Who or what inspired you to take up composing and make it your career?

I started improvising and composing as soon as I began playing. My teachers, friends and family were very supportive, nurturing and inspiring throughout, and I spent all my breaks and lunchtimes at school singing, playing, improvising and composing nonsense songs with friends. I would write songs and play and sing in school concerts, and I remember helping to arrange music for the school orchestra at middle school! I knew from quite early on that writing and making music was what I had to do.

Who or what were the most important influences on your composing?

I believe my music comes from a melting pot of everything musical I’ve encountered – whether it’s music I’ve played, loved or hated, just experiencing it has an effect on my musical voice. However, some influences will have more sway than others. Javanese gamelan music has played a large part in my life for a number of years, and its influences can be heard throughout my music. Musical theatre is another huge influence on my music, alongside big band music, Beethoven, Debussy and Karl Jenkins. I must also mention that I find a lot of ‘current’ composers hugely inspiring – including many I’ve met through social media such as Twitter.

What have been the greatest challenges of your career so far?

I think the greatest challenge to many who work in the arts is the issue of balance in their lives. For me, it’s balancing composition with family life – especially when I’m looking after a toddler and a new idea bounces into my head!

Which compositions are you most proud of?

That’s a hard one! I’m proud of Surakartan Haze as it was the first full orchestral piece of mine that was workshopped and performed. I’m also proud of Bells in the Rain as it’s a piece I’m very happy with, and that I wrote in the first couple of months of my daughter’s life.

Do you have a favourite concert venue to perform in?

As with most composers, I’m quite happy with any venue in which my music is to be presented! However, I’m becoming more interested in less traditional venues, which are consequently more accessible to those who are not normally accustomed to classical music. We need to do something to help engage others in classical music, and the traditional concert hall seems to be a large obstacle – so why not remove it from the equation? Venues such as Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge and St Ethelburgas church in Liverpool Street, London are examples of venues I’ve visited or performed in recently that I feel make good, accessible venues.

Favourite pieces to perform? Listen to?

I wouldn’t say I have specific favourites to perform, but two that would make the list (choir wise) are Fauré’s Requiem (as an alto) and the Chichester Psalms. I love playing in orchestras and big bands, but I find there’s something so personal and powerful about the voice. Listening wise, there are too many favourites to pick. Epic, powerful pieces tend to be my music of choice, with In The Hall of the Mountain King and Wieniawski’s Szcherzo-Tarantelle being high on the list.

Who are your favourite musicians?

Again, I don’t really have favourites. The qualities I admire and seek out in musicians are that they are skilled at their craft, but that they communicate through their music, and add that all important extra dimension to their performance.

What is your most memorable concert experience?

There are a few, but one in particular is Steve Reich’s prom celebrating his 75th birthday at the 2011 BBC Proms series. I was particularly mesmerised by Ensemble Modern’s interpretation of his Music for 18 Musicians.

What do you consider to be the most important ideas and concepts to impart to aspiring musicians?

I think the most important concept is to remember that music is an incredibly powerful force, and that in the end it’s just that – music. It’s an organisation of sounds in time, and there are no rights or wrongs. Composers and performers of years gone by lived in musical societies where certain styles of music were the order of the day, or certain performance practices had to be conformed by to be accepted. That’s no longer the case, and we live in such a free musical society that nothing is wrong. However, as a result, there is a saturation of music everywhere, which can mean as composers we have a battle to be heard. My advice would be to be determined and keep working at it – and to value all your colleagues, as you never know who may help you find your next opportunity.

What are you working on at the moment?

My composition practice tends to involve working on several pieces at the same time. Right now I’m working on a Requiem (my labour of love, which gets some attention in between other projects!), a string quartet, and a collection of works for piano.

What is your present state of mind?

My state of mind at the moment tends to flick between happy and at peace, and slight frustration. I think I’m finally achieving balance and have a nice range of projects ongoing –the frustration comes in when the rest of the world takes over and I have the next section of a work in my head but no time to get it down on paper (or on computer!).

