The development and expansion of the repertoire base and practice of professional and amateur wind orchestras in the UK, Far East and North America through composition, performance, commercial recording and education
Submitting Institution
Royal Northern College of MusicUnit of Assessment
Music, Drama, Dance and Performing ArtsSummary Impact Type
CulturalResearch Subject Area(s)
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences: Psychology
Studies In Creative Arts and Writing: Film, Television and Digital Media, Performing Arts and Creative Writing
Summary of the impact
Works written by RNCM composers, performances and commercial recordings
of new music by the world-renowned RNCM Wind Orchestra and its staff
conductors, advocacy and leadership in UK and world-wide organisations,
and copious educational spin-offs from research, have, over the past 20
years, made significant impacts on the development of both the quality and
innovative practices in the huge international wind orchestra movement.
New compositions in particular, have contributed to a notable
re-invigoration of creative practice, inspiring successive generations of
musicians to engage with demanding contemporary music in what has
traditionally been an artistically conservative medium. RNCM composers
have also introduced the wind orchestra into new genre areas including the
jazz concerto and oratorio.
Underpinning research
The principal research findings that underpin this impact are in the form
of:
1. Compositions for wind orchestra
A variety of works exemplify innovative writing in terms of style, genre,
and technical demands, both at the elite-level for professional-level
military, college and national youth ensembles, and at intermediate
student-level for school and community symphonic wind orchestras.
Widespread international dissemination through performances and
recordings has contributed to the recognition by the international wind
orchestra community of these works as particularly significant in terms of
quality, and the ways in which they challenge ensembles to break out of
the standard diet of marches, film-music medleys and competition pieces
that were pervasive until the 80s and mid-90s. Largely thanks to advocacy
for challenging compositions in recent years, and a burgeoning of new
music writing, the repertoire base has been transformed.
The RNCM's pivotal role in stimulating high-quality composition for wind
orchestra has been continuous since the start of the impact period (1993),
although this continues a record of innovative work in the medium begun in
the 1970s, both by RNCM composers such as Anthony Gilbert (retired 1999)
and Edward Gregson (retired July 2008), and those commissioned by the RNCM
(who include a roll-call of later 20th-century British composers in the
field, including Michael Tippett, Thea Musgrave, Richard Rodney-Bennett,
David Bedford, Judith Bingham, Derek Bourgeois, etc.). This was primarily
due to one key figure in the foundation of the international wind
orchestra movement, Tim Reynish, Head of the RNCM School of Wind and
Percussion from 1977 until his retirement in 2002, now Emeritus Tutor in
Chamber Music. His continuing activities, beside extensive international
conducting, teaching and advocacy, include Editor of Maecenas Music for
bands and wind ensembles.
Among the most successful composers in the medium overall is Adam Gorb
(Head of the RNCM School of Composition): `One of Britain's top composers'
(The Jewish Chronicle 7 October 2010). Gorb's music is highly
adventurous in terms of orchestration (for example in their extensive use
of percussion and idiomatic writing for individual instruments),
semi-programmatic in adventurous ways, and often allusive of dance, folk
music and non-Western sounds. He has also been a pioneer in bringing the
wind-orchestra into other genres, notably oratorio. Other staff composers,
including Gary Carpenter, David Horne, Emily Howard and Andy Scott have
made important and sometimes mould-breaking contributions to the
repertoire. Scott's jazz concerto for two saxophones, Dark Rain is
a case in point.
2. Performance and commercial recordings of significant wind orchestra
repertoire
Regular programming of these works internationally by a huge number and
range of ensembles has enriched the artistic values and engagement both of
musicians and audiences. Since 1993, approximately 30 CDs of works by RNCM
composers and others have been recorded for Chandos and the specialist new
music label, NMC, as well as Polyphonic, Campion, Doyen, etc. Between 2008
and July 2013, 9 commercial CDs were released by the RNCM Wind Orchestra
under its conductors, Tim Reynish, Clark Rundell (Head of Conducting and
New Music) and Mark Heron (Tutor in Conducting).
