Jonathan Little (composer)
Jonathan Little |
|
Born |
Melbourne, Australia |
Nationality |
Australian |
Occupation |
Composer |
Jonathan David Little (born Melbourne, Australia, in 1965) is a composer, academic and writer based in the UK, working mainly in the “contemporary classical” genre. In 2009 he became the first composer to receive a Professional Development Award from the UK Music Business’s own charity, the Musicians' Benevolent Fund,[1] and since 2005 he has received annual ASCAPlus Awards for Concert Music, five “Masterworks” Recording Prizes (US), and in 2008 his first major album release was voted one of the top recordings of the year by US Fanfare magazine (“The Want List 2008”).[2] He was subsequently featured in a major news article in Musical Opinion in early 2009.[3] As a composer, he first came to prominence in America in 2006 when The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers ran an article on him having five of his works accepted for recording (2004–07) by the US-headquartered French contemporary music label ERM (Editions de la Rue Margot), aimed at showcasing international contemporary composers.[4]
Music and background
Little’s music is notable for its "beauty, intensity and richness of material".[5] He studied Composition and Performance at the University of Melbourne, where he won the Lady Turner Exhibition for overall excellence. He holds the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in music for his research at Monash University into the development of "exotic" 19th- and 20th-century orchestration, and has written and broadcast extensively on this, and related topics, often in the context of wider cultural history and related art forms.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12]
In 2008, the first compilation album of his music was released on Dilute Recordings (UK) to universal critical praise. Entitled Terpsichore and Other Works, it first drew plaudits from Cambridge University Press’s new music journal, Tempo, which described the title orchestral work as a “ground-breaking tour de force … incandescent”,[13] while, in America, Fanfare magazine admired its “music of tremendous power … [and] astonishing range of colors and moods”.[14] American critic and recording historian Lynn René Bayley ranked the album second amongst her Top 5 worldwide releases for the year (in Fanfare's "Want List 2008"), applauding “a major new, original and quite brilliant classical voice”.[15] Terpsichore is one of a series of epic orchestral tone pictures on the theme of the legendary “Nine Muses” – and the complete series remains a monumental work-in-progress.[16]
Jonathan Little works in a variety of genres, including large-scale choral, string and symphonic works. Recordings have been supported by the Foundation for New Music (US), the Kenneth Leighton Trust (UK) and ASCAP (US). A second major disc (released in early 2012), entitled Polyhymnia (The Muse of Sacred Poetry), appeared on the Navona label of PARMA Recordings (US), supported by ASCAP and the Musicians Benevolent Fund.[17]. Little was also awarded a PRS For Music Foundation/ Bliss Trust Composer Bursary in 2012, to help support composition of Erato in his "Nine Muses" series. A member of the Los Angeles chapter of The Recording Academy, and of Grammy 365, Little’s performing rights are assigned to ASCAP.
Career and writings
Jonathan Little has also pursued an academic and writing career. He was appointed Senior Lecturer at Buckinghamshire New University in 1999 on their innovative Music Industry Management course (the first such degree course in Europe) – where he specialised in the workings of the British and international recording industry, and taught songwriting analysis. In 2001, he became Principal of the Academy of Contemporary Music in Guildford, England – Europe’s largest specialist academy for students of contemporary music, and the first music education establishment to win the Queen's Award for Enterprise (Innovation category).[18] Having acted as a Curriculum Consultant to the Brighton Institute of Modern Music, and Visiting Lecturer in Media Music Composition at the University of Surrey, Little is now Senior Lecturer in Music at the University of Chichester (since 2006).
An authority on aspects of composition, orchestration and songwriting, Little is listed in the Music Publishers Association (UK) Register of Expert Musicologists. In 2005, he was appointed Consultant Editor to A&C Black’s flagship volume of musical reference, the Musicians’ and Songwriters’ Yearbook,[19] and he has contributed articles on the future of music to the Hudson Institute's American Outlook magazine,[20][21][22] and the British Academy’s Heart & Soul: Revealing the Craft of Songwriting (published by Sanctuary to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Ivor Novello Awards).[23] His writings on the future of the music industry initially stemmed from an important report surveying the first European digital distribution conference in 2000,[24] and subsequently with Scottish music industry analyst JoJo Gould, he co-founded and edited Music Business Journal (ISSN 1473-6233) – which in the early 2000s was the world’s leading online music business journal.