A unique combination of influences and interests help make composer Jenni Pinnock a distinctive voice in contemporary composition world. A versatile performer on piano, oboe and saxophone, a range of ensembles and opportunities have given Jenni an incredibly varied musical diet of genres, instrumentation and styles. Alongside more typical ensembles are the Javanese gamelan and church bell ringing.

Recent performances include her work Ori for small ensemble and electronics, her bassoon and ‘cello duet Double Helix and her art song Bells in the Rain. Current projects include a string quartet, a Requiem, and a work for brass quintet and electronics. In recent years she has had works performed at the International Youth Arts Festival, the London Festival of Contemporary Church Music (as part of the Orgelbüchlein project), and at Colchester New Music workshops and events.

Originally from Hertfordshire, Jenni graduated with first class honours from her BMus (hons) at Kingston University and then embarked on an intensive Masters in composition at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance studying with Stephen Montague and Greg Rose. A member of the ISM, alongside her compositional endeavours she teaches instrumental lessons and arranges music, both of which act as constant sources of inspiration. She is a member of Colchester New Music and Liquorice composers collectives.

www.jennipinnock.com

Who or what inspired you to take up composing, and make it your career? 

I’ve always enjoyed making things, whether from Lego, words or whatever, and I always wanted to be able to live from the things I made or thought about. At times it feels like a pathology. If I didn’t write music I’d probably have to find something else to do that required making something, or thinking. Latterly I’ve felt the need for a ‘problem-solving’ element to my work in that I see my music as addressing an artistic need.

Who or what were the most significant influences on your musical life and career as a composer? 

My teachers (Ben Lamb, Malcolm Singer, Gary Carpenter, Ken Hesketh and Joseph Horovitz) have had a huge influence on my work. Ben (my piano teacher in secondary school) was the first person to encourage me to take composition seriously, but I owe a debt to all of my teachers. They have been very kind, and generous with their thoughts. After them it is probably all of mistakes I’ve made. When a piece goes wrong in front of lots of people, and I know it’s my fault, it’s a powerful way of ensuring I never make those mistakes again. If I never failed at writing music I don’t think I’d ever make any progress.

What have been the greatest challenges of your career so far? 

Failing, and starting again. I think this always takes a certain amount of courage to start over because you have to disown things that you’ve spent a lot of time on and begin as if from nothing. But it’s always worth it because you become better than you were before.

What are the special challenges/pleasures of working on a commissioned piece? 

Feeling connected to a larger network of musicians. Composing (for me) is a very private activity, and as a result it’s often very solitary. But working on music for someone else always feels less so. There is a dialogue that you naturally enter into about what shape the piece should take, or a discussion of what emotional or artistic resources to draw on which is always exciting. What is normally a very private experience for me becomes something I can share with the person I’m writing for. It feels very intimate.

What are the special challenges/pleasures of working with particular musicians, singers, ensembles and orchestras? 

Every ensemble or musician I’ve worked with has brought their own aesthetic to a new piece, and I think that has been one of the most significant factors for me in the development of any new work. I always want the performers to look (and sound) really good when they play my music, so I naturally want to tailor new pieces to suit what they do in their performance practice.

Which works are you most proud of?  

I wrote a piano trio that I wrote in my last year at college which is probably my most technically accomplished piece. It took me 14 quite substantial drafts before I could get anywhere with it, and I think that allowed me to iron out a lot of wrinkles. I wrote a violin concerto for Henning Kraggerud not long ago and that is certainly my most substantial piece. There are harmonic and thematic ideas that I was able to bring to fruition in that piece in a way that I hadn’t been able to achieve before; in particular marrying quite a spontaneous and improvisatory solo line with a more systematic approach to thematic development.

Do you have a favourite concert venue? 

Cadogan Hall. I had my best premiere there, and the acoustic is wonderful.

Who are your favourite musicians/composers? 

William Byrd, Beethoven, Ravel, St. Philip Neri,  T. S. Eliot, Henri Dutilleux, Evelyn Waugh, Nadia Boulanger, Frederic Rzewski, Gerard Grisey, Alasdair MacIntyre, Gilbert and George, Billy Corgan, Rebecca Saunders, Esbjorn Svensen. I know some of these aren’t composers but I feel the influence of all of them.