3. Educational benefits arising from performing new music
Researchers' artistic expertise has informed interactions with thousands
of wind orchestra musicians around the world. RNCM composers and
conductors are regularly invited faculty at major international wind
orchestra festivals and summer schools and the RNCM's own major national
annual weekend courses, where they work with young players and ensembles,
introducing them to new repertoire (including research cited in this
study) and advise and encourage young composers to work in the medium.
References to the research
1. Adam Gorb, Awayday (Maecenas Music, 1996) Composition, can be
supplied on request. Commissioned by the RNCM. UK Première: 17 November
1996. Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, RNCM Wind Ensemble, Timothy Reynish.
CD Recordings: University of North Texas Wind Ensemble, Eugene Corporon.
Klavier KCD 11091(1998); US Marine Band, Timothy Foley. MARK 3171-MLD
(1999); Tokyo Kosei Wind Orchestra, Douglas Bostock. KOCD 3905 (2000);
RNCM Wind Ensemble, Clark Rundell Chandos CHAN 10409 (2007); University of
Georgia Wind Ensemble, John P. Lynch. Naxos 8.572231 (2009).
2. Adam Gorb, Towards Nirvana (Maecenas Music, 2002) Composition,
can be supplied on request. Commissioned by Tokyo Kosei Wind Orchestra
(only non-military professional wind orchestra in the world). Japan
première: 18 October 2002, Tokyo Metropolitan Arts Space, Douglas Bostock,
conductor; US premiere, same artists, Chicago, December 2002. CD
Recording: RNCM Wind Ensemble, Mark Heron. NMC D154 (2004). Winner,
British Composers Award (Wind and Brass Ensemble) 2004
3. Andy Scott, Dark Rain: Concerto for Two Saxophones and Wind
Band (Astute Music, 2006), can be supplied on request. Commissioned
by BASBWE Education Trust, College Commission Consortium. CD
Recording. Rob Buckland, John Harle (saxophones), RNCM Wind Orchestra,
Clark Rundell. Sospiro Records SOSRB100112 (2012) (See REF 2). Winner,
British Composer Award (Wind and Brass Ensemble), 2006
4. Adam Gorb, Adrenaline City (Studio Music, 2006). Composition,
can be supplied on request. Commissioned by a consortium of US Wind
Ensembles. Première: 3 March 2006. Clarinet Summit, New York. US Military
Academy Band, Timothy Holtan. CD Recordings: RNCM Wind Ensemble, Clark
Rundell. Polyphonic QPRM ISID (2006); North Texas Wind Symphony, Eugene
Corporon. GIA Windworks CD-820 (2010); Harvest: The West Point Band,
Timothy Holtan. WESTPOINT (2010). Winner, British Composer Award (Wind and
Brass Ensemble), 2008
5. Adam Gorb, Farewell (Maecenas Music, 2008). Composition. See
REF 2. Commissioned by The National Youth Wind Ensemble of Wales.
Première: 5 April 2008 Cardiff University, RNCM Wind Orchestra, Tim
Reynish. US première: 30 November 2010, Cincinnati, College-Conservatory
of Music Wind Ensemble. Taiwan première: July 5 2011, Jiayi City,
Singapore Philharmonic Winds. CD Recording: RNCM Wind Orchestra, conductor
Timothy Reynish. NMCD154 (2010). Winner, British Composer Award (Wind and
Brass Ensemble), 2009
6. Adam Gorb, Eternal Voices (Maecenas Music, 2010). Composition,
can be supplied on request. Commissioned by the Royal Marines Band
Service. Première: 20 November 2010 Exeter Cathedral, Sir Trevor
MacDonald, Exeter Festival Chorus, Her Majesty's Band of the Royal
Marines, Lt. Col. Nick Grace. CD Recording: CHVCD32
Details of the impact
A brief overview of the field provides a context for the impact of
research at the RNCM.
