Category Archives: Uncategorized

City Music Alumna Wins Dunraven Welsh Young Singer of the Year

City University Music alumna, Siân Dicker (graduated 2014), was awarded the Dunraven Welsh Young Singer of the Year award after competing in the final at Maesteg Town Hall on Saturday 25th March 2017. The competition was adjudicated by David Jackson (Artistic Director of BBC Cardiff Singer of the World) as well as Welsh singers Rebecca Evans and Gary Griffiths. Siân is currently in her second year of a Masters in Vocal Studies at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama studying with Marie Vassiliou and Janice Chapman. As a result of winning the competition, Siân was awarded £2,500 towards her tuition fees for next year.

Siân’s upcoming engagements include her Wigmore Hall debut performing new music in collaboration with GSMD composers, opera scenes at Milton Court studio theatre in July as well as various recitals at the Guildhall school. See further details on her website: https://www.siandicker.com/

 

City Chamber Choir Concert at St Clement’s Church

The City University Chamber Choir gave its Spring Term concert at St Clement’s Church on Wednesday 29th March, conducted by Tim Hooper, featuring a wonderful selection of pieces, including the sublime ‘Locus Iste’ by Bruckner, a full performance of the Vivaldi Gloria and the word premiere of acappella vocal piece ‘Sleep’ by first year BMus student Jacob Collins. For the Vivaldi, the choir was accompanied by a small chamber orchestra featuring BMus students Anna Vaughan (violin), Daisy Heath (‘cello), Stamatios Solonos (oboe), Jacob Collins (Harpsichord) and MA student Carlota Rodriguez Ruiz-Healy (viola). Vocal solos featured Emilie Parry Williams, Nia Rees and Carolina Herrera. A very enjoyable concert and the harpsichord also enjoyed its first outing of the year!

Tim Hooper will be conducting the Chamber Orchestra in a concert on May 19th as part of the City Summer Sounds Festival

City Composers Visit King’s College London, March 2017

At the beginning of the academic year, Marcos Stuardo, a PhD composition student at King’s College London, proposed an exchange whereby composers studying at Kings would give presentations on their work at City and vice versa. Following a departmental research seminar last November at which four PhD composers from King’s discussed their work, two of our PhD composers, Georgia Rodgers and William Cole, and Masters student, Dorothy Lee, visited King’s College on Wednesday 29th March, accompanied by our “Composition Tsar”, Aaron Einbond.  

William was the first to take the floor, discussing a performed sound installation that was staged last year. After William outlined ideas behind the work’s conception and played a short sample of a recording of the performance, a lively dialogue ensued as the King’s cohort questioned its ontological and experiential structures, and its relationship to more traditional operations of music-making.

Following William’s presentation, Georgia detailed her aesthetic interests in acoustic phenomena and explained how these concerns inform her compositional approach, which she demonstrated through an analysis of two recent works. The King’s composers were receptive to Georgia’s music and raised several interesting issues, resulting, again, in an exciting exchange of ideas.

Last to present was Dorothy, who showed how her work brings together Western and Asian musical concepts, highlighting a range of philosophical and creative influences, and illustrating how these influences play out in her music. Drawing the session to a close, yet another stimulating discussion occurred as Dorothy was confronted with a number of acute questions from the audience.

At the end of the seminar we retired to the pub, where we discussed possibilities of how this exchange might progress in the future and how we might incorporate students from other faculties across London. With the revival of our Listening Group next year, the composition arm of the Music department at City are keen to reach out and create opportunities for sonic artists across London’s universities (and beyond) to share their ideas and exhibit their work. The arrangement with King’s this year has demonstrated just how valuable cross-institution interchange is, and going forward it seems imperative that City capitalises on its potential to play a leading role in this. 

William Cole, Music PhD Student

PhD and MA Celebrations at City Graduation

January graduation saw no less than 6 Music Department students awarded their doctorate degrees. Students on the MA Music, MA Composing for Moving Images, MA Ethnomusicology and MA Composition also received their awards.The doctoral awards were as follows: 

PhD

Stephen Wilford: Bledi Cockneys: Music, Identity and Mediation in Algerian London’ (supervisor: Stephen Cottrell) 

Jocelyn Howell: ‘Boosey & Hawkes: The Rise and Fall of a Wind Instrument Manufacturing Empire’ (supervisor: Stephen Cottrell)

Alex Jeffery:’The Narrascape of Gorrilaz’ Plastic Beach: An Interdisciplinary Case Study in Musical Transmedia’ (supervisor: Miguel Mera).

Miranda Crowdus: ‘Hip Hop in South Tel Aviv: Third-Space, Convergent Dispossession(s), and Intercultural Communication in Urban Borderlands’ (supervisor: Laudan Nooshin) 

DMA

Ben Schoeman: ‘The Piano Works of Stefans Grové (1922-2014): A Study of Stylistic Influences, Technical Elements and Canon Formation in South African Art Music’ (supervisor: Christopher Wiley; Guildhall advisor:Ronan O’Hora).

Annie Yim: ‘Robert Schumann’s Musical-Aesthetic Influence on Brahms’ Piano Trio in B Major, Op.8 (1854 Version) as Illustrated by Schumann’s Piano Trio in D Minor, Op.63’ (supervisor: Christopher Wiley; Guildhall advisor: Joan Havill).

Many congratulations to all the students and their supervisors!

