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 Born
in 1960, George
Benjamin
started to play the piano at the age of seven, and began composing
almost immediately. In 1976 he entered the Paris Conservatoire to
study composition with Olivier Messiaen and piano withYvonne Loriod,
after which he worked with Alexander Goehr at King's College Cambridge.
His first
orchestral work, Ringed by the Flat Horizon, was performed
at the BBC Proms when he was only 20; since then his works have
continued to be played across the world. In recent years there have
been major retrospectives of his work in London, Tokyo, Brussels,
Berlin, Strasbourg and Madrid. The centre-point of a portrait at
the 2006 Festival d'Automne in Paris was his first operatic work,
Into the Little Hill, a collaboration with playwright Martin
Crimp which has toured widely on both sides of the Atlantic since
its premiere and won the Royal Philharmonic Societys 2008
award for large-scale composition. It received its London premiere
in a new production - a collaboration between the Opera Group and
the London Sinfonietta - at the Royal Opera House in February 2009,
His most recent work, Duet for piano and orchestra, was the
Roche commission for the 2008 Lucerne Festival, where he was composer
in residence, and was premiered there by Pierre-Laurent Aimard and
the Cleveland Orchestra under Franz Welser-Moest.
He appears
regularly as a conductor with the world's leading ensembles and
orchestras, and recent seasons have included engagements with the
London Sinfonietta, Ensemble Modern, BBCSO, Philharmonia and the
Berlin Philharmonic and Royal Concertgebouw orchestras. In 1999
he made his operatic debut conducting Pelléas et Mélisande
in Brussels and he has conducted numerous world premieres, including
works by Rihm, Chin, Grisey and Ligeti. In January 2010 there will
be extensive celebrations of Benjamins music in San Francisco
and London, marking his 50th birthday, and in June he will be the
music director of the Ojai Festival in California.
George
Benjamin was the founding curator of the South Bank's Meltdown Festival,
and was artistic consultant to the BBC's retrospective of 20th century
music, Sounding the Century. Since 2001 he has been the Henry
Purcell Professor of Composition at Kings College, London.
He is a Chevalier dans l'ordre des Arts et Lettres, a member of
the Bavarian Academy of Fine Arts, and has been awarded honorary
fellowships by the Guildhall School, the Royal Academy and the Royal
College of Music.
George
Benjamins music is published by Faber
Music, and his works are recorded on Nimbus
Records.
Please
contact Louise Hynd for further information: louise.hynd@askonasholt.co.uk
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