First Ivors Composer Week announced


The Ivors Composer Awards celebrates their 20th anniversary this year – and they are marking the occasion by expanding its format into a first-ever Ivors Composer Week.

The seven days of events will follow on from the Awards themselves, which celebrate the best new works by composers writing for classical, jazz and sound art. Ivors Composer Week will take place from 14 to 20 November, with the winners of this year’s Ivors Composer Awards announced on Tuesday 15 November.

Like the Awards themselves, the week will champion composers, providing opportunities to connect and exploring topics that impact on composers. Events will support The Ivors Academy Trust, which creates new opportunities for composers and songwriters including mentoring, creative support, leadership development and education.

Key events during the week include:

  • A reception at the House of Commons on Monday 14 November. This invitation-only event will be hosted by Kevin Brennan MP, chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Music, and sponsored by PRS for Music. The ORA Singers will perform Ave Verum Corpus Re-imagined, composed by past Ivors winner Roderick Williams.
  • On Tuesday 15, the 20th edition of The Ivors Composer Awards will be presented by BBC Radio 3 presenters Hannah Peel and Tom Service, the latter also a BBC Music Magazine contributor. Tickets are available.
  • For Meet The Commissioners at St Martin in the Fields on Wednesday 16, Sarah Gee (Spitalfields Music), Gill Graham (Wise Music Group) and Aaron Holloway-Nahum from Riot Ensemble will discuss the changing classical commissioning landscape. Book for free as a member or for £10 as a non-member.
  • Thursday 17 will feature a live stream of a lecture by David Ferguson, Classical Beyond the Concert Hall. Also on the bill, composer Héloïse Werner (pictured top) and others will discuss the impact of new technologies in creating and strengthening human connections. Live streamed, the event is open to all.

Lloyd Coleman, composer and chair of The Ivors Academy’s Classical Council, said, ‘As we celebrate the 20th anniversary of The Ivors Composer Awards, it is important that we look ahead to the next twenty years. As composers, we are affected by problems with touring, under-investment in state school music education, and financial pressures facing cultural institutions and venues.

‘But the talent of composers in the UK, innovations in technology and the importance of music and culture to Britain’s place in the world mean that with the right support and funding, there are good reasons to be optimistic. The Ivors Academy will launch a new conversation and campaign, Composers Under Pressure? during Composers Week to explore the challenges and opportunities facing composers today and how we can ensure a bright future.”

You can read more about the Ivors Composer Awards in the December issue of BBC Music Magazine.

Héloïse Werner pic: Nick Rutter



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Morgan Wallen Flies Five-Year-Old Fan Battling Leukemia, And Her Family, To Meet Him At First Headlining Stadium Show In Texas


This the coolest story I’ve heard in a while.

Morgan Wallen recently flew a five-year-old fan named Gracie, who is currently battling leukemia, to his first headlining stadium show at Globe Life Field in Texas on October 8th.

She is a huge fan, and even had a Morgan Wallen-themed birthday party a few weeks ago, so you can only imagine how excited she was to go see him play, and meet him in person, at such a milestone show in his career.

Her mom just shared the sweet video of Gracie and her parents backstage with him over on TikTok, and it’s quickly gone viral in the last 24 hours or so since it’s been up.

And actually, the story of how it came to be is pretty cool, as Brevin, who you hear Gracie’s mom reference in the video, is the one who first told Morgan about Gracie.

He is a fan who met Morgan back in July, after Morgan found out Brevin had been dealing with some tough stuff at home and school.

Apparently, during their meeting, Morgan asked Brevin what he wanted for his birthday, and Brevin asked that Morgan meet Gracie, who he had seen on TikTok and knew how much she loved Morgan too.

I mean, that alone is enough to melt your heart.

Per Brevin’s request, Morgan and his team made it happen, and when you see how excited little Gracie is when Morgan comes in the room, it’s just a heartwarming moment for a little girl and her family who have no doubt been to Hell and back dealing with her sickness.

When Gracie first sees Morgan, she of course has a huge smile on her face, and runs up to give him a big hug.

