| |
Param Vir
Param Vir (born February 6, 1952 in Delhi) is a British composer
originally from India.
Biography
Param Vir was born in Delhi, India. His mother was a poet and
distinguished vocalist - his father an electronics engineer and
mathematician - and Vir's formative years at home were steeped in
Indian classical music. Piano lessons began at the age of 9 and
composition lessons followed at the age of 14. It was through these
avenues that Param Vir was first introduced to contemporary music in
the western idiom - an introduction that immediately kindled a
belief and passion in the young composer that has never abated, and
continues to inform his entire creative output.
Vir's early work in composition aroused the interest of Sir Peter
Maxwell Davies who invited him to the Dartington Summer School in
1983 on a scholarship. Under the encouragement of Sir Peter Maxwell
Davies, and with the financial support of a Fellowship from the
Inlaks Foundation, Param Vir moved to London in 1984 to study
composition with Oliver Knussen. Within three years of his arrival
in London he had won the Benjamin Britten Composition Prize (Aldeburgh),
the Kucyna International Composition Prize (Boston), the Tippett
Composition Award (Dartington) and the Performing Right Society
Composition Prize (London). His works have been performed, among
others, by the Asko Ensemble, The Schoenberg Ensemble, London
Sinfonietta, London Sinfonietta Voices, BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC
Philharmonic Orchestra and Ensemble Modern. Param Vir has also
studied composition with Jonathan Harvey and Randolph Coleman.
His two one-act operas - 'Snatched by the Gods' and 'Broken Strings'
were commissioned by Hans Werner Henze for the 1992 Munich Biennale,
in a production by Pierre Audi and Netherlands Opera. The following
year Param Vir received the composition prize from the Ernst von
Siemens Stiftung (Munich) for the double bill. These operas were
then produced by Almeida Opera in July 1996 in a new production with
the London Sinfonietta conducted by Markus Stenz. In 1993 the Park
Lane Group featured his work for solo guitar, 'Clear Light Magic
Body' at the South Bank Centre, London. His major work for orchestra
'Horse Tooth White Rock', commissioned by the BBC Philharmonic, was
given its world première in March 1994, under Sir Peter Maxwell
Davies and its London première at the BBC Maida Vale Studios on
February 25, 2003 with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by
Jurjen Hempel.
Other works include ‘Before Krishna’ (1987), ‘Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva’
(1988), written for the London Sinfonietta Voices, 'Tender Light'
(1996) an elegy for viola da gamba, 'The Comfort of Angels' (1996)
for two pianos, ‘Gift’ (1996) for solo flute commissioned by the
Almeida Theatre and 'Flame' (1997) for solo cello for the Munich
Biennale. In 1997 the Berlin Festival commissioned a substantial and
powerfully moving work for six percussion, baritone and piano,
'Ultimate words: Infinite song' based on the texts of the Danish
resistance fighter Kim Malthe-Bruun.
Param Vir's double bill opera 'Snatched by the Gods' and 'Broken
Strings' is now established within the contemporary repertoire, with
three new productions taking place: with Scottish Opera in Glasgow
and Edinburgh in 1998 and the Berlin State Opera and Vienna in 1999.
A revival of the original Pierre Audi production was given by the
Transparant Opera Company, with several performances taking place in
February 2001 in Antwerp, Rotterdam and Rouen. Since its world
premiere in 1992 this double bill has been much acclaimed by
audiences and critics alike.
Param Vir’s first full length opera – ION – was commissioned by
Aldeburgh Almeida Opera and received its first performance at the
Aldeburgh Festival in 2000. The first full production of the opera
was staged in 2003 in a co-production between Music Theatre Wales,
the Berliner Festwochen and Opera National du Rhin. The premiere
launched the latter’s 2003/4 season with a series of seven
performances, before moving on to the Berlin Festival, the Linbury
Studio of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and touring around
the UK.
HORSE TOOTH WHITE ROCK, a large orchestral work based on the life of
the eleventh century Tibetan saint Milarepa, was commissioned and
first performed by the BBC Philharmonic conducted by Sir Peter
Maxwell Davies in 1994. Since then, it has been performed by the BBC
Symphony Orchestra at the 2005 BBC Proms and by the Flanders
Philharmonic at de Singel in Antwerp.
Other notable works include ULTIMATE WORDS: INFINITE SONG, for
baritone solo, percussion sextet and piano, which was commissioned
by the 1997 Berlin Festival. The piece is inspired by the writings
of the Second World War Danish resistance hero Kim Malthe-Bruun. THE
THEATRE OF MAGICAL BEINGS was commissioned by Birmingham
Contemporary Music Group in 2003 and described by one critic as a
“virtuosic and hugely enjoyable, life-affirming work”. More
recently, the Schönberg Ensemble commissioned and gave the first
performance of HAYAGRIVA at the Muziekgebouw aan’t IJ in Amsterdam
in December 2005.
Param Vir has just completed a major new work on commission from the
BBC Symphony Orchestra based on Anish Kapoor’s sculpture Cloud Gate.
BETWEEN EARTH AND SKY was premiered by the BBC Symphony Orchestra on
November 24th 2006 at Hammersmith Town Hall to much acclaim.
Career highlights
1983 - attended Dartington Summer School on a scholarship.
1984 - moved to London to study with Oliver Knussen.
1987 - awarded Benjamin Britten Composition Prize.
1993 - Pierre Audi production of Broken Strings wins Ernst von
Siemens Prize (Munich).
2003 - first full production of Ion tours Europe.
2005 - Horse Tooth White Rock performed at the BBC Proms.
2005 - Hayagriva commissioned and premiered by the Schoenberg
Ensemble in Amsterdam
2006 - Between Earth and Sky, inspired by Anish Kapoor's CLOUD GATE,
is premiered by the BBC Symphony Orchestra in London
Key works
Before Krishna (1987; string orchestra)
Broken Strings (1992; one-act chamber opera)
Horse Tooth White Rock (1994; orchestra)
Ultimate Words: Infinite Song (1997; baritone, six percussion,
piano)
Ion (2000; chamber opera)
The Theatre of Magical Beings (2003; large ensemble)
Hayagriva (2005; large ensemble) |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
|
|