Winner of the Parliamentary Jazz Award for Best Media, 2019

Jazz News

The Ivors Composer Awards 2021, winners announced.

Sunday, December 12, 2021

The Ivors Academy has revealed the winners of 10 Ivor Novello Awards at The Ivors Composer Awards 2021, celebrating music by composers writing for classical, jazz and sound art. Press release attached

We have received the following press release;


IVOR NOVELLO AWARD WINNERS FOR CLASSICAL, JAZZ AND SOUND ARTS ANNOUNCED AT THE IVORS COMPOSER AWARDS

 

Thomas Adès wins an Ivor for his vocal composition Gyökér (Root), Nikki Iles wins Jazz Composition for The Caged Bird, Anna Thorvaldsdottir’s CATAMORPHOSIS picks up Large Scale Composition Award, Caroline Kraabel’s wins Sound Art Ivor Novello Award, Alex Paxton’s Sometimes Voices wins Small Chamber Award and Martin Iddon wins Solo Composition for Lampades


Sarah Angliss, Alexander Goehr, Zoe Rahman and Cleveland Watkiss MBE recognised for their outstanding achievements in music


Six of the ten winning composers receive an award from The Ivors Academy for the first time


Live ceremony hosted by BBC Radio 3’s Tom Service and Sara Mohr-Pietsch at the British Museum, and broadcast on the station’s New Music Show on Saturday 11 December at 10pm

 


The Ivors Composer Awards

 


The Ivors Academy tonight [8 December] revealed the winners of 10 Ivor Novello Awards at The Ivors Composer Awards 2021, celebrating music by composers writing for classical, jazz and sound art. The winners were announced during a ceremony hosted by BBC Radio 3’s Tom Service and Sara Mohr-Pietsch at the British Museum.


Recognised as a pinnacle of achievement since they were first presented in 1956, Ivor Novello Awards celebrate creative excellence in composing and songwriting. Six out of ten of this year’s winners received an award from The Ivors Academy for the first time, joining a roll call of Ivor winners that includes Sir Harrison Birtwistle, Judith Weir CBE, Errollyn Wallen CBE, Stan Tracey CBE, Yazz Ahmed, Django Bates and Sir John Rutter.


The Ivors Composer Awards are supported by PRS for Music. BBC Radio 3 will broadcast the ceremony in a special edition of the New Music Show on 11 December at 10pm, which will also be available on BBC Sounds.


Julian Joseph OBE, Chair of The Ivors Academy’s Awards Committee and Fellow of the Academy, said:
“Every Ivor Novello awarded tonight goes from composers and performers to their peers, it’s what makes each one so distinct and special. I’m honoured to be part of recognising the artistry, imagination and determination that goes into creating such wonderful music and soundscapes. Our winners’ achievements fill me with huge admiration and respect and I wish them all my fullest congratulations.”


Andrea Czapary Martin, CEO, PRS for Music, said:
“Congratulations to all of the winners at this year’s Ivors Composer Awards. The resilience of the classical, jazz, and sound art communities throughout the pandemic has been inspirational, and we look forward to enjoying their remarkable work in the live setting when it is safe to do so. I am also proud to say that five of this year’s winners have received support through our charity partner, PRS Foundation. The Ivors Composer Awards shine a light on the excellence these communities have to offer, and we wish the winners every continued success in their careers.”


Alan Davey, Controller BBC Radio 3 and classical music said:
“Congratulations to all the Award Winners tonight. It was so exciting to witness the breadth of genres, approaches, and themes presented as part of the event – a joyous celebration of new music in times that are still difficult for so many in the industry. Given the uncertainty for the sector due to another winter of Coronavirus it is paramount for us at Radio 3 to show our ever-lasting support for the impressive composition talents– some of them so brilliantly showcased tonight. We are sure that our listeners will also rejoice in discovering some of the UK’s most innovative and imaginative new music, once the ceremony is proudly broadcast on the airwaves of our station as part of the New Music Show on Saturday 11 December at 10pm.”