He introduced himself to her parents, as well (as if they didn’t know who he was), and told Gracie he liked her outfit and asked her how old she was.

It’s a very sweet video, and it will certainly make your Wednesday a whole lot better.

This is what country music’s all about:

@prayersforgracie Gracie meeting her biggest fan! @morganwallen @brettfitness #dreamcametrue #WeStickTogether #fightingleukemiasincebirth #teamgracie #fightingleukemiawithadance #fypシ ♬ original sound – Gracie

Gracie’s mom shared a few other videos from the night on Instagram, and you can clearly see that she’s in Heaven seeing her favorite artist play her favorite songs, and I couldn’t love this any more:





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A Composer’s Diary: ICE video premiere!


What an incredible day!

Today 6.8 my piece “ICE” commissioned by Green Capital Lahti got its video premiere, recorded by Lahti Sinfonia and conducted by Finland’s star conductor Dalia Stasevska (who is still in the UK as she conducted the opening of the Proms!)! The video premiere was on the big screen of Helsinki Music Centre at 12 PM, and is now available online in 100 cities threatened by rising sea levels. 

After the video premiere, the Mayor of Lahti Pekka Timonen officially cut the ribbon and opened the monumental visual piece I.C.E by Erkko Aarti and his team. The piece can be seen in front of Helsinki main library Oodi for the next 10 days, and all these days from 10 AM to 5 PM my piece ICE can be heard in the Wood Paviljong (on repeat).



When I was asked in December 2020 if I would like to compose the piece, I immediately had a “vision” of how this piece should sound, it was clear from the beginning to the end. Due to it’s important topic (the climate crisis) this piece is really special to me. My humblest thank you to Green Capital Lahti, Sinfonia Lahti and Dalia Stasevska for your trust in me, and giving me this enormous and amazing opportunity to be part of this!



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Able Joseph delivers “Lonely LA” single – Aipate


Guitar-driven and melody-powered, the newest song by Australian singer-songwriter Able Joseph is simply magnificent. The gentle indie-pop track is called “Lonely LA” and was produced by Grant Konemann and released on Sydney-based indie label Double Drummer.

“Lonely LA” is a mid-tempo and heartfelt piece telling an intimate story about changing lives and circumstance. Joseph says, “There’s a beautiful side to two people having to adjust to life’s curveballs and facing change as a team — be that changing dreams, homes, realities… this isn’t a love song, it’s a relationship song.”

Give the song a listen and connect with Able Joseph on Instagram.





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Pop singer opens salon in Wedgewood-Houston | Retail


Power pop music star Hayley Williams opened Wednesday a hair salon in a Wedgewood-Houston building previously eyed for a craft beer bar.

The lead vocalist for Franklin-based Paramore, Williams and her long-time hairstylist Brian O’Connor co-own Fruits, nylon.com reports. The salon operates from a small, former industrial building with an address of 1229 Martin St. and sits next to micro-unit apartment building Martin Flats and near Diskin Cider.







Brian O’Connor, Hayley Williams 













Open Tuesdays through Saturdays, Fruits is a Green Circle Salons member (billed as a collection of carbon-neutral businesses) that charges a $1.45 fee for each service and that goes toward sustainability causes. Haircuts start at $20, with many services in the $50 to $80 range. Colorings range from $35 to $225, according to the Fruits website.

Fashion designer Savannah Yarborough seemingly owns the property from which Fruits operates. Yarborough also owns leather jacket and footwear boutique SAVAS, which operates nearby at 525 Merritt Ave.

As the Post reported in June 2018, tentative plans to open Doc’s Beeratorium — a grower fill and craft beer-focused pub concept — were scrapped (read here).

Formed in 2004, Paramore has released six albums and undertaken five national headliner tours. In addition to singing and lyric writing, Williams plays keyboards with the band.



