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Richard Ayres

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Name
  
Richard Ayres


Role
  
Composer

Richard Ayres httpswwwoperstuttgartcomimagesrichardayre


Education
  
Royal Conservatory of The Hague

Albums
  
Composers' Voice Portrait: Richard Ayres (musikFabrik / Roland Kluttig)

Similar People
  
Martijn Padding, Willem Jeths, AskoSchonberg, Louis Andriessen, Nieuw Ensemble

Richard ayres no 46 twenty three thoughts about robert walser


Richard Ayres (born 29 October 1965, Cornwall) is a British composer and music teacher.

Contents

Richard Ayres followed Morton Feldman’s classes at the Darmstadt and Dartington summer schools. He studied composition, electronic music, and trombone at Huddersfield Polytechnic until 1989, graduating with Distinction in 1989. Since September 1989, Ayres has lived and worked in the Netherlands. He studied postgraduate composition course at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague, studying with Louis Andriessen, and graduating in 1992.

From 1990 Richard Ayres has worked as composer receiving performances from among others the ASKO Ensemble, the Schönberg Ensemble, Ives Ensemble, Orkest de Volharding, Maarten Altena Ensemble, The Netherlands Ballet Orchestra, Netherlands Radio Symphony Orchestra, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Apartment House, London Sinfonietta, Klangforum Wien, MusikFabrik, Continuum (Canada) as well as writing for ensembles with more unusual instrumentations formed for specific projects.

Ayres received the Gaudeamus International Composers Award for composition in 1994. His piece No.31 (for trumpet and ensemble) received a recommendation at the UNESCO Rostrum of Composers in Paris in 1999. He received the Matthijs Vermeulen Award in 2003.

He was Featured Composer at the Huddersfield Festival in 2003 and his music has been heard at the Aldeburgh Festival: his first opera, The Cricket Recovers was premiered there in 2005. It has since had new productions in Stuttgart, Weimar and Braunschweig. He is currently writing his second opera, Peter Pan.

In the orchestral arena his No. 37b for orchestra was premiered at the Donaueschingen Musiktage by the SWR Sinfonieorchester Freiburg and Baden-Baden and has since been taken up by the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. No. 40 NONcerto for oboe and chamber orchestra was premiered by Baart Schneemann and the Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra in 2006.

2008 saw the premiere of No. 42 In the Alps for soprano and ensemble which was premiered and toured throughout the Netherlands by Barbara Hannigan and the Netherlands Wind Ensemble. He also wrote No. 43 Glorious, a work for chamber ensemble and film - a collaboration with film-maker Guy Maddin for the SHIFT Festival in Amsterdam and Canada.

In January 2004, Ayres was appointed as teacher of composition at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague. He remained in his position here until 2006 and now teaches at the Amsterdam Conservatoire.

Peter pan by richard ayres trailer welsh national opera


Selected works

  • No. 8 Piano (solo) 1991
  • No. 24 (NONcerto for alto trombone) 1995
  • No. 31 (NONcerto for trumpet) 1999
  • No. 30 (NONcerto for orchestra, cello and high soprano) 2003
  • No. 30a "Schnell aber nicht immer"
  • No. 33 a-b-c (Valentine Tregashian COnsiders...) 2001
  • No. 36 (NONcerto for horn) 2002
  • No. 34b (Two pieces for cello and ensemble) 2003
  • No. 39 The Cricket Recovers 2005
  • No. 37b for Orchestra 2006
  • No. 40 (NONcerto for oboe)2006
  • No. 41 (Five Memos for Eva) 2007
  • No. 42 (In the Alps- an animated concert) 2008
  • No. 43 (Glorious) 2008
  • No. 47 (Peter Pan) 2015
  • No. 48 (Night Studio) 2015
  • References

    Richard Ayres Wikipedia