Frank Corcoran

Irish Composer

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ACTUALLY FROM 2014 BUT FEELS GOOD

Celebrating Frank Corcoran at 70
Forthcoming concert includes world premieres performed by Alan Smale and Martin Johnson.

A concert celebrating the work of composer Frank Corcoran will take place at the James Joyce Centre in Dublin on Thursday 26 November at 8pm.

Beginning with an introduction by writer Barra Ó Séaghdha, composer Benjamin Dwyer will then deliver a keynote talk on the composer’s work and its connection to Joyce.

The second part of the evening will begin with a short public interview with the composer, followed by the world premiere of his Rhapsodietta Joyceana performed by cellist Martin Johnson.

This will be followed by performances of Variations on A Mháirín de Barra (1995) performed by Adèle Johnson (viola), Seven Theses on Joyce and Music presented by the composer, and Joycespeak Musik (1995) for tape. The concert concludes with the world premiere of Seven Miniatures for violin performed by Alan Smale.

Born in 1944 in Borrisokane, County Tipperary, Frank Corcoran studied philosophy, music, ancient languages and theology in Ireland and Rome and took further studies in composition with composer Boris Blacher in Berlin.

His output includes orchestral, choral, chamber and electro-acoustic music. Corcoran’s Joycespeak Musik won the Studio Akustische Kunst in 1995, Sweeney’s Vision won the Bourges Festival Premier Prix in 1999, and Quasi Una Missa won the 2002 Swedish E.M.S. Prize.

Two Unholy Haikus took first prize at the Cork International Choral Festival in 2012 and his Eight Haikus was awarded first prize at the International Foundation for Choral Music in 2013.

Corcoran’s music has been performed by the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, Crash Ensemble, Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra, Irish Chamber Orchestra and the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra among many others, and has been recorded on the Marco Polo, Wergo, Composers Art and Black Box labels.

Recent large-scale works include a Cello Concerto, written for Martin Johnson, and a Violin Concerto, composed for Alan Smale, both premiered with the RTÉ NSO. Corcoran is a member of Aosdána and lives in Hamburg and Italy.

A book dedicated to the composer’s work was recently published. Frank Corcoran – Festschrift at Seventy – Old and New – Sean agus Nua: An Irish Composer Invents Myself is edited by Hans-Dieter Grünefeld and includes contributions from Benjamin Dwyer, Roger Doyle and Jane O’Leary.

The book is available from the Contemporary Music Centre here.

For more on the concert on 26 November, visit http://on.fb.me/1LbtvTs
Published on 12 November 2015

AMONG MY SOUVENIERS IN NEW YORK

Irish Composer Frank Corcoran to Attend the Premiere of VARIATIONS ON MYSELF
February 25
12:55
2013
?by Music News Desk

Irish Composer Frank Corcoran to Attend the Premiere of VARIATIONS ON MYSELF

Frank Corcoran — the noted Irish composer — will be in New York City to attend the premiere performance of his recently completed chamber orchestra work Variations on Myself .
A founding member of Aosdána – Ireland’s state-sponsored academy of reative artists – Corcoran who was born in Tipperary in 1944 completed his musical education in Berlin under the supervision of Boris Blacher. His Two Unholy Haikus won the Sean Ó Riada Award at the 2012 Cork International Choral Festival and the First Prize in th 2013 International Federation of Choral Music.

Several of his orchestral and choral works are available on recordings issued by, among others, the NAXOS, Col-Legno, and Caprice labels. For almost thirty years he taught composition and theory in the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik in Hamburg, Germany. Corcoran first visited the US in 1989 as a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Subsequently, he has been invited to lecture at Indiana University, CalArts, Harvard University, Boston College, New York University and Princeton.

As basis for his recently completed work, Variations on Myself, Corcoran employs a melodic theme derived from the pitches suggested by the composer’s name: F-D-C#-Eb-C-A. Melodic and harmonic materials are generated by mutating these pitches while strict metrical writing of the strings contrasts with undulating lines in the wind instruments
often moving at their own tempo.

The free-admission concert is part of the North/South Consonance concert series, now on its 33rdconsecutive season. It will take place the evening of Tuesday evening March 12. The GRAMMY nominated North/South Chamber Orchestra under the direction of its founder Max
Lifchitz will also premiere four other works especially written for the occasion by composers representing a wide variety of styles. In addition to Corcoran, the other are: Harry Bulow, Binnette Lipper, Joyce Solomon Moorman and William Pfaff.

The concert will start at 8 PM and will take place at the auditorium of Christ & St. Stephen’s Church (120 West 69thSt – between Broadway and Columbus) on Manhattan’s West Side. Admission is free– no tickets necessary.

For further intormation please visit http://www.northsouthmusic.org/

PASTE IT IN GOOD !

NEW YORK in April 2011

CHURCH OF CHRIST AND SAINT STEPHEN

Frank Corcoran : Songs of Terror and Love ( Texts from Jacopone Da Todi )

Max Lifchitz, conductor
The North/South Consonance Ensemble
David Sailsberry Fry, Baryton

BITS AND BLOBS IN THE CUPBOARD

Haikus in der Kathedrale: Frank Corcoran erhält den Seán Ó Riada Preis 2012
Frank Corcoran erhält den Seán Ó Riada Preis 2012. Foto: Hans-Dieter Grünefeld
(nmz) –
Ein substanzielles Sujet für zeitgenössische Chormusik zu finden, erfordert ein Sensorium für Stimmen und stimmhafte Befindlichkeiten. Zumal in sakraler Umgebung, zumal im katholisch, aber eben auch keltisch geprägten Irland. Da findet Musik manchmal in musikalischen Zwischenwelten statt. So beim Cork International Choral Festival mit dem Seán Ò Riada Composition Competition.