PhD Music Graduates, 30.1.17

MA Music Graduates, 30.1.17

Icons of Sound in Smithsonian Magazine

Smithsonian Magazine has recently published an article highlighting the participation of the vocal ensemble Cappella Romana in  Icons of Sound, a research project on acoustics and music of the ancient basilica of Hagia Sophia based at Stanford University. Chants performed for Cappella Romana’s most recent appearance at Stanford were edited from medieval sources by two researchers from City’s Department of Music: Alexander Lingas and Spyridon Antonopoulos. Click here for the article: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/you-can-hear-hagia-sophias-sublime-acoustics-without-trip-istanbul-180961563/.

Drs Lingas and Antonopoulos at Stanford University for Icons of Sound

Reader in Music Alexander Lingas and Research Fellow Spyridon Antonopoulos recently participated in a new stage of the Icons of Sound project on the phenomenology of worship during the Middle Ages at Hagia Sophia, the basilica built by Emperor Justinian I to be the cathedral of the city of Constantinople (modern Istanbul). This project is a collaboration between Professors Bissera Pentcheva (Department of Art History) and Jonathan Abel (CCRMA) of Stanford and Cappella Romana, the American-based vocal ensemble Dr Lingas founded in 1991.

Drs Lingas and Antonopoulos created new editions of medieval Byzantine chants for the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross (14 September) that were given their first modern performances by Cappella Romana in Seattle (Washington), Portland (Oregon), and at Bing Concert Hall at Stanford University. A preview of the Stanford event is available here: https://live.stanford.edu/blog/october-2016/mysteries-hagia-sophia-revisited

After the Stanford concert, Drs Lingas and Antonopoulos attended a scholarly symposium at Stanford before embarking on a recording of the concert repertoire at the studios of CCRMA. Photos of Cappella Romana’s residency at Stanford are available here:

http://www.cappellaromana.org/photos-icons-of-sound-hagia-sophia-reimagined/

Doctorates Awarded in the Music Department at City University, 2015-16

We are delighted to announce the following doctorates awarded in the Music Department in the 2015-16 academic year:

PhD

Liam Cagney: ‘Synthesis and Deviation: New Perspectives on the Emergence of the French courant spectral 1969-74′ (supervisor: Ian Pace) 

Tatjana Goldberg: ‘Maud Powell, Marie Hall and Alma Moodie: A Gendered Re-Evaluation of Three Violinists’ (supervisor: Ian Pace) 

Ikuko Inoguchi: ‘Concepts of Time in the Works of John Cage, George Crumb and Toru Takemitsu and Implications for Performance’ (supervisor: Ian Pace) 

Miranda Crowdus: ‘Hip Hop in South Tel Aviv: Third-Space, Convergent Dispossession(s), and Intercultural Communication in Urban Borderlands’ (supervisor: Laudan Nooshin) 

Jocelyn Howell: ‘Boosey & Hawkes: The Rise and Fall of a Wind Instrument Manufacturing Empire’ (supervisor: Stephen Cottrell)

DMA

Vasileios  Rakitzis: ‘Alfred Cortot’s Response to the Music for Solo Piano of Franz Schubert: A Study in Performance Practice’ (supervisor: Ian Pace; Guildhall advisor: Caroline Palmer)

Christopher Suckling: The Realisation of Recitative by the Cello in Handelian Opera Current and Historical Practices’ (supervisor: Alexander Lingas; Guildhall advisor: Alison McGillivray)

Annie Yim: ‘Robert Schumann’s Musical-Aesthetic Influence on Brahms’ Piano Trio in B Major, Op.8 (1854 Version) as Illustrated by Schumann’s Piano Trio in D Minor, Op.63’ (supervisor: Christopher Wiley; Guildhall advisor: Joan Havill)

Many congratulations to the students and their supervisors.

City’s Alexander Lingas and Spyridon Antonopoulos Appear with Cappella Romana on BBC Radio 3’s In Tune

Cappella Romana, the American-based vocal ensemble founded by Reader in Music Alexander Lingas, appeared yesterday on BBC Radio 3’s In Tune. Dr Lingas and Spyridon Antonopoulos, who received his doctorate from City and is now an Honorary Research Fellow in the Department, were interviewed by host Sean Rafferty. The archived broadcast is available here13438817_10101081776562901_4418322132635390653_n13524374_10154301486352556_4576460574453941193_n


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Lingas and Antonopoulos to Perform Medieval Cypriot Music in Belgium

After performing at St Giles Cripplegate on 1 July, City Reader in Music Alexander Lingas and Fellow Spyridon Antonopoulos will travel with Cappella Romana for two concerts in Belgium at festivals in St-Hubert and Namur:

 

Cyprus: Between Greek East & Latin West

 Cappella Romana in St-Hubert, Belgium

Cappella Romana in St-Hubert, Belgium

Presented by: Royal Juillet Musical de Saint-Hubert

 

Sunday, July 3rd, 2016 4:00pm
Venue: Bouillon Church of Saints Peter and Paul

http://www.juilletmusicaldesainthubert.be/concert-2016-cappella-romana/

 

Cappella Romana in Namur, Belgium

Cappella Romana in Namur, Belgium

Cyprus: Between Greek East & Latin West

Presented by: Festival musical de Namur

Monday, July 4th, 2016 7:30pm
Venue: Abbaye de Floreffe

http://billetterie.festivaldenamur.be/spectacle/cappella-romana.html

Alexander Lingas, founder and artistic director

This tour is generously sponsored by a grant from USArtists International, a program of the Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation, which is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.