 

 

THE WINNERS


Jazz Composition – Nikki Iles ‘The Caged Bird’
The Jazz Composition award went to Nikki Iles for her work ‘The Caged Bird’. Written for jazz band it was first performed by the Royal Academy Big Band at the Royal Academy of Music’s Dukes Hall. Iles wrote the piece during the early stages of the UK lockdown in 2020 when her work and new collaborations were cancelled.
She explains that “the whole process of writing this piece was the start of re-connecting me to my music and it gently evolved, reflecting my journey through this time”.
The Ivors Academy jury for this category referred to the piece as “beautifully crafted, balanced and realised”.

 

Large Scale Composition – Anna Thorvaldsdottir ‘CATAMORPHOSIS’
UK-based Icelandic composer Anna Thorvaldsdottir picked up her first Ivor Novello Award at the ceremony this evening. ‘CATAMORPHOSIS’ was recognised as the best Large Scale Composition of the year.
The work explores the “fragile relationship between humankind and the planet”. The jury felt the piece was a “wonderfully distinct and exquisitely curated sound world”.
Premiered by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and Kirill Petrenko, the work is available to watch on the Berlin Philharmonic Digital Concert Hall.

 

Small Chamber Composition – Alex Paxton ‘Sometimes Voices’
The youngest award-winner this year is Alex Paxton (born in 1990) who was nominated for three works and was awarded the Small Chamber Composition award for his work ‘Sometimes Voices’. Written for keyboard and drums, the work was commissioned and premiered by Hyper Duo, a Swiss experimental group made up of pianist Gilles Grimaitre and percussionist Julien Mégroz.
The jury referred to the piece as “a highly innovative work of exceptional creative imagination and musical energy”. ‘Sometimes Voices’ is available to watch here.

 

Solo Composition – Martin Iddon ‘Lampades’
The Solo Composition award went to Martin Iddon for his work ‘Lampades’. Written for tuba and fixed media, the work was commissioned and performed by Jack Adler-Mckean and can be watched here.
The jury called the work a “strikingly beautiful and original sound world creating an immersive, mysterious sense of space”.

 

Sound Art – Caroline Kraabel ‘London 26 and 28 March 2020: Imitation: Inversion’
This year’s Sound Art award went to to UK-based American composer Caroline Kraabel for her work ‘London 26 and 28 March 2020: Imitation: Inversion’. The work was written for double bass with baritone, alto and sopranino saxophones as part of a 40-minute film.
The film included shots of London’s deserted city centre during the first COVID lockdown in the UK, taken on Kraabel’s phone whilst cycling during her permitted exercise time. To create the work, Kraabel recreated and recorded some of the original sounds in the video clips on her alto saxophone for the ‘imitated’ section and then created opposite sounds for the ‘inverted’ section.
The jury said the work “captured something of the zeitgeist of the time” and was “an inventive and humorous translation from real world sounds to instrumental sounds, revealing connections between the organic and the mechanical”.

 

Vocal or Choral Composition – Thomas Adès ‘Gyökér (Root)’
Thomas Adès’s work ‘Gyökér (Root)’ was awarded the Ivor Novello Award for Vocal or Choral Composition. The work was commissioned by Oliver Zeffman as part of his ‘Eight Songs from Isolation’ project, and Zeffman picked up the award on Adès behalf this evening as he was unable to attend.
The text for the work was taken from the Camp Notebook of Hungarian poet Miklós Radnóti which were his final poems written whilst imprisoned in a forced labour camp during the end of the second world war. The 4-minute piece was recorded by mezzo-soprano Katalin Károlyi and percussionist Ricardo Gallardo.
The jury referred to the piece as a “gut-wrenchingly beautiful, deeply poetic and strikingly original work, the kind you rarely encounter”. The piece is available to listen to here.

 

Impact Award – Zoe Rahman
MOBO Award winning jazz composer and pianist Zoe Rahman was recognised with the Impact Award. After studying piano at the Royal Academy of Music Rahman moved to Boston to study jazz performance at Berklee College of Music.
Throughout her career, she has infused influences from her English, Irish and Bengali heritage to write music with swing, lyricism, energy, and intimacy. Her sound is drenched with originality and a jazz legitimacy that recognises her pedigree as a world class artist, composer, and performer.
The Ivors Academy described Rahman as “one of Britain’s most powerful compositional voices and important contemporary artists who puts a spotlight on Jazz from the UK as an international musical force.”