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How Fred Again.. Turns Digital Bricolage Into Dance-Floor Weepers


On a recent Friday night in Manhattan, pandemonium surrounded a waffle truck parked on the corner of 56th Street and 11th Avenue, as thumping beats and the aroma of fresh batter poured from within. An enthusiastic young woman thrust an inflatable giraffe head festooned with a red glow stick through one of the truck’s windows, bopping it to the music. A security guard ripped it away.

Inside the vehicle, holding court, stood a grinning Fred Gibson, the 29-year-old British songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist better known as Fred again.., who was following up a show at the Hell’s Kitchen venue Terminal 5 with an ad hoc after-party.

“Chaotic,” he later happily proclaimed the impromptu event, where he previewed tracks from his third album, “Actual Life 3 (January 1 — September 9, 2022),” out Friday. “Just great.”

“Actual Life 3” is the culmination of music that Gibson — a pop hitmaker for Ed Sheeran, BTS and the British grime star Stormzy — started releasing at the end of 2019, after his mentor Brian Eno urged him to forgo writing for others and prioritize his own work. The result is lush electronica-rooted piano balladry, wistful nu-disco anthems and the occasional U.K. garage firestarter, all threaded with samples culled from the far reaches of YouTube, Instagram and his iPhone camera roll — a sonic bricolage of digitally documented lives.

A few days after the concert, Gibson — a smiley, ebullient, occasionally sheepish presence — rolled a cigarette on a West Village bar patio and recalled Eno needling him when he was experiencing a peak of commercial success but had a brewing fear of artistic complacency. He had met Eno at one of the artist’s occasionally star-studded a cappella gatherings as a teenager, and wowed him with his production talents, which led to Eno (“a wizened cliff-pusher,” as Gibson described him) bringing him on as a producer on some of his projects.

“I know that Fred has sometimes referred to me as a mentor, but actually, it works both ways,” Eno said by phone. “What he’s doing is quite unfamiliar — I’ve actually never heard anything quite like this before. He always seems to be doing it in relation to a community of people around him — the bits of vocal and ambient sounds.”

Eno was referring to the basic construction of a Fred again.. song. Many tracks start with Gibson using one of thousands of ambient drones Eno once gave him. From there, he’ll go into his digital scrapbook of found footage. While some samples employ familiar voices — the moaning rap of the Atlanta superstar Future, an Instagram Live freestyle of the rapper Kodak Black, vocals from a call with the Chicago house D.J. the Blessed Madonna — the vast majority are relatively obscure. They include a stadium worker Gibson joked around with after a Sheeran show, audio from a nightclub he recorded with his iPhone, spoken word poets and burgeoning bedroom pop singers he caught glimpses of while scrolling his various social media feeds.

Gibson then cuts, distorts, pitch-shifts, stretches or compresses the samples into shimmering cinematic soundscapes, and sings atop them in his soft, pleading croon. Some are cavernous, others dense, but they all retain the deep warmth of something homespun — the ideal foundation for lyrics about feeling too much and not nearly enough that map thin fault lines demarcating love and loss. The result are tracks that leave listeners both laughing and weeping on the dance floor.

Gibson estimated that he’s experimented with thousands of different ways to turn the speech of complete strangers into something musical. “You’re constantly trying to create as many vacancies as possible for accidents to happen,” he said. “But at the beginning it was very labored, quite tortured, if I’m honest,” he added. “It felt like I was distorting their spirit.”

One track was crafted from footage of a young Toronto-based performance artist named Sabrina Benaim performing her piece “Explaining My Depression to My Mother,” which would go on to become the thumping dirge “Sabrina (I Am a Party).”

The source material is a full-tilt confessional characterizing the vicissitudes of anxiety and depression — not exactly the kind of thing obviously complemented by beats from a successful pop producer. “I was anxious with everything I was putting onto these people,” Gibson said. “I felt like I was projecting onto them.”

Speaking by phone from Toronto, Benaim remembered hearing the finished track for the first time, after Gibson reached out over Instagram. “It was the wildest thing,” she said and laughed. “It was like I left my body. He handled the emotional center of it so well — he just cared so much about not ruining or soiling the poem in any way. It’s coming from such a careful place.”