ARTS MAGAZINE chrome ON FRANK CORCORAN

They just went live with the essay on Colony…SEE: http://www.colony.ie/#!joyceanaesthetics/csdx

Text, audio, manuscripts and photos…..I think it looks, sounds and reads
well….this is a very hip journal and everyone on Dublin in reading this right
now……!!!!!!

Access through CHROME…..NOT Safari

( Ben Dwyer on Frank Corcoran’s music and musicks )

PRE-CHRISTMAS CHEER RADIOPHONIC

NDR _ Kultur PRISMA MUSIK : Saturday Dec. 3. 20.00 – 22.00

FRANK CORCORAN “listens in ” to

SCHUBERT’S STRING QUINTET in C Major ….

After 22.00 then, Frank Corcoran’s 4. Symphony ( National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland , Cond. C. Pearce )

THE GRAMOPHONE ON MY SYMPHONIES

Corcoran Symphonies Nos. 2-4
Frank Corcoran was born in Tipperary in 1944 and studied in Dublin, Rome and later in Berlin with Boris Blacher. His [symphony] symphonies are something of a revelation
Show View record and artist details
Author:
Michael Stewart
Corcoran Symphonies Nos. 2-4

Symphony No. 2
Symphony No. 3
Symphony No. 4

Buy from Amazon

Rather like the image of Skelling Rock in Ireland that adorns the cover of this CD, Corcoran’s symphonies stand implacable and without apology before the listener: as challenging as Birtwistle, rougher-hewn than Maxwell Davies. The works of Varese and Bussotti are perhaps a better comparison. These are soundscapes in the purest sense of the word, edifices to lose oneself in.
Corcoran is an illusionist with time – Symphonies Nos 3 and 4 are approximately 15 minutes apiece and yet time seems to collapse and expand under a law of its own in these works. In the booklet-notes, Corcoran speaks of ‘virtual space’ and of ‘a logic out of chaos’, and I would go along with that. There is much truth too, in his remark that ‘ears understand the logic of my story’, and they do, no matter how uncharted or disruptive the soundscape. And the ‘story’ traverses all three symphonies: there is continuity of thought and a consistency of style here. His mastery of orchestral colour and texture is impressive too, and has there ever been more of an anti-ending to a symphony than in his Fourth?
Much praise must go to the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland and to conductor Coleman Pearce who deliver these ‘dolmens in sound’ (to quote Corcoran again) with much commitment, and also to Marco Polo for bringing us this most enterprising issue. A real discovery.’

IN BELLA ITALIA

Maccagno, Italy

Professor Benjamin Dwyer was the fourth annual Irish Artist in Residence at the 2016 soundSCAPE summer festival for

new music in Maccagno, Italy.

During his three-day residency, Dwyer presented a lecture entitled “Traditional Irish and Postmodern Contours in

the music of Gerald Barry, John Buckley, Roger Doyle and Frank Corcoran”

SCHUBERT’S SYPHILIS

NORDDEUTSCHER RUNDFUNK
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1
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Sonnabend,
SENDEWOCHE 49
3. Dezember
Nachtrag zu Woche 48
Prisma Musik
Thema: Kleine Schule des musikalischen Hörens: Frank Corcoran hört das Streichquintett C-Dur von Franz Schubert
Das Werk gehört zu seinen letzten und gilt Kennern als Gipfel dessen, was in dieser Kunst überhaupt möglich ist. Generationen haben sich den Kopf darüber zerbrochen, wie Schubert zum Beispiel die magische Stimmung des Adagio-Satzes erzeugt hat.
Der irische Komponist Frank Corcoran versucht in der Kleinen Schule des musikalischen Hörens den Geheimnissen dieser Musik auf die Spur zu kommen, die einem unbegreiflichen Schaffensrausch auf dem Kranken- und schließlich Sterbebett entsprang.
(Sonnabend, 3. Dezember, 20.00 – 22.00 Uhr, NDR Kultur)

GIVE ME AN IRISH GLISSANDO ANY TIME

Why have Irish composers been ignored for so long?
Music critic Michael Dervan writes about his journey to discovering more Irish composers in his book The Invisible Art, which is nominated for a Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Award.
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Music critic Michael Dervan (who has been music critic at the Irish Times since 1986) loves music – but realised as he grew up that Irish composers were often hidden musicians. With his book Invisible Art, he set out to address this. For the book, he commissioned pieces by a range of expert writers about Irish music from 1916 – 2016.
Ireland stands unique among the nations of the world in having a musical instrument, the harp, as its national emblem. Irish musicians of all hues are widely celebrated. Riverdance has been an international phenomenon for two decades. Flautist James Galway and the rock band U2 are known all over the world. Singer Sinéad O’Connor is famous enough for her behaviour on US chat shows to create international headlines. And traditional music is even more widely dispersed than the phenomenon of the Irish pub.

Composing the Island, the September 2016 festival of 27 concerts over 19 days, was a pretty hefty event by any measure. And it was not even designed to celebrate the full history of composition in Ireland, just the works of the last hundred years. There has been nothing quite like it before. Anywhere. Ever.
Yet the tradition of music it salutes has long had in Ireland a Cinderella-like position, an invisibility that can sometimes seem like the airbrushing or photoshopping into non-existence of a major art form.

Composers have felt the slight acutely. ‘I’m a Composer’—‘You’re a What?’ was the title Frank Corcoran gave an essay he contributed to The Crane Bag back in 1982. It was his way of explaining that Irish people simply didn’t see being a composer as a serious or full-time occupation.