 


Innovation Award – Cleveland Watkiss MBE
This year’s Innovation Award celebrated a pioneer in the universe of sound; vocalist and composer Cleveland Watkiss. Boasting an eclectic list of collaborators from Björk, Talvin Singh, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the London Community Gospel Choir and The Who, Watkiss was described by The Ivors Academy as “unique globally and in the annuals of British Jazz and contemporary music, uncategorisable”.
An innovative musician who is sensitive to the conditions that allow creative improvisation to thrive, Watkiss inspired and was a co-founder of the Jazz Warriors big band.

 


Outstanding Works Collection – Alexander Goehr
The Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Works Collection went to Alexander Goehr, recognising his achievements across a career spanning seven decades.
The Ivors Academy said “From his time at the Royal Manchester College of Music where he co-formed the hugely influential New Music Manchester Group. To his time at Cambridge University; Goehr has been a consistent force for innovation and discourse in contemporary classical music.”
The Academy continued saying “his decades of consistently high-quality compositions define a master of the art in classical music in all settings large and chamber, operatic and symphonic”.

 


Visionary Award – Sarah Angliss
The Visionary Award celebrated the multifaceted creative technologist and composer Sarah Angliss. Classically trained, specialising in baroque and renaissance music, Angliss also studied electroacoustic engineering and robotics, and both sides of her education inform her art.
Whether it is a mechanically operated singing bird, developing a micro-opera that can tour unusual venues, or creating her own robotic polyphonic carillon, The Ivors Academy said Angliss “stays true to her artistic concepts, to create unique compositions that connect to the listener with emotional depth and great beauty, never failing to leave a lasting impression.” Her inventive approach has seen her in huge demand for live performances and soundtrack appearance alike.

 

2021 CHANGES TO THE IVORS COMPOSER AWARDS
To reflect the changes brought about by the pandemic, The Ivors Academy adjusted its definition of ‘first UK performance’ to include the appearance of works on a commercial recording – as long as the recording was the first time the work had been heard by the public – in addition to concerts that were live streamed anywhere in the world, as long as the concert could be viewed by the UK public. Additionally, nominated categories have been streamlined for 2021 resulting in six categories across classical, jazz and sound art.

 

THE IVORS ACADEMY
The Ivors Academy is the UK’s independent professional association for music creators. We represent and champion a diverse, talented community of songwriters and composers. We are a self-funded not-for-profit organisation, relying on the continued support of our members and partners to carry on our work. The Academy is known internationally for The Ivors and The Ivors Composer Awards. An Ivor Novello Award is the pinnacle in the career of many songwriters and composers.
http://www.ivorsacademy.com

 

PRS FOR MUSIC
PRS for Music represents the rights of over 155,000 songwriters, composers, and music publishers in the UK and around the world. On behalf of its members, it works to grow and protect the value of their rights and ensure that creators are paid transparently and efficiently whenever their musical compositions and songs are streamed, downloaded, broadcast, performed and played in public. In 2020, 22.4 trillion performances of music were reported to PRS for Music, with £699m paid out in royalties to its members, making it one of the world’s leading music collective management organisations.
http://www.prsformusic.com

 

BBC RADIO 3
We believe arts and music make the world a better place by bringing people together through shared experience and understanding, providing a place of inspiration, and a means to navigate a complex world.
At BBC Radio 3 we want to enable as many people as possible to have life changing musical and arts experiences. We aim to provide listeners with time out from a busy world through full-length artistic performances and slow radio that takes the time it takes.
We pride ourselves on being a commissioner and interpreter of complex culture; shining a new light on well-loved artistic works and investing in new artistic talent to bring cutting edge work to audiences everywhere.
We are one of the most significant commissioners of contemporary classical music anywhere in the world and the biggest broadcaster of live classical concerts including the BBC Proms.
From classical music to arts discussion, documentaries to essays, drama to sound art, video games and film music, to jazz, world, ambient, electronic and the avant-garde, there is a Radio 3 for everybody – we welcome you to join us on BBC Sounds, DAB, online, and on FM.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3