Symphonic wind orchestras and bands are ubiquitous in many countries of
the world, including most European countries, North and South America,
Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Australia. For example, most high
schools, colleges and local communities in the US have at least one wind
orchestra, and for many school students and communities, bands are the
primary form of music-educational experience. Youth and school ensembles
at local and national level are a feature of the musical life in all the
countries listed above. There are secular professional, and many
elite-level military wind ensembles in many countries, as well as a
thriving music publishing and commercial recording sector servicing these
markets. WASBE is a key force in developing standards and promoting
innovative new musical works; it has a membership of over 1000 individuals
and organizations in more than 50 countries from throughout the world. It
is `completely dedicated to enhancing the quality of the wind band
throughout the world and exposing its members to new worlds of repertoire
and musical culture'. Likewise, the British Association of Wind and Brass
Ensembles (BASBWE) includes in its objectives the following: `The wind
band/ensemble has been the fastest growing medium in `classical'
music-making in the latter part of the twentieth century [...] A crucial
role has been in developing awareness of repertoire and ensuring that
there is a constant supply of new music, without which the whole movement
could stagnate'. And in the words of William V. Johnson, president of
WASBE, `The RNCM has done much more than helping to change behaviours and
impacting the international field of wind orchestras. It is the birthplace
of the modern international wind band movement' - the organisation was,
indeed, founded at the RNCM in 1981, largely thanks to the influence of
one individual, Tim Reynish, who remains one of the international
movement's leading directors, educators and commissioner of new work'. In
2000 the RNCM was awarded the Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and
Further Education for `the outstanding and pioneering work of its Wind
Orchestra'.
1. Composition (examples)
It is against this background that many new works for wind orchestra
(including those listed above) have been created, mostly developed through
rehearsal, performance and recording by the RNCM's own world-class
ensemble under its various staff conductors, and then disseminated into
the wider movement through publication, advocacy, educational events and
continual take-up by ever more ensembles around the world, contributing to
the stimulation of innovations in their repertoire. For example, between
1993 and 2013, Adam Gorb published 25 works, ranging from pieces
specifically designed for youth and other beginner ensembles (6 of his
works are in the top 35 downloads from the specialist publisher of sheet
music for amateur wind ensembles, G & M Brand), to sophisticated and
demanding commissions for professional ensembles. Examples of the later
are Towards Nirvana (for the Tokyo Kosei Wind Orchestra), and Adrenaline
City, commissioned and performed by a consortium of major US College
ensembles, later programmed by the elite US Marine Corps Band in 2011. Farewell
is a symphonic-length work commissioned by the National Youth Wind
Orchestra of Wales that has since been widely taken up internationally by
upper-level ensembles. It was featured at the WASBE conference in Taiwan
in 2011, performed by Philharmonic Winds, Singapore - one of south-east
Asia's leading wind orchestras. Professor Eugene Corporon, one of the US's
leading wind orchestra conductors and teachers, says `I consider him to be
one of the most important Wind Band composers of our time. Many of his
contributions have broadened our repertoire and become well respected as
legacy works that have advanced the medium'.
2. Performance (examples)
Reliable evidence of performances worldwide that can be evidenced is
impossible to achieve; recordings and YouTube viewings can help give
snapshots of impact. Among Gorb's most widely-performed works are the
intermediate-level Yiddish Dances and senior-level Awayday.
The former has been issued on CD 5 times, 2 since 2008; currently on
YouTube are recordings of 21 performances by different high school and
college bands in the US, UK, Italy, Spain Mexico, Korea, Austria and
Germany with a total of 139,353 viewings between 2008 and July 213;
equivalent figures for Awayday are: 5 CDs (1 since 2008) by some
of the leading professional ensembles in the world, one of which features
as the soundtrack to a YouTube videogame (20,578 viewings). 22
performances in the US, UK, New Zealand, Thailand and Germany with a total
of 29,419 viewings
A different kind of impact was achieved by Gorb's Eternal Voices,
`dedicated to all Royal Marines and their families who have given the
ultimate sacrifice and have been affected by modern conflicts since the
year 2000'. The work combines symphonic wind orchestra with a full chorus,
soloists and a narrator. It was first performed in Exeter Cathedral in
November 2010 and mixes texts by the poet, Ben Kaye, with excerpts from
BBC news bulletins: `a haunting, sobering, and beautiful piece' said one
reviewer; another blogger wrote `Exeter audiences are not given to many
standing ovations, so they were obviously delighted with the evening'. It
was attended by 1,020 people and later repeated at Coventry Cathedral in
October 2011 (attendance c.500) and Chichester Cathedral in October 2012
(attendance c.487). After the latter, a comment was posted on the Royal
Marines' website: `I ... was completely blown away with the whole evening
... everyone in my group agreed it was one of the most poignant and moving
events they had been to in recent years'.
