Rebecca Saunders
Rebecca Saunders is a London-born composer who lives and works freelance in Berlin. In a 2017 Classic Voice poll of the greatest works of art music since 2000, the number of total votes received by Saunders compositions was the third highest, surpassed only by the works of Georg Friedrich Haas and Simon Steen-Andersen.
Biography
Saunders studied violin and composition at the University of Edinburgh, earning a PhD in Composition in 1997. As a DAAD scholar, she studied with Wolfgang Rihm from 1991 to 1994 at the Hochschule für Musik Karlsruhe; Nigel Osborne supervised her doctoral thesis.Her awards include the Busoni Prize of the Berlin Academy of the Arts, Sponsorship award, the Ernst von Siemens Composers' Prize, the Hindemith Prize of the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, the composition prize of the ARD, and the Mauricio Kagel Music Prize. In 2019 she won the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize, the second woman, and first female composer to be awarded.
In 2010 and 2012, she taught at the Darmstadt International Summer Courses and was composer-in-residence at the Konzerthaus Dortmund from 2005–2006, Staatskapelle Dresden from 2009–2010, and Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival in 2010.
Fabio Luisi and the Staatskapelle Dresden gave the UK premiere of Saunders' revision of traces at the 2009 Proms.
Her music has been performed by notable ensembles worldwide, including Ensemble Musikfabrik, Klangforum Wien, Ensemble Modern, Quatuor Diotima, Ensemble Dal Niente, the Arditti Quartet, Ensemble Resonanz, Ensemble Recherche, ICE, the Neue Vocalsolisten, Ensemble Remix, and the BBC Symphony Orchestra.
Music
Saunders’s music is characterized by limited pitch material and a wide breadth of timbral complexity. She is fascinated with resonance and extraneous noise created by instrumentalists, such as the scratch of a bow change, the thud of the pedals of a piano or harp, and the taps and slides of the left hand on a string instrument’s fingerboard. Due to the subtleties and specificity of the sounds she creates, Saunders includes lengthy textual explanations in many of her scores to describe each effect that she wishes the performer to produce.Much of Saunders’s music is based upon a single pitch, or sometimes a small collection of pitches which govern large sections of music. Therefore, development and elaboration are determined more by sonority and texture rather than traditional voice leading. However, she does sometimes include “quasi-diatonic” pitch collections, which suggest a more traditional context than that of her music based on single notes.
Rebecca Saunders has also explored physical space in her music. In an interview for the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, she described her music thus:
By describing the “mass and weight” of her music, and comparing her art to that of a sculpture, she is attempting to bring sound into a physical plane. Additionally, in works like chroma, she invites the listener to wander around and explore the influence of physical space on the audience’s experience.
Works
- Behind the Velvet Curtain, for trumpet, harp, piano and cello
- Trio, for clarinet, violoncello and piano
- Mirror, mirror on the wall, for piano
- The Under Side of Green, for clarinet, violin and piano
- Molly's Song 1—crimson, for twelve soloists, metronome, whistle, music box and conductor
- Molly's Song 2—a shade of crimson, for voice, viola, flute, steel string guitar and shortwave radios
- Molly's Song 3—shades of crimson, for alto flute, viola, steel-stringed guitar, four radios and music box
- Duo, for violin and piano
- Into the Blue, for clarinet, bassoon, cello, double bass, piano and percussion
- dichroic seventeen, for piano, two percussionists, two double basses, accordion and electric guitar
- G and E on A, for orchestra and 27 music boxes
- String Quartet
- QUARTET, for piano, B-flat clarinet/bass clarinet, double bass and accordion
- cinnabar, for violin, trumpet and ensemble
- duo four - two exposures, for solo trumpet, solo percussion and orchestra
- albescere, for twelve instruments and five voices
- Chroma , for twelve to sixteen performers
- vermilion, for clarinet, electric guitar and cello
- insideout, for woodwinds, brass, timpani, percussion, piano, strings, accordion, electric guitar — music for the choreographic installation by Sasha Waltz
- blaauw, for double-bell trumpet
- Choler, for piano duo
- Miniata, for accordion, piano, choir and orchestra
- Crimson, for piano
- Fury I, für Kontrabass
- Blue and Gray, for two double basses
- rubricare, for strings and organ
- rubricare, for baroque string orchestra
- A Visible Trace, for seven soloists and conductor
- Traces, for orchestra
- Soliloquy, for six voices a cappella
- Stirrings Still I, for alto flute, oboe, clarinet, piano and bowed crotales
- Stirrings Still II, for six players: alto flute, oboe, clarinet in A, crotales, piano and double bass
- Company, for counter tenor, trumpet, violoncello, accordion and electric guitar
- Disclosure, for five players: bass clarinet, trumpet, trombone, piano and violin
- murmurs, Collage for ten players
- Fury II, Concert for double bass and ensemble
- To and fro, for violin and oboe
- Stratum, for orchestra
- Stasis I, a special collage for 16 soloists
- Stasis collective, a special collage for 23 musicians
- Stasis II, quartet for trumpet, oboe, percussion and piano
- Caerulean, for bass clarinet
- Dialogue, for viola and percussion
- Neither, for 2 double bell trumpets
- Stirrings, for nine players: alto flute, clarinet in A, oboe, crotales, piano, harp, violin, violoncello, double bass
- Still, for violin solo und orchestra
- Ire, Concerto for violoncello, strings and percussion
- Fletch, for string quartet
- Shadow, for piano
- ...of waters making moan, for accordion
- Solitude, for violoncello
- Stasis II, quartet for trumpet, oboe, percussion and piano
- Void, for two percussionists and chamber orchestra
- Alba, for trumpet und orchestra
- Six for AK, for 2 percussionists, piano, guitar and harp
- White, for double bell trumpet solo
- Skin, for soprano and ensemble
- Myriad sound installation of 2.464 identical musical box mechanisms