James Wood (musician)


James Wood is a British conductor, composer of contemporary classical music and former percussionist.
Wood studied composition with Nadia Boulanger in Paris from 1971 to 1972 before going on to study music at Cambridge University, where he was organ scholar of Sidney Sussex College from 1972 until 1975. After graduating from Cambridge he went on to study percussion and conducting at the Royal Academy of Music, London from 1975 until 1976. After a further year studying percussion privately with Nicholas Cole, Wood embarked on a triple career as percussionist, composer and conductor.

Career

In 1977 he was appointed conductor of the Schola Cantorum of Oxford, a post which he held until 1981, and immediately following this he founded the , of which he was principal conductor for twenty-six years until moving to Germany in 2007.

New London Chamber Choir

During his time with he pioneered a large amount of little-known choral music from a wide range of composers, including Iannis Xenakis, Tona Scherchen, Toru Takemitsu, Eric Bergman, Harrison Birtwistle, Lili Boulanger, Ruth Crawford, Luigi Dallapiccola, Frank Denyer, György Kurtág, György Ligeti, Almeida Prado, Giacinto Scelsi, Alfred Schnittke, Claude Vivier, Walter Zimmermann and Wood himself. He was also responsible for the commissioning many new works from composers including Jonathan Harvey, Alejandro Vinao ', Javier Alvarez ', Iannis Xenakis ', Luca Francesconi ', Simon Bainbridge ', Roberto Sierra ' and David Sawer . Many of Wood’s own works were also specially written for , including Incantamenta, Phainomena and his large-scale church opera, Hildegard, for soloists, chorus, ensemble and electronics.
With NLCC Wood undertook numerous CD recordings, many of which were world premiere recordings: these included music by , , , , , and James Wood himself. They also recorded music of and for Hyperion, and for Erato. Their 1990 Hyperion recording of was voted ‘best available recording’ in BBC Radio 3’s ‘Building a Library’ in September 2000. They also collaborated with Oliver Knussen and the London Sinfonietta in a recording of Stravinsky’s The Flood and Requiem Canticles. In 1988 Wood helped devise a BBC2 documentary about Lili Boulanger – ‘Whom the Gods loved’ directed by . The film culminated in performances of the Pie Jesu as well as Boulanger’s monumental Du Fond de l’Abime with , Martyn Hill, New London Chamber Choir and the London Sinfonietta.

Percussion activities

Alongside his activities as a conductor and composer, Wood was also active as a percussionist in many contemporary ensembles including , , Matrix, Dreamtiger, Endymion and the London Sinfonietta. In this capacity he was noticed by the new director of the Darmstädter Ferienkurse, Friedrich Ferdinand Hommel, who invited him to succeed Christoph Caskel as Professor of Percussion from 1982. He retained this position throughout the Hommel years until 1994. During this time he pioneered a wide range of new for solo percussion and percussion ensemble, including many new pieces of his own, such as Choroi kai Thaliai, Ho shang Yao and Rogosanti, which he toured extensively with the soprano, and the sound engineer, . All of these pieces were also recorded for CD and released by Continuum. He was artistic director of the 1988 and 1990 Percussion Festivals in London, and also devised two BBC TV documentaries on percussion in the BBC2 series ‘Music in Camera’, directed by Hilary Boulding.
One of Friedrich Hommel’s principal aims as Director of the Darmstädter Ferienkurse had always been to establish the courses as a centre for the rapidly evolving world of percussion. To this end he commissioned Wood to write a large-scale work for percussion ensemble which would make full use of the large number of talented young percussionists from all over the world who were coming to Darmstadt for the summer courses. The result was Stoicheia, a 65-minute work for two percussion soloists, two percussion ensembles, four synthesizers and electronics. The two soloists were Steven Schick and Wood himself, and the work was subsequently recorded by .