What is your most memorable concert experience? 

Grisey’s Les Espace Acoustique when it was performed by the London Sinfonietta a couple of years ago, and any performance of Ravel.

What do you consider to be the most important ideas and concepts to impart to aspiring musicians? 

Music that comes out of speakers or through headphones is always different to music that’s performed live by a person.

What are you working on at the moment? 

I’m currently finishing off a piece for Christopher Guild for piano and analogue radio. We’re giving the first performance on 17 December at The Forge in Camden. I don’t think I’ve ever enjoyed composing as much as I am at the moment. Once that’s done I’ve got pieces to write for Notes Inégales, and for the flautist Carla Rees.

Where would you like to be in 10 years’ time?

Teaching people who want to learn, and writing for people who want to play, but more so, and solvent.

What is your idea of perfect happiness? I don’t know.

What is your most treasured possession? I don’t know.

What do you enjoy doing most? I don’t know.

What is your present state of mind?

I’m currently wondering why I don’t have a most treasured possession, why I don’t know what I enjoy most, and why I have no idea of perfect happiness. I think if I knew the answer to these things then I wouldn’t be happy, I wouldn’t enjoy anything and I wouldn’t treasure anything.

Piers Tattersall will perform two works for piano and analogue radio with pianist Christopher Guild in a concert at The Forge, Camden, on 17th December 2013. Further details and tickets here

Piers Tattersall was born in Salisbury, and his composition teachers have included Malcolm Singer, Gary Carpenter, and Joseph Horovitz.

His works have been commissioned and performed by various ensembles including The Orpheus Sinfonia, The Warehouse Ensemble, and the Composers Ensemble. After completing his studies he took up a residency at La Ville Matte in Sardinia working with violinist Valentino Corvino, and pianist Peter Waters. In 2011 his ballet Rumpelstiltskin was performed at the Peacock Theatre (Sadler’s Wells), and his violin concerto Kreisler, l’entre deux guerres composed for the violinist Henning Kraggerud and the Britten Sinfonia was toured and broadcast on BBC Radio 3.

Harold Craxton

Craxton Studios, a unique house and ‘Atelier’ on Kidderpore Avenue in leafy Hampstead, north London, was designed and built in 1901 by the artist George Hillyard Swinstead for his family and as his art studio. The house was bought by eminent and much-loved pianist and teacher Harold Craxton and his wife Essie in 1945 after they and their family were bombed out of their home in St. John’s Wood during the Blitz. Their six children included the distinguished oboist Janet Craxton; the painter John Craxton R.A. (who illustrated Patrick Leigh Fermor’s books, amongst other things) and the BBC’s Royal events television director Antony Craxton C.V.O. Professor Harold Craxton O.B.E (Royal Academy of Music) lectured, taught and entertained at the house and accompanied some of the finest singers and musicians of the day. The house became a hub for music and the arts, and was frequented by such artistic luminaries as Dame Peggy Ashcroft, Sir Frederick Ashton, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Winifred Atwell, Dame Janet Baker, Sir John Barbirolli, Sir Lennox Berkeley, Sir John Betjeman, Pierre Boulez, Julian Bream, Benjamin Britten, Lord Kenneth Clarke, Johnny Dankworth, Sir Peter Maxwell Davis, Alfred Deller, Dietrich Fischer-Diskau, Dame Margot Fonteyn, Lucien Freud, Leon Goossens, Gerard Hoffnung, Witold Lutoslawski, Gian Carlo Menotti, Sir Yehudi Menuhin, Sir Henry Moore, Peter Pears, Mstislav Rostropovich, Elizabeth Schwarzkopf, Stephen Spender and Graham Sutherland. There are vestiges of these illustrious lives and times around the house in photographs, paintings, concert handbills and posters and other memorabilia. But the house is not a museum and still feels like a family home, which gives it a very unique and special atmosphere as a venue for concerts and other musical events.

