Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Gavin Bryars

 
Music Encyclopedia: Gavin Bryars

(b Goole, 16 Jan 1943). English composer. He studied philosophy at Sheffield University and music privately; in the 1960s he played in jazz groups and since 1970 he has lectured at Leicester Polytechnic. A leading experimental composer, influenced by Cage and Satie, he first wrote for indeterminate forces (The Sinking of the Titanic, 1969), but more recently his music has been influenced by theories of literature; it is often repetitive and witty. His opera Medea was staged in 1984.



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Artist: Gavin Bryars
Top
Gavin Bryars

Similar Artists:

Christopher Hobbs, Brian Eno, John Tavener, Derek Bailey

Influenced By:

Followers:

  • Born: January 16, 1943, Goole, Yorkshire, England
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Avant-Garde
  • Instrument: Composer, Cello
  • Representative Albums: "Sinking of the Titanic/Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet," "Hommages," "The North Shore: Intermezzo, Allegrasco"
  • Representative Songs: "The Sinking of the Titanic (C," "My First Homage," "Les Fiançailles"

Biography

Arguably the most important British post-minimalist composer, Gavin Bryars mixes classical, jazz, and modern influences in his intellectually engaging (yet still emotionally touching) music. Though his style has changed somewhat since his first major piece, 1969's "The Sinking of the Titanic," Bryars has remained a provocative yet accessible composer capable of working in a variety of settings.

Born in the small Yorkshire village of Goole, England, in 1943, Bryars' first musical love was jazz. Beginning in 1963, when he was a philosophy student at the University of Sheffield, Bryars played bass with free jazz guitarist Derek Bailey and drummer Tony Oxley in the nonsensically named improvisatory trio Joseph Holbrooke. (An 11-minute excerpt from a 1965 Joseph Holbrooke rehearsal was released on CD in 1999, but the group remains otherwise undocumented.) Joseph Holbrooke broke up in 1966 when Bailey and Oxley moved to London to form the Spontaneous Music Ensemble, and at that point, Bryars abandoned improvisatory music.

After a period spent studying in the United States under John Cage, whose theories inspired much of Bryars' early work, Bryars returned to England and became a Fine Arts instructor at Portsmouth College of Art in 1969. While studying with renowned composers Cornelius Cardew and John White, Bryars wrote the original sketch of "The Sinking of the Titanic" to accompany a student art exhibition. Bryars originally thought of the piece as a musical equivalent of conceptual art and did not originally intend for the piece to be performed. It wasn't until 1972 that Bryars wrote the first performance score for the piece, and he revised the piece in 1975, 1990, and 1994.

Bryars wrote his second major piece in 1971, "Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet." Like "The Sinking of the Titanic," "Jesus' Blood" is based on a piece of church music slowly transmogrified, but this piece, based on a tape recording of a London tramp singing the titular hymn, is an additive work that builds slowly into an explosive orchestral climax.

Although Bryars wrote his first two major pieces in Portsmouth, probably the most lasting and important project of his time in that town was his founding of the legendary Portsmouth Sinfonia. Half art project, half put-on, the Portsmouth Sinfonia was a community orchestra that anybody could join, regardless of skill. The resulting mix of virtuosi and people who had never picked up an instrument before in their lives is oddly fascinating, as heard on the group's two albums, 1973's The Portsmouth Sinfonia Plays the Popular Classics and 1975's Hallelujah!: Live at the Royal Albert Hall.

Brian Eno was a member of the Portsmouth Sinfonia from 1970 to 1974, and through that connection, Bryars became the first artist signed to Eno's Obscure label, whose first release was of the original recordings of both "The Sinking of the Titanic" and "Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet" in 1975. Bryars also appears on the label's second release, Ensemble Pieces, with his "1, 2, 1-2-3-4," alongside pieces by John Adams and Christopher Hobbs. The following year, Bryars' "The Squirrel on the Ricketty-Racketty Bridge," a piece for eight guitars played by four guitarists, was performed by Bryars, Eno, Bailey, and Henry Cow's Fred Frith and appeared on the Obscure compilation Machine Pieces.

In 1977, Bryars collaborated with librettist Fred Orton on the opera Irma, which was staged by Tom Phillips and released on Obscure with an orchestra conducted by Bryars. Thus inspired, Bryars began composing his first solo opera, Medea, which was staged by Robert Wilson in Paris and Lyon in 1984. Bryars' second opera, Doctor Ox's Experiment, was based on a story by Jules Verne and was staged by Canadian film director Atom Egoyan in London in 1998.

In 1981, Bryars began a decade-plus association with the Belgian art pop label Les Disques du Crepuscule, releasing the chamber music album Hommages. In 1986, the tone poem "Three Viennese Dancers" was released on the influential ECM label. Crepuscule released a celebrated revision of "The Sinking of the Titanic" in 1990, followed by the new "After the Requiem" in 1991. Bryars revised both "The Sinking of the Titanic" and "Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet" (in a new recording featuring Tom Waits singing the hymn) for Point Music in 1993 and 1994. A remix project with Aphex Twin, Raise the Titanic, was released in Japan in 1995. In between those projects, Bryars released the eclectic Vita Nova, with four new pieces performed by four different ensembles.

