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Alex Taylor (composer)

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New Zealand composer (born 1988)

Alexander Lawther Taylor (born 1988) is a New Zealand composer, poet and writer.

Early life and education

Taylor was born in 1988 and attended Westlake Boys High School. At the University of Auckland he studied music and English. In 2011 he received an MMus(Composition) with a folio of compositions for viola and orchestra, piano, clarinet and ensembles. He was supervised by Eve de Castro-Robinson and John Elmsly.

Career

Taylor sings and plays several instruments: piano, violin and saxophone. He lists the 20th and 21st century composers and musicians who have influenced him as: Europeans Anton Webern, György Ligeti and Gérard Grisey, Americans Charles Ives, Morton Feldman, Annea Lockwood and Conlon Nancarrow; New Zealanders Anthony Watson, Samuel Holloway and Eve de Castro-Robinson.

Taylor also writes poetry and specialises in setting words to music. He also composes for small ensembles, orchestras and choirs. In New Zealand the NZSO and ensemble 175 East have performed his music.

In 2012 the National Youth Orchestra premiered his work feel commissioned when he was the orchestra's Composer-in-Residence. It features viola and cor anglais solos. The third movement of the work is which was his winning entry in the NZSO Todd Corporation Young Composers Award in 2011.

Taylor has been commissioned by Westlake Boys High School to write pieces which have been performed by them: two years later (2013) for male voice choir and a summoning (2016) for the concert band.

In 2016 he attended the Darmstadt new-music/avant garde festival where he presented a show The Unauthorised History of New Zealand Music with New Zealand composer Celeste Oram.

Taylor is currently studying for a PhD at the University of California San Diego under Lei Liang.

Awards and honours

In 2012 Taylor won the SOUNZ Contemporary Award at the APRA New Zealand awards for . He was the youngest person to receive the award. He won the Composers Association of New Zealand Trust Fund Award in 2013. In 2016 Taylor was the recipient of an Arts Foundation New Generation Awards.

Selected works

Poetry

  • Seven prose poems
  • For John Cage
  • Sym phony; Industrial popping sounds
  • How to listen to a piece of music
  • Close ; Park bench; Outside, a cold day

Articles

  • "Strange loops : circular narratives and ambivalence in Samuel Holloway’s “Impossible Songs.”" Canzona, 2009; v.30 n.51, 32–37
  • "A discourse around music." Applause (Wellington, N.Z.), Nov 2016; n.22, 16–17

Music

  • Four landscapes (2008) – for string quartet
  • (2011) – a mini viola concerto
  • Study of two pears (2011) – a song cycle for mezzo-soprano and chamber ensemble
  • Burlesques mecaniques (2012) – for piano trio
  • Feel (2012) – for full orchestra
  • two years later (2013) – for male voice choir
  • Horn concerto : hydraulic fracture (2015) – for horn and orchestra
  • a summoning (2016) – for concert band
  • Four little pieces (2017) – for cello and piano
  • Night (2018) text by H.D. (Hilda Doolittle), 'Night' from her 1916 collection Sea garden
  • Assemblage (2019) – for orchestra with painting machine
  • On what grounds (2021) – a suite for violin, cello and theorbo
  • Asymptote (2021) – for piano trio
  • Obtuse strategies (2023) – for piano

References

  1. "Taylor, Alex, 1988-". tiaki.natlib.govt.nz. Archived from the original on 11 August 2019. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  2. ^ Tan, Rosabel (14 August 2013). "The Grit, The Colour: An Interview with Alex Taylor". Pantograph Punch. Archived from the original on 11 November 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  3. Taylor, Alexander Lawther (2011). "Composition folio". auckland.primo.exlibrisgroup.com. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  4. ^ "Alex Taylor". NZ Opera News: 17. January–March 2012.
  5. ^ Edgington, Anna (November 2016). "2016 New Generation Awards". Applause from the Arts Foundation of New Zealand. 22: 14–15 – via NDHA.
  6. ^ Dart, William (25 October 2012). "NZ Trio: Youthful composure". NZ Herald. Retrieved 12 November 2024.
  7. Taylor, Alex (14 August 2013). "Sonic Shadows and Personal Mavericks: Ten Composers Who've Shaped My Work". Pantograph Punch. Archived from the original on 11 November 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  8. ^ "Milestone performance features musical youth of New Zealand". NZ Opera News: 4. July–August 2012.
  9. "Alex Taylor PhD dissertation recital" (PDF). 12 March 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  10. ^ "Alex Taylor - SOUNZ". sounz.org.nz. Archived from the original on 11 November 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
  11. Taylor, Alex (2011). "Eulogies". Potroast. 8: 14–17.
  12. Taylor, Alex (2008). "For John Cage". Canzona. 29 (50): 26.
  13. Taylor, Alex (2010). "Sym phony; Industrial popping sounds". J.A.A.M. (Wellington, N.Z.). 28: 152–155.
  14. Taylor, Alex (2012). "How to listen to a piece of music". Potroast. 9: 29.
  15. Taylor, Alex (2012). "Close [t/d]; Park bench; Outside, a cold day". Minarets (Online). 2: 38–41 – via NDHA.
  16. Taylor, Alex (2009). "Strange loops : circular narratives and ambivalence in Samuel Holloway's "Impossible Songs."". Canzona. 30 (51): 32–37.
  17. Taylor, Alex (2016). "A discourse around music". Applause (Wellington, N.Z.). 22: 16–17 – via NDHA.

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