Romy Croft — a singer-songwriter in the xx who tapped Gibson to produce her own debut solo single, “Lifetime” — worked with Gibson and Haai on “Lights Out,” a song released earlier this year, in nearly the same way. Croft had given Gibson an xx demo that never came to fruition; a year later, Gibson mentioned having done something with it.

As she explained in a recent phone call, she was gobsmacked by the result, a dance track that mixes laser squelches, piano chords, a skittering beat and Croft’s wistful vocals. “He had just given it a new lease of life,” Croft said. To her, the record reflects a thematic link in his work: “A thread of emotion and vulnerability within it that ties it together, as well as a lot of joy.”

Eno said he finds many of Gibson’s samples to be “tender and beautiful.” “To marry that with the kind of energetic chaos of the music he does is, I think, a beautiful combination,” he added. “It’s romance, in a sort of maelstrom of emotion.”

The new album may be the apotheosis of this aesthetic. Gibson’s first two LPs, made during and immediately after the pandemic lockdown, concerned the illness of a close friend and its aftermath, and are often pensive affairs. “Actual Life 3” is an unfurling of sorts, a more cathartic, misty-eyed dance-floor moment. Its unlikely collaborators include Kieran Hebden, a.k.a. the electronic musician and producer Four Tet, known for the kind of dense, protean electronica compositions that rarely (if ever) abide anything close to a typical pop song’s structure.

“He pulls me in a direction I wouldn’t normally be working in,” Hebden said on a recent FaceTime call. Gibson’s songs, he explained, are “great melodies and chord sequences, elegantly done. The work that has been done is considered. It doesn’t always sound ridiculously slick — there’s nothing very cynical about it. It’s quite direct, and honest; it just feels deeply refreshing, isn’t hidden away, and isn’t super mysterious.”

“But,” Hebden paused, “the mystery of it is: How can anybody make it look so easy?” He laughed.

At the waffle truck earlier this month, after playing the last in a series of then-unreleased songs to his increasingly hyped crowd, Gibson told Hebden — who was among his mischief-makers that night — to pick a final song. Hebden looked at him knowingly, and changed tracks. Miley Cyrus’s “Party in the USA” blasted over the speakers. The crowd exploded into verse, and Gibson danced along, laughing. The musicians made their way out of the truck and back into the venue thronged by fans, another memory made in the night, soon to be posted for posterity — potentially, the start of another song.



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Composers and Pets, Part 2



The strong connection between humans and animals, especially pets, has been known for thousands of years. Composers are no different from us mere mortals in that many of them, too, had cherished pets, and some even wrote music inspired by animals. Following my previous post on the topic, let’s “paws” for a few more pet “tails.”

The story goes that Domenico Scarlatti’s cat Pulcinella once jumped up onto his harpsichord’s keyboard and produced a 4-note theme. It was not typical of the music of the time, but it intrigued Scarlatti so much that he used the phrase to write his Fugue in G minor, K. 30. Scarlatti never called the piece “The Cat Fugue,” but the nickname it picked up in the 18th century has stuck to this day. Here’s a cool rendition as harpsichordist Elaine Comparone plays standing up.

American composer Amy Beach was so charmed by the Scarlatti cat story that she used it a jumping off point for her own Fantasia fugata, Op. 87. She included an inscription that read: “The composer is indebted to ‘Hamlet’, a large black Angora who had been placed on the keyboard with the hope that he might emulate Scarlatti’s cat and improvise a fugue.” Here’s Joanne Polk.

There are many stories about Mozart and his sometimes, shall we say, eccentric behavior. Apparently, one odd thing the composer liked to do was to imitate cats. And there are at least two stories of different occasions where Mozart, who was said to have a low boredom threshold, suddenly started meowing loudly, and leaped over nearby tables and chairs.

Mozart’s affection for cats, however, actually proved a help to his career early on. When he was nine, the Mozart family traveled to London. The Royal Society, a 360-year-old British organization dedicated to the sciences, doubted the child prodigy’s age. They felt no one could be such a genius and so accomplished so young and suspected that he was actually an “adult dwarf.” They thought his father Leopold was lying in order to make Wolfgang’s achievements seem more spectacular.