The main beneficiaries of educational work are players and young
conductors introduced to new works and coached at numerous courses of by
conductors Clark Rundell and Mark Heron and RNCM instrumental specialists.
RNCM Wind Orchestra, with its two conductors, Rundell and Heron, together
with composers Gorb and Carpenter, and Senior Oboe Tutor, Melinda Maxwell
(oboe), were in residence at the 2009 WASBE conference in Cincinnati, OH,
attended by 12,000-15,000 students and adult band members. Over the course
of six days, they performed works by five RNCM composers (Carpenter, Gorb,
Gregson, Horne and Emily Howard). In addition, there was an open
rehearsal; a repertoire session and another on `Effective Rehearsal
Strategies' led by Rundell; an oboe master-class by Maxwell; `composer
drop-in sessions'; and a pre-concert talk. Public concerts included the US
première of Carpenter's Doubles concerto for oboe and clarinet
(REF2), the world premières of Gorb's Tranquility (Festival
commission), David Horne's Waves and Returns, Emily Howard's, Deep
Soul Diving, and Edward Gregson's classic, Metamorphoses
(with electronics). Live CD of the 8 July concert: Mark Custom, Inc.
8469MCD.
The RNCM has hosted intensive Wind Weekends biennially since 1981. The
2009 Weekend was specifically devoted to Wind Orchestras (in collaboration
with BASBWE) attended by 370 band members and a further 164 individual
players (excluding RNCM students), who participated in a total of 19
workshops given by College staff and international `star' teachers.
Another 918 non-student audience members joined them at five public
concerts. All the music played and workshopped over the weekend was
demanding contemporary works, including the world première of Gorb's Freedom,
as well as Towards Nirvana and Farewell. The Oct. 2010 the
RNCM/BASBWE Wind and Brass weekend included c. 20 workshops and
master-classes for ensembles, and for all individual wind orchestra
instruments at both senior and junior levels, as well as 13 concerts:
attended by 2,400 in total (excluding RNCM students); in Nov. 2012 the
Wind Weekend was devoted to double-reed instruments, and included
master-classes and performances by 13 international oboe and bassoon
celebrities, all sponsored by major European instrument manufacturers:
attended by 1,052 people (excluding RNCM students).
Mark Heron exemplifies the RNCM's approach to invigorating repertoire and
standards in wind orchestra practice through his work as a course director
and conductor, introducing new works including by RNCM composers: at
Canford Summer School, with a 50-strong ensemble and 20-30 student
conductors, every year since 2008; as guest conductor of the National
Youth Wind Orchestra of Israel (April and June 2011); as lecturer and
conductor at national wind festivals in Ireland (April, 2009), Spain (Nov.
2009), Portugal (March 2011), London, Royal Academy of Music (Feb. 2008);
he led advanced conducting schools in Melbourne for 30 students (Jan.
2013) and another in Slovenia for 10 students (July 2013).
Sources to corroborate the impact
- Secretary of Exeter Festival Chorus (audience figures for Eternal
Voices)
- Director of Maecenas Music (leading wind ensemble music publisher)
- President of WASBE (significance of RNCM for worldwide wind orchestra
development)
- Professor Emeritus of Music and retired Director of Wind Studies at
the College-Conservatory of Music, University of Cincinnati (major US
wind-orchestra conductor; organiser, 2009 WASBE conference)
- Conductor, Wind Ensembles, University of Minnesota, Morris (biographer
of Tim Reynish)
- Director of Wind Studies, University of North Texas, College of Music
(major US conductor and teacher; advocate/performer of Gorb's music in
US)
-
http://www.wasbe.org/conferences/2009
(website of the World Association for Symphonic Bands and Ensembles,
Cincinnati conference, 2009)
-
Winds Music Magazine, 24/2 (Autumn, 2009) (Reports of 2009
WASBE and RNCM wind orchestra festivals)
-
http://tinyurl.com/p4v79yn, http://tinyurl.com/kyhn7q6
(youtube uploads of performances of Adam Gorb, Yiddish Dances
and Awayday)
-
http://tinyurl.com/lvevvw4 /(http://tinyurl.com/lasa2ch)
(review and blogger comments about Eternal Voices, 2010)