A collaboration with the renowned Balanescu Quartet, The Last Days, was released in 1995. Another varied collection of new works, Farewell to Philosophy, featuring a cello concerto commissioned by Julian Lloyd Webber, a piece for the Nexus percussion ensemble, and an orchestral solo for jazz bass legend Charlie Haden, followed the next year. A reunion with his own chamber music group, the Gavin Bryars Ensemble, was released as A Man in a Room, Gambling in 1997, with another orchestral work, "Cadman Requiem," appearing the next year. Bryars capped a productive period of his career with a self-titled collection of works in a variety of settings in 1998, followed by the CD reissue of his first album and the archival Joseph Holbrooke tape. In 2000, a Joseph Holbrooke reunion concert from 1998 was issued, as was Bryars' score for Biped, a Merce Cunningham dance performance. During this period, Bryars was also working on his third opera, G. Amjad, a collaboration with David Lang for the Canadian dance company La La La Human Steps, was issued in late 2008. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Gavin Bryars
Top
Gavin Bryars

Background information
Birth name Richard Gavin Bryars
Born 16 January 1943
Origin Yorkshire, England
Occupations Composer

Richard Gavin Bryars (born 16 January 1943)[1] is an English composer and double bassist. He has been active in, or has produced works in, a variety of styles of music, including jazz, free improvisation, minimalism, experimental music, avant-garde and neoclassicism.

Contents

Career

Born in Goole, East Riding of Yorkshire, England, Bryars initially studied philosophy at Sheffield University before studying music for three years.

The first musical work for which he is remembered was his role as bassist in the trio Joseph Holbrooke, alongside guitarist Derek Bailey and drummer Tony Oxley. The trio began by playing relatively traditional jazz before moving into free improvisation. However, Bryars became dissatisfied with this when he saw a young bassist (later revealed to be Johnny Dyani) play in a manner which seemed to him to be artificial, and he became interested in composition instead.

Bryars's first works as a composer owe much to the so-called New York School of John Cage (with whom he briefly studied), Morton Feldman, Earle Brown and minimalism. One of his earliest pieces, The Sinking of the Titanic (1969), is an indeterminist work which allows the performers to take a number of sound sources related to the sinking of the RMS Titanic and make them into a piece of music. The first recording of this piece appeared on Brian Eno's Obscure Records in 1975. The 1994 recording of this piece was remixed by Aphex Twin as Raising the Titanic (later collected on the 26 Mixes for Cash album).

A well known early work is Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet (1971), which has as its basis a recorded loop of a homeless person improvising a hymn of that name. On top of that loop, rich harmonies played by a live ensemble are built, always increasing in density, before the whole thing gradually fades out. A new recording of this work was made in the 1990s with Tom Waits singing along with the original recording of the homeless person during the final section.

Bryars was a founding member of the Portsmouth Sinfonia, an orchestra whose membership consisted of performers who “embrace the full range of musical competence” — and who played (or attempted to play) popular classical works. Its members included Brian Eno, whose Obscure Records label would subsequently release works by Bryars. In one of the first three releases from the label, Brian Eno's album Discreet Music, Bryars conducted and co-arranged the three pieces Three Variations on the Canon in D Major by Johann Pachelbel which constitute the second half of the album.

Bryars's later works have included A Man In A Room, Gambling (1992), which was written on commission from BBC Radio 3 and Artangel. Bryars's music is heard beneath monologues spoken by the Spanish artist Juan Muñoz, who talks about methods of cheating at card games. The ten short works were played on Radio 3 without any introductory announcements, and Bryars is quoted as saying that he hoped they would appear to the listener in a similar way to the shipping forecast, both mysterious and accepted without question. His Cello concerto Farewell to Philosophy was recorded in 1997 by Julian Lloyd Webber.

Bryars has written a large number of other works, including three operas, and a number of instrumental pieces, among them three string quartets and several concertos. He has written several pieces for choreographers, including Biped (2001) for Merce Cunningham. Between 1981-1984 he participated in the CIVIL warS, a vast, never-completed multimedia project by Robert Wilson.

Bryars founded the music department at Leicester Polytechnic (now De Montfort University), and taught there for a number of years. He lives in England, and, in the summer months, on the west coast of Canada.

He was born on the same day, 16 January 1943, as another prominent English composer, Brian Ferneyhough [2].

In his June 2008 appearance on Desert Island Discs author Peter Carey chose Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet as his eighth and final record choice.

Selected Works

  • The Sinking of the Titanic (1969, First performance: Queen Elizabeth Hall, London 1972)
  • Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet (for Pre-recorded Tape and ensemble), 1972
  • Medea (Opera, libretto after Euripides. ) 1982, revised 1984 and 1995
  • CIVIL WarS (incomplete Opera collaboration with Robert Wilson), 1984 . Some sections of the music exist in completed form, as follows:
    • On Photography for Chorus (SATB), harmonium, piano.
    • 2B for Percussion ensemble.
    • Arias For Marie Curie, The Queen of the Sea, Captain Nemo, The Japanese Bride.
  • String Quartet No 1 Between the National and the Bristol, 1985.
  • Cadman Requiem (Dedicated to Bill Cadman), 1989
  • String Quartet No 2, 1990.
  • A Man in a Room, Gambling for speaking voice and string quartet (Text: Juan Muñoz), 1992
  • The North Shore for viola and piano, 1993
  • Three Elegies for Nine Clarinets, 1994
  • Cello Concerto Farewell to Philosophy, 1995.
  • Adnan Songbook, 1996.
  • String Quartet no.3, 1998
  • Biped - music for the dance by Merce Cunningham, 1999
  • Being the Confession and Last Testament of Johannes Gensfleisch, also known as Gutenberg, Master Printer, formerly of Strasbourg and Mainz Opera, 2002
  • Nothing like the Sun - 8 Shakespeare sonnets for soprano, tenor, speaking voice, 8 instruments, 2007

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Gordon Jones (Classical Musician)
Édouard Lock (person)
Ivan Pavlov (Electronica Artist, '90s)

Who is Gavin Laird? Read answer...
Who is Gavin Lawrence? Read answer...
Does bob bryar have a girlfriend? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What country does bob bryar live in?
Where does bob bryar live?
Is bob bryar single?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gavin Bryars" Read more

 

Mentioned in