They sent Daines Barrington to visit and find out the truth. Barrington put the boy through a series of tests, including covering the keys with a cloth to see if Mozart could still play from just the sense of touch. The story goes that a favorite cat entered the room and the child left the piano to play with it and it took a long time to get him back to the instrument. Seeing that typical childlike action is what finally convinced Barrington that Mozart was, indeed, still a child.

Another famous cat lover was French composer Maurice Ravel. While it’s not known definitively how many cats he owned at any one time there is one account claiming there were at least 7 Siamese (his favorite breed) in the house. Ravel claimed that he could speak the cat language and did so, even when there were guests in the room.

The cats were allowed to frolic in his work room, and even climb up onto his piano. I mentioned in last year’s pets blog that there was one musical instance of his love for cats in his music. In his opera, L’enfant et les sortilège, (The Child and the Spells), a naughty little boy mistreats his belongings and one night the toys and furniture and animals take revenge on him, including a dark “Duo miaule” for male and female voices. Here’s a scene from a São Paulo performance:

Ravel loved his cats so much that, when he had visitors, he spoke to them endlessly about his cats, and when he wrote to family and friends, he filled several pages describing their every moves.

I couldn’t find a citation that Beethoven ever owned a pet; however, one did work its way into his heart. The 40-year-old composer had fallen in love with his 18-year-old piano student Therese Malfatti and proposed to her. Many speculated that she rejected him more for his famous volatile temper than for the age difference. Although their personal relationship didn’t work out, Beethoven was befriended by Therese’s dog, Gigons. At one point Beethoven wrote to a friend, “You’re wrong to think Gigons only goes to you. No, I too had the good fortune to have him stick to my company. He dined by my side in the evening, and then accompanied me home. In short, he provided some very good entertainment.”

Another dog lover was English composer Edward Elgar, who owned a spaniel named Marco before he married. Unfortunately, Elgar’s wife Alice didn’t care for dogs and Elgar was dogless during their 30-year marriage. He had to make due with walks with his friend George Robertson Sinclair’s bulldog Dan, who was remembered in No. XI of the “Enigma” Variations. Elgar wrote that the first few bars depicted the dog “falling down the steep bank into the River Wye, paddling upstream to find a landing place, and his rejoicing bark on landing.” Here’s the Symphony Orchestra of India.

After Alice died in 1920, Elgar adopted two dogs, another Marco and Mina. There’s a story told that Elgar conducted a live broadcast concert when he was 70. At the end of the concert he gave a short speech which included saying good night to Mina. The dog was described as being very excited hearing her name and her master’s voice over the radio.

American avant-garde composer George Crumb, who passed away in February of this year, was a known lover of dogs. His 1998 suite for guitar and percussion, Mundus Canis (A Dog’s World), describes the dogs that his family owned over the years. Here’s the whole piece, with the fifth and final movement titled “Yoda.” It’s not about the famous Star Wars character, but his dog of that same name, “…a fluffy-white animal of mixed parentage and mercurial temperament.” You’re sure to get a chuckle for how that section ends!

CODA:  And leaving you with one more piece for cat lovers. Although the Duetto buffo per due gatti is attributed to Gioachino Rossini, there are many scholars who say some of the music is Rossini’s but the “cat parts” were added by someone else. There are many fun versions to be found online, but this one is pawsitively hiss-terical!





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James McMurtry taps into his rich body of work


By Paul T. Mueller

Singer-songwriter James McMurtry released his first CD in 1989, so it’s pretty much inevitable that his shows these days resemble career retrospectives. At an August 26 solo acoustic show at Houston’s McGonigel’s Mucky Duck, McMurtry led off with “Melinda,” from his 1995 album Where’d You Hide the Body.

