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Judith Weir
Judith Weir (born 11 May 1954 in Cambridge, England) is a Scottish
composer currently resident in London.
Biography
Judith Weir’s music has achieved considerable popularity with audiences
and critics alike. She trained with John Tavener while still at school
and subsequently with Robin Holloway at Cambridge University. Her music
is characterised by a distinctive textural clarity and a lucid but
idiosyncratic harmonic idiom. Often drawing on sources from medieval
history, as well as the traditional stories and music of her native
Scotland, she is best known for her operas and theatre works, although
she has also achieved considerable international renown for her
extensive catalogue of orchestral and chamber works.
Weir's musical language is fairly conservative in its mechanics, but her
ear for sonority and effect, and ability to make simple ideas sound
fresh, makes her work free of modern-music clichés, while at the same
time being interesting, approachable and communicative. Her operatic
musical writing is sometimes compared to Britten's. As well as some
"micro-operas", she has composed the full-length operas A Night at the
Chinese Opera, The Vanishing Bridegroom, Blond Eckbert, and recently, in
co-operation with Margaret Williams, Armida, an opera for television.
Commissioned works most notably include woman.life.song for Jessye
Norman and We are Shadows for Simon Rattle.
From 1995 to 2000, she was the Artistic Director of the Spitalfields
Festival in London. She held the post of Composer in Association for the
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra from 1995 to 1998. In 1997 she
received the Lincoln Center's Stoeger Prize.
According to The Independent newspaper, "Judith Weir has brought new
hope to those who thought modern music could never be tuneful and
original".
Career highlights
1987 - premiere of A Night at the Chinese Opera by Kent Opera.
1995-8 - Fairburn Composer in Association, City of Birmingham Symphony
Orchestra.
1995-2000 - Artistic Director, Spitalfields Festival, London.
2000 - premiere of woman.life.song at Carnegie Hall, commissioned by
Jessye Norman.
2001 - South Bank Show music award.
2005 - premiere broadcast of Armida, opera for Channel Four Television.
Key works
King Harald’s Saga (1979; soprano, singing eight roles)
A Night at the Chinese Opera (1987; opera)
Blond Eckbert (1994; opera)
We Are Shadows (1999; choir, orchestra)
The welcome arrival of rain (2001; orchestra)
Tiger Under the Table (2002; chamber ensemble)
Piano Trio Two (2003-4)
Selected recordings
Judith Weir: Discography
A Night at the Chinese Opera - NMC D060
King Harald’s Saga - Cala CACD88040
Piano Concerto; Distance and Enchantment; various other chamber works -
NMC D090
Blond Eckbert Nicholas Folwell (baritone), Blond Eckbert; Anne-Marie
Owens (mezzo soprano), Berthe; Christopher Ventris (baritone), Walther /
Hugo / An Old Woman; Nerys Jones (soprano), A bird; Chorus and Orchestra
of English National Opera; Siân Edwards (conductor) Collins Classics:
CD14612 / NMC: NMC D106
On Buying a Horse: The songs of Judith Weir On Buying a Horse; Ox
Mountain Was Covered by Trees; Songs from the Exotic; Scotch Minstrelsy;
The Voice of Desire; A Spanish Liederbooklet; King Harald's Saga;
Ständchen. Susan Bickley (mezzo soprano), Andrew Kennedy (tenor), Ailish
Tynan (soprano), Ian Burnside (piano) Signum SIGCD087 |
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