For me, the name Harold Craxton will always be synonymous with certain ABRSM editions of piano music, and I still have my red cloth-bound three-volume edition of the Beethoven Piano Sonatas, edited by Harold Craxton and Donald Tovey, and a faded mauve paperback of Chopin’s Nocturnes, even though I have now graduated to dusky blue Henle urtext editions.

Visiting Craxton Studios for a Sunday afternoon recital by acclaimed British pianist Sarah Beth Briggs was like stepping back into another era: the antique Bluthner piano, the Arts & Crafts decor, the audience and even the generous high tea after the concert all created an atmosphere of “music for friends amongst friends”, and a reminder of how music was enjoyed over 100 years ago. The concert was in memory of pianist and teacher Denis Matthews, who died in 1988. He was good friends with the Craxton family and visited the house on Kidderpore Avenue many times.

Sarah Beth Briggs studied with Denis Matthews for many years and the concert was her personal tribute to an adored and inspirational teacher. All the pieces she played had a special connection for her with Dennis, and indeed the opening piece, Mozart’s Fantasy in C minor K475, was the first piece Sarah heard Denis perform in a concert in Newcastle, when she was still quite a young child. As she explained in her engaging introduction, it was also the piece that convinced her that Mozart could be as dramatic and colourful as Beethoven. It was a persuasive and authoritative opener and tied in neatly with Beethoven’s ‘Pathetique’ Sonata which followed it, the Beethoven highlighting many aspects of Mozart’s writing.

After such a dramatic first half, Sarah then played a Debussy Prelude, explaining that Denis loved the music of Claude Debussy, and she and he spent many hours working on the first book of Preludes together. Des pas sur la neige is a brief and icy excursion into a snowy landscape, the ascending figure in the left hand in the opening (and shared between the hands later in the piece) suggesting feet trudging through snow. This was followed by Chopin’s Fourth Ballade, prefaced by an introduction by Sarah in which she quoted the late John Ogdon’s description of the work: “it lasts only twelve minutes…..it contains the experience of a lifetime”. Sarah gave a passionate and engrossing account of this perhaps the most popular and complex of all of Chopin’s Ballades.

After the performance, Sarah explained that Denis had always felt it was inappropriate to follow Chopin’s Ballade with an encore, and in his spirit she simply thanked the audience for coming before taking a final curtain call. We were then directed into the dining room of the house where a magnificent high tea was laid out: tiny sandwiches and canapés, petit fours, and several different cakes (most of which were homemade). While the guests were filling their plates with delicacies, the organisers had cleared the studio of chairs and laid out tables with white cloths. Tea was served in the studio where the concert had taken place, providing a very civilised and quaintly old-fashioned end to a very enjoyable afternoon of music making, the pieces played with obvious affection and imbued with very special memories for the pianist. I was delighted to be a guest at such a gathering and to have the opportunity to talk to Sarah afterwards.

Craxton Studios

Craxton Memorial Trust

Sarah Beth Briggs

My review of Sarah’s new recording of Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert

Meet the Artist……Sarah Beth Briggs

Pascal Amoyel (photo credit: Ludivine B)
Pascal Amoyel (photo credit: Ludivine B)

Who or what inspired you to take up the piano, and pursue a career in music?

When I was 12, the caretaker of my block of flats listened to me practicing scales and told us that the pianist Georges Cziffra had lived in the same block and that he had just moved to create a foundation for young people. She also said “why don’t you meet him, that may be your destiny!”

She was right… I had the great privilege to meet a man with tremendous humanity and generosity, and thanks to him, I became a pianist. I worked with him for 8 years

Who or what were the most important influences on your musical life and career? 

Olivier Greif, Georges Cziffra, Krishnamurti, and silence.

What have been the greatest challenges of your career so far? 

To write a musical show, “The 50 fingers pianist”, that pays tribute to Cziffra, from the young 5 year old little pianist playing in the circus, to the escaped soldier, from the bar piano player playing jazz in seedy night clubs of Budapest suburbs, to being sentenced to hard labour for having tried to escape from Hungary. His life is a very moving epic.

Which performance/recordings are you most proud of?  

