Tim Souster

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Tim Souster (29 January 1943March 1, 1994) was a British composer best known for his electronic music output.

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[edit] Background

Born Timothy Andrew James Souster in Bletchley, Milton Keynes, Souster was educated at Bedford Modern School (from 1952 through 1961) and New College, Oxford (from 1961 through 1964). His teachers included Bernard Rose, Sir David Lumsden and Egon Wellesz. In 1964, he attended summer courses at Darmstadt taught by Karlheinz Stockhausen, and took composition lessons with Richard Rodney Bennett the following year.

Before the end of 1965, Souster was a producer with the BBC Third Programme, and put on many performances of contemporary music by composers such as Boulez, Berio, Barraqué, Cardew, Feldman, Henze and Stockhausen. After leaving the BBC in 1967, he began to devote more time to composing and songwriting.

[edit] Foray in electronic music

In the late 1960s Souster began experimenting with electronics. His first acknowledged composition involving electronic techniques was Titus Groan Music (1969) for wind quintet, ring modulator, amplifiers and tape. In August of the same year he moved to King's College, Cambridge and formed a live-electronic group with Roger Smalley, Andrew Powell and Robin Thompson called Intermodulation. As well as compositions by Souster and Smalley, the group performed contemporary music by Cardew, Riley, Rzewski, Stockhausen and Wolff.

[edit] Later years

In 1971, Souster became a teaching assistant to Stockhausen in Cologne, and in 1973 he moved to Berlin. He remained in Germany for two more years, subsequently returning to England, where he resided there for the rest of his life (save a 1978 six-month stint in California). In the 1980s and 1990s he wrote music for film and television, including music for the BBC TV adaptation of The Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy, including the main theme, which was a re-arrangement of Journey of the Sorcerer by The Eagles. In this time he also composed a large amount of concert music.

His last completed work was La marche (1993), a brass quintet.

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