James McMurtry (photo by Paul T. Mueller)

Next came the title track of 2002’s Saint Mary of the Woods; more songs from other stages of his career followed, accompanied by masterful work on six- and twelve-string guitars. They included “a medley of my hit,” the raucous “Choctaw Bingo,” and “Levelland,” which McMurtry described as “one of the Robert Earl Keen songs that I wrote.” Four songs from last year’s excellent The Horses and the Hounds made the cut; the later-in-life romance tale “Canola Fields” might have held particular significance for audience members, many of whom were old enough to have been fans from the beginning. McMurtry closed on a upbeat note with “If It Don’t Bleed,” a wryly humorous look at aging that tempered ruefulness (“there’s more in the mirror than there is up ahead”) with acceptance (“it don’t matter all that much if it don’t bleed”).

Tags:James McMurtry



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Music composer Vipin Patwa talks about his two songs from Code Name: Tiranga


Composer Vipin Patwa has come up with two new songs for the just-released film, Code Name: Tiranga starring Parineeti Chopra and Harrdy Sandhu. The first song Yaar Ve is sung by Arijit Singh and Vande Mataram by Shankar Mahadevan. We had a hearty chat about the same and more with the Lucknow boy. 

Tell us about the song “Yaar Ve”? What are the thoughts behind the composition?

When the film was about to go on the floor, the director of the film called me and briefed me on the situation. In that particular situation Harrdy Sandhu dies in a bomb blast and it’s a painful situation for Parineeti Chopra and to cover the entire scene the song was made. The song matches the mood and has a melancholy yet very heart-rending tune. 

Why did you choose Arijit?

I feel there’s no better voice than Arijit’s right now in our country. Also, since the song is quite a mature one and we wanted someone with that kind of maturity, modernness, innocence, honesty and experience to sing this song. Our team requested Arijit and he accepted the same. 

The music director

What about Vande Mataram?

I enjoyed composing Vande Mataram a lot. It’s an honour if you can somehow honour or compliment your motherland in some or the other way. It was a great privilege for me to compose a song like “Vande Mataram”. 

Was Shankar a natural choice?

Once the song “Vande Mataram” was ready, again, collectively everyone had Shankar Mahadevan name in mind. The director too was keen on having Shankar on board to sing this song. I was lucky again that Shankar agreed to sing this song. 

How has your journey been so far in Bollywood?

It’s a bit long journey for me in Bollywood and I had to face a lot of difficulties, it’s a process I think but that’s all in the past now. Personally, I think when you are educated you have the right kind of attitude and confidence to face the world.

Who are your fave male and female singers and why?

A lot of them Arijit, Jubin a few newcomers too are singing quite well nowadays. A newcomer named Pawandeep also sings well besides female singers like Jonitaa Gandhi, Asees Kaur and a lot of others are doing brilliantly!

Vipin Patwa

Which genres of music you love?

I like all genres but yes Indie pop, a bit of rock and classical I like a lot. 

What do you like to listen to at leisure?

Also, I listen to a lot of instrumental music in my leisure time.

What are your upcoming projects?

There are a few films including Hari Om Hari and a lot of singles back to back. 



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Photo Gallery: The Garden at Warsaw



 Punk twin duo The Garden performed to a sold out crowd in Brooklyn.

On the eve of Thanksgiving, 11/24, California based experimental punk duo The Garden played a sold out show to a thrilled crowd at Warsaw. Many members of the audience could be seen sporting clown face-paint––a signature look of the twin duo. A highlight of the show included witnessing the band getting bananas tossed at them (don’t worry, they loved it.) After the set, AdHoc asked The Garden if this was a common occurrence for them, and they said tonight was the first time that had happened, but they’d been asking crowds to do it for a while. The band was also joined by punk band Dr. Know, who delivered an exciting opening performance. 

The Garden, being known for their unique sound and playful use of samples, provided just that throughout their live set in Brooklyn. Their set also featured many tracks from their last full LP, Kiss My Superbowl Ring (which was released on Epitaph in 2020) as well as a new unreleased track.

Photos were taken by AdHoc’s own Steph Rinzler, check them out below.

The Garden

Dr. Know





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