1980s and 1990s

During the period from 1983 onwards Wood started to experiment with microtonality. In Ho shang Yao he devised simple prototype quartertone extensions for marimba and glockenspiel. As a result of this and further experiments in works such as Spirit Festival with Lamentations, Stoicheia and the quartertone marimba concerto, Venancio Mbande talking with the trees, he became convinced that any future for microtonality would have to involve first and foremost the development of microtonal fixed-pitch instruments and the adoption of satisfactory designs by commercial instrument builders. Following his own second prototype quartertone marimba extension the design was taken up by the Dutch company, , who produce them on special order.
But outside the realm of purely fixed-pitch instruments, Wood was also active in writing microtonal music for conventional instruments – this led to one of Wood’s largest-scale works, Oreion, for large orchestra. Commissioned by the BBC for the , this 30-minute work was performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Wood himself. The work was subsequently selected for performance at the 1991 ISCM Festival in Zürich, performed this time by the , again conducted by the composer.
This experience led to the idea of engaging in some kind of research and training programme for instrumentalists in microtonal performance, and so in 1990 Wood founded London's first Centre for Microtonal Music, and its ensemble, Critical Band. The purpose of the Microtonal Centre was to research instrumental microtonal playing techniques, to teach these to young musicians whilst at the same time educating composers in the historical, theoretical, emotional and practical implications of microtonality. The initiative involved the collaboration of the Society for the Promotion of New Music, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and the Barbican Centre in London, which held a Weekend of Microtonal Music, 'In Tune?', in 1990, 1991 and 1992. Aside from its presence at the 'In Tune?' Festivals, the ensemble 'Critical Band' undertook several recordings, concerts and tours, including a CD of three of Wood's own compositions: Venancio Mbande talking with the Trees, Phainomena and Two men meet, each presuming the other to be from a distant planet. This latter work was also premiered by Critical Band at the . But since the late 1990s both the Centre for Microtonal Music and Critical Band became disbanded through lack of funding.
Ever conscious of the fact that electronic music provided a perfect medium in which to explore his love for both microtonality and new sounds, Wood decided to immerse himself more fully in this world, and in 1996 undertook a major project at IRCAM in Paris. He worked together with Carl Faia on a new work for Alphorn, MIDI-cowbells and electronics – Mountain Language – from 1997 to 1998. This marked the start of a series of works involving electronics, including Séance, Jodo, Autumn Voices and the opera, Hildegard.

Recent developments and move to Germany

From the mid-1990s Wood also started to receive conducting invitations from several European ensembles, including :de:L’Itinéraire|l’Itinéraire, Ensemble InterContemporain, musikFabrik and , and choirs including , Netherlands Chamber Choir, Swedish Radio Choir, Collegium Vocale Gent, :de:WDR Rundfunkchor Köln|West German Radio Choir, Berlin Radio Choir, RIAS Kammerchor, as well as the . In 2002 he worked closely with Karlheinz Stockhausen on the world premiere of Engel-Prozessionen, which he conducted at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw with the Netherlands Radio Choir. Later he conducted the same work as part of Cologne Opera's production of the opera, Sonntag aus Licht.
Wood's increasing activity in mainland Europe eventually led, in 2007, to his decision to leave England for Germany. Since then Wood has continued to work regularly with choirs and ensembles throughout Europe, notably the Netherlands Radio Choir, musikFabik, Berlin Radio Choir, RIAS Kammerchor and the MDR Rundfunkchor in Leipzig, as well as remaining prolific as a composer. Notable performances include Luigi Nono’s Caminantes Ayacucho with the Netherlands Radio Choir and Netherlands Radio Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra at the 2008 Holland Festival; his training of the Vienna State Opera Chorus for Nono’s Al gran sole carico d’amore at the 2009 Salzburg Festival, conducted by Ingo Metzmacher; the first ever performance with live pianolist of Theo Verbey’s completion of Stravinsky’s 1919 version Les Noces with musikFabrik and RIAS Kammerchor at the Berlin Philharmonie in 2013; and the German premiere of Wood's own Tongues of Fire with the MDR Rundfunkchor in Leipzig in November 2014.
From 2008 until 2011, he undertook the reconstruction of the two missing voices of the Sacrae Cantiones Liber Secundus of the sixteenth-century Italian composer, Carlo Gesualdo. This massive undertaking culminated in his recording of the complete set with for Harmonia Mundi. Released in February 2013, the went on to receive universal critical acclaim, and was awarded the ECHO Klassik Preis in the category ‘Choir Recording of the Year’ in October 2013.
Following a joint commission from the Dutch Ensemble, , the and the , Wood then undertook a collaboration with the writer, Paul Griffiths and the director, on the opera, Gulliver, based on Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift – a project which lasted three years, from 2011 until 2014. At the same time he completed several new works for percussion, including a 35-minute work for percussion ensemble, Cloud-Polyphonies, commissioned by a consortium of American Universities headed by .
Since 2008 Wood has directed the , designed to help and encourage young composers from all over Europe in composing for chamber choir.

Awards and Honours

Discography (Works by James Wood)

Links