.

The concert will also feature works by David FennessyEnda Bates, and Gráinne Mulvey.

For more details and booking click here.

Engage Arts Festival

Over the summer I arranged Katie Kim’s forthcoming album Salt for her and the Crash Ensemble. This version of Salt will be performed for the first time at the Engage Arts Festival in Bandon Co. Cork on 29 September 2016

At the same festival, my acousmatic piece Six Minutes of Music Created from Sound Around My Home will also be defused in a 1960s kitchenette, the perfect environment! More details will be available here very soon.

Frontiers + Michael Oesterle

My 2015 violin & Piano piece Five to Forty Seconds will be performed by Birmingham Conservatoire‘s Thallein Ensemble on 18 November 2016 at 1930 at the CBSO Centre, Birmingham. This is part of Michael Oesterle’s residency at Birmingham Conservatoire.

The Concert will also feature works by Michael Oesterle, Peter Bell, and Patrick Ellis.

for more details and booking click here.

New Piece for RTÉ ConTempo Quartet

Throughout the month of March, the RTÉ ConTempo Quartet will be touring my new string quartet Four Lines of Music Slow Down and Eventually Stop around Ireland.

16 March 2017, 1800: City Gallery, Limerick 
19 March 2017, 1500: St Mary’s Cathedral, Kilkenny 
23 March 2017, 2000: Triskel, Cork
26 March 2017, 1500: Kevin Barry Room, National Concert Hall, Dublin

These concerts will also feature music by Joseph Haydn and Béla Bartók.

More info and tickets available here.

New Piece for Crash Ensemble

I have recently completed a piece for Crash Ensemble’s 20th Birthday, as part of the Arts Council of Ireland’s Making Great Art Work Funding Scheme. This is due to be performed sometime in 2017. More details available here soon.

New Works for Modular & FM Synthesisers

Over the past year I have been working on notated music for me to perform on Modular and FM Synthesisers. These pieces can be performed solo and also in combination with any number of additional players in tandem with some conceptual poetry I am working on. I am hoping to record these pieces before the end of 2016. I will also be performing them in the UK and Ireland over the coming months.

In other news, I start back teaching at Birmingham Conservatoire next week. Looking forward to seeing all my colleagues and students again!

If you make it to any of the above gigs, please come and say hi!

 

 

New Website!

For those that are interested, I have just launched a new website here. Blog posts can be read by clicking any image. The rest of the website can be accessed by clicking the menu in the top right hand corner of the page. I hope you find it useful!