Henry Vega is an award-winning composer and Electroacoustic musician from New York City, currently living in The Hague, Netherlands. He founded The Spycollective in 2006, a now defunct music, theater and dance group, and is a founding director of . Vega has been composing and performing internationally since 2001 and is also a founding member of The Electronic Hammer trio with Diego Espinosa and Juan Parra Cancino. He is married to Polish composer Kasia Glowicka.
One of Vega's influences came from working with American composer Earle Brown, who was a modern proponent of the Open Form style of composition and a father of aleatoric music. This inspired Vega to compose pieces with the idea of "blocks of music," where performers had the freedom of interpretation to play a block repeatedly until cue'd to another block. Vega said, ""This makes an impression of synchronisity between the performers, even though while they are in the block, they are completely unsynchronised." In writing about performances during Gaudeamus Week in Amsterdam, Peter Grahame and Alexa Woolf praised Vega as a composer, "who is dedicated to the creation and promotion of electro-acoustic music; the three female singers creating 'an idolized computer-programmed singer, whose imaginary capabilities are infinite'... Great sounds, and splendid dissemination of them in Amvest Zaal. In a 2012 interview, Vega noted several influences on his composition Wormsongs, including the futurist writings of philosopher Max More and a text from the artist Georg Hobmeier. He also noted the musical inspiration coming from composers such as Kenneth Gaburo, Philip Glass, and György Ligeti. The use of text and the musical style combine to inspire Vega in the potential of technology as a force in musical performance and composition. He said, "One of the themes that More talks about is overcoming the fear of technology, learning to coexist with it and internalize it." Another work Vega composed from philosophical influence was Fogpatch, in collaboration with German media artist and architect, Daniel Fetzner and performance artist Georg Hobmeier. Vega's electronic compositions accompanied a theatrical performance based on an experience of German philosopher Max Bense. The project explored the fundamental conflicts between art and technology by reconstructing a traumatic body experience Bense had in San Francisco.
During his Artistic Residency at the Studio for Electro Instrumental Music in Amsterdam, Vega developed, composed, rehearsed and collaborated on projects such as the electronic-music theatre piece Iminami, his work Wormsongs and also the piece "Slow slower."
Awards
April, 2005 - Confluencias 3rd Intl. Competition of ElectroAcoustic Music - Finalist "The White Pieces"
November, 2006 - Musica Nova - 1st prize for "Idoru in Metals"
November, 2006 - International Biennale of Modern Art Crash - 1st prize for "Idoru in Metals"
"Liquidus", for percussion and 2 computers. Developed at the Institute for Sonology.
"Idoru in Metals", for 2 sopranos, alto and computer. Composed for the Netherlands Vocaal Laboratorium
"The Vapor Collisions", for mixed ensemble and computer. Composed at the Sonic Arts Research Centre, Belfast. Commissioned by Yannis Kyriakides and Roland Spekle from Ensemble MAE.
"Izumi", for percussion and two computers. Created at Sonic Arts Research Centre, Belfast. Premiered at Musica Electronica Nova festival, Wroclaw Poland. Performed by The Electronic Hammer.
"Iminami", interactive blend of drama, electronic music, dance and live video. Performed by The Spycollective. Commissioned by the Dutch Fund for the Creation of Music and ARGEkultur in Salzburg
"The Hallelujah Drones", for six voices and computer. Performed by VocaalLab Nederlands at Gaudeamus Music Festival, Amsterdam
"Music in still parts", for violin, cello, saxophone, clarinet, percussion, piano, electronics. Performed by Ensemble Integrales
"Stream Machines and the Black Arts", for electronic violin, electronics and video. Commissioned & Performed by Barbara Lunenburg
"Slow slower", for recorder, viola da gamba, harpsichord and computer. Commissioned & Performed by the Roentgen Connection