I wanted to record the complete Chopin Nocturnes by night. I was staying in a great French castle (Chambord) where I was alone. Deep in the night, I was closing it with a powerful cadence! This atmosphere out of time was favourable to the contemplation I wanted for this music.

Which particular works do you think you play best? 

I have a special affection for the works of Liszt. As well as being every pianist’s father, creator of the recital, he stopped his career at only 35, at the height of his fame, adulated by kings and emperors. Slowly aspirated by the silence, he finally decided to take refuge in a small cloister in Roma, to dedicate himself to composition and contemplation…… I also love playing Scriabin.
 
How do you make your repertoire choices from season to season? 

It’s sometimes hard to balance between what we would like to play and what the programmers sometimes ask, especially when their request are made a few years in advance! I think that the most important thing is to make no concession, to be faithful to our desire and to what inspires us, because only that will serve music.

Do you have a favourite concert venue to perform in and why? 

Playing in the mythic Berlin Philharmonie is one of my best souvenirs in my performing life.

Favourite pieces to perform? Listen to? 

Liszt Harmonies poétiques et religieuses

Chopin’s Nocturnes (by Rubinstein!)

Who are your favourite musicians? 

Edwin Fischer, Rubinstein, Sofronitsky, Pires.

What is your most memorable concert experience? 

The dramatized concert “Le Block 15, ou la musique en résistance”, in which the cellist Emmanuelle Bertrand and I pay a tribute to two survivors of Auschwitz camp, the cellist Anita Lasker-Wallfisch (who lives in London) and the pianist and composer Simon Laks. We are always very moved by sharing those testimonies.

What do you consider to be the most important ideas and concepts to impart to aspiring musicians? 

It is not the ideas that inspire music, but music that inspires ideas.

Intuition is Intelligence.

What are you working on at the moment? 

Actually, I am continuing my work about Charles-Valentin Alkan, a composer to whom I have dedicated a recording, including the Grande Sonate “Les 4 âges”. I am fascinated by this artist who is still not known enough, as well, generally speaking, by all those unconventional and out of fashion figures in the word History.

I am also starting, as a composer, to write a concerto for cello and string orchestra, for the cellist Emmanuelle Bertrand.

Where would you like to be in 10 years’ time?

A wise man.

What is your idea of perfect happiness?

The total acceptance of present time.

What is your most treasured possession? 

To realise that something can be owned is an illusion.

What do you enjoy doing most? 

Watching my children grow.

Pascal Amoyel performs works by Alkan, Chopin, and Liszt, and the world premiere of a new work by Nimrod Borenstein at Westminster Cathedral Hall on Sunday 8th December in a concert. Further details and tickets here

Voted “Solo Instrumental Discovery of the Year” at the Victoires de la Musique in 2005, Pascal Amoyel has established himself over the past few years as a significant personality on the musical scene. His recording of the complete ‘Nocturnes’ of Chopin by Pascal Amoyel has been awarded by the Warszawa Fryderyk Chopin Society within the context of the International Record Competition – Grand Prix du Disque Frédéric Chopin 2010 and in September 2009, the magazine Classica-Le Monde de la musique has considered his recording of the ‘Funérailles’ (Franz Liszt) as one of the 5 best ever.

As a teenager he was profoundly influenced by his encounter with György Cziffra, with whom he studied in France and Hungary for several years.

After receiving a Licence de Concert from the Ecole Normale de Musique in Paris, he was awarded Premiers Prix in piano and chamber music at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique in the same city. He was awarded scholarships by the Menuhin and Cziffra Foundations, then won first prize in the Paris International competition for Young Pianists.

He appears as a recitalist and soloist with orchestra in Europe, the United States, Canada, Russia, Japan and China.

His recordings as a duet with Emmanuelle Bertrand or as a soloist have received the most prestigious awards.

Pascal Amoyel is also a composer, laureate 2010 of the Banque Populaire Foundation.

He use to work with Olivier Greif and gave the world première performance, and several works have been dedicated to him, including El Khoury’s Third Sonata and Lemeland’s Piano Concerto.

He is the artistic director of the festival Notes d’Automne, a meeting between Music and Literature, in Le Perreux sur Marne.

www.pascal-amoyel.com