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''[[One Minute Wonders (piano)|Sonatas]]'' (Piano solo) 2005<br />
''[[One Minute Wonders (piano)|Sonatas]]'' (Piano solo) 2005<br />
''The Darker side of Mechanical Perfection'' (orchestra) 2005<br />
''The Darker side of Mechanical Perfection'' (orchestra) 2005<br />
''Hear our Voice'' (community cantata) 2006 (written in collaboration with [[Jonathan Dove]])<br />
''Hear our Voice'' (community cantata) 2006 (written in collaboration with [[Jonathan Dove]])[[http://www.hmdt.org.uk/inschool_hearourvoice_1.html]]<br />
[[King's Wood Symphony]] (horns, percussion and electronics) 2007<br />
[[King's Wood Symphony]] (horns, percussion and electronics) 2007<br />
''Odyssean Variations'' (cello and orchestra) 2008<br />
''Odyssean Variations'' (cello and orchestra) 2008<br />

Revision as of 11:23, 14 May 2010

Matthew King (born 1967) is a British composer and pianist. His works include opera, piano and chamber music, choral and orchestral pieces.

Career

King's early works include The Snow Queen (opera), described by one reviewer as "music of distinctive beauty with disarming theatre sense."[1] More recently he has experimented with unusual combinations of instruments, sometimes located in unconventional performing environments. The King's Wood Symphony for multiple horns with percussion and an electronic score by Nye Parry was composed for performance in a forest. Described as "a site-specific symphony, one that could never sound the same way twice",[2] the work utilises the harmonic spectra of natural horns and electronically altered horn sounds calling to each other across a vast performing space.

King has also composed a series of innovative community works which endeavour to combine professional and amateur performers in a dynamic creative process without patronising either group. King's On London Fields (libretto by Alasdair Middleton) was described by Stephen Pettitt in the Evening Standard as "unafraid of complexity, even when writing for very young performers. Some of the clashing rhythms and textural layerings are mind-boggling."[3]

King's recent works include Odyssean Variations (premiered by British cellist Natalie Clein and an orchestra of young musicians from the London Borough of Hackney in 2008); the chamber opera Das Babylon Experiment (premiered in the open air in Nuremberg in 2008) and Totentango, premiered in 2010 by the London Symphony Orchestra.

Matthew King is married with three children. He has presented several programmes on BBC Radio 4 and Radio 3. He teaches composition at Guildhall School of Music & Drama.

Selected Works

The Snow Queen (Chamber Opera) 1992
Jonah (opera/oratorio) 1996
Gethsemane (chamber oratorio) 1998
Ash on the Ground (Symphonic Variations for Avenue A) 1998
Love in a Life (soprano and ensemble) 2000
Night Phantoms and Rocking Horses (ensemble) 2000
Quartet 2001 (String Quartet) 2001
Four Places in Yorshire (String Quartet) 2004
On London Fields (opera) 2004 (winner of 2005 RPS Education Award)
Brunel (opera project) 2004
Sonatas (Piano solo) 2005
The Darker side of Mechanical Perfection (orchestra) 2005
Hear our Voice (community cantata) 2006 (written in collaboration with Jonathan Dove)[[1]]
King's Wood Symphony (horns, percussion and electronics) 2007
Odyssean Variations (cello and orchestra) 2008
Das Babylon Experiment (chamber opera) 2008
Totentango (commissioned by the London Symphony Orchestra) 2009

References

  1. ^ White (1 January 1996)
  2. ^ Maycock (26 June 2007)
  3. ^ Pettitt (22 November 2004)

Sources