Little has written two major academic studies on musical orientalism and exotic orchestration for Edwin Mellen Press: The Influence of European Literary and Artistic Representations of the 'Orient' on Western Orchestral Compositions, ca.1840-1920: From Oriental Inspiration to 'Exotic' Orchestration,[25] together with its companion volume, Literary Sources of Nineteenth-Century Musical Orientalism: The Hypnotic Spell of the Exotic on Music of the Romantic Period. (This definitive 900-page, two-volume study won an Authors' Foundation/Royal Literary Fund Award for 2011.) Other notable writings are his Theory and Practice of Songwriting (otherwise Practical Songwriting) for Robert Hale Ltd, and On Musical Composition for Wirripang – Australia’s leading independent fine music publisher, and issuer of many of Jonathan’s compositions in score format.[26]
The National Library of Australia holds copies of Little's selected verse, and all his published musical works.
Media
Selected recorded music reviews
Principal works (published)
Musical scores
Symphonic and String Orchestra Works
- Terpsichore: “The Whirler” or Muse of Dance, Op.7 (from The Nine Muses, No.7) (Dance Poem for Large Orchestra), c.15’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2006) ISMN M720072234. ASCAP Registered.
- Polyhymnia: “She of Many Hymns” or Muse of Sacred Poetry, Op.10 (from The Nine Muses, No.6) (Lamentation for String Orchestra), c.21’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2010) ISMN 9790720101989. ASCAP Registered.
Chamber and Instrumental Music
- Sacred Prelude, Op.1 (string quintet), c.11’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2006) ISMN M720060255. ASCAP Registered.
- Themes on a Variation, Op.3 (brass & percussion), c.14’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2007) ISMN M720060101. ASCAP Registered.
- Fanfare, Op.3a (brass & percussion), c.1’30 (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2006) ISMN M720041711. ASCAP Registered.
- Duo Sonata on Elizabethan Themes, in 4 mvnts, Op.4 (2 percussion soloists), ca.21’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2006) ISMN M720072166. ASCAP Registered.
- The Feast of Kings and Martyrs, Op.8 (dual for 2 percussionists), ca.5’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2007) ISMN M720060705. ASCAP Registered.
Choral and Vocal Music
- Basque Lullaby, Op.1a (voice and piano), c.2’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2005) ISMN M720060187. ASCAP Registered.
- That Time of Year, Op.2 (a cappella SATBarB soloists), c.5’ (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2006) ISMN M720041728. ASCAP Registered.
- Kyrie, Op.5 from Missa Temporis Perditi (a cappella SATB double choir and soloists), c.5' (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2005) ISMN M720007908. ASCAP Registered.
- Wasted and Worn, Op.6 (part song for a cappella SSAATTBB soloists or choir), c.6' (publication pending) *Recordare Domine (On Ixion’s Wheel), Op.9 (a cappella SSSSAAAATTTTBBBB choir), c.21' (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2010) ISMN 9790720101972. ASCAP Registered.
Major recordings
- Terpsichore and Other Works [CD]: Tallis Chamber Choir / Philip Simms; String soloists of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra; Vocal soloists of the Sofia National Opera; Cardiff Percussion Duo; Kiev Philharmonic Orchestra (and principal soloists) / Robert Ian Winstin. Dilute Recordings, UK (Jan. 2008). Cat. No. DIL 07-002. Recording supported by the Kenneth Leighton Trust (UK), Foundation for New Music (US) and ASCAPlus Programme (US). A Record of the Year in FANFARE magazine (“Want List 2008”)
- Polyhymnia [CD]: Strings of the Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra (and principal soloists) / Petr Vronsky; Kiev Philharmonic Orchestra (and principal soloists); String soloists of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra / Robert Ian Winstin; Tallis Chamber Choir / Philip Simms; Navona (a fine music label of PARMA Recordings), US (Dec. 2011). Cat. No. pending. Recording supported by the ASCAPlus Programme (US), the University of Chichester (UK), and the Musicians Benevolent Fund (UK).
Writings
Doctoral Dissertation
- Sources of Nineteenth-Century Musical Orientalism, or, From "Oriental" Inspiration to Exotic Orchestration: The Extra-Musical Stimuli behind Composers' Attempts to Achieve "Exotic" Programmatic Effects in Orchestral Music, ca. 1840-1920. Ph.D., Music, Monash University, 1995. 560pp. [170,000 words] illus., tbls., mus. exs., works lst., discog., bibliog. DDM Code: 61orLitJ; DA no.: RILM no.: 95:4810dd
Books (monographs)
- The Influence of European Literary and Artistic Representations of the ‘Orient’ on Western Orchestral Compositions, ca. 1840-1920: From Oriental Inspiration to ‘Exotic’ Orchestration [110,000 words; 45 plates; line drawings + mus. exx.] (Lewiston, NY, US; Queenston, Canada; Lampeter, Wales: Edwin Mellen Press, 5th Nov. 2010). Foreword by Associate Professor Craig De Wilde (University of Singapore). ISBN 10: 0-7734-1426-6 ISBN 13: 978-0-7734-1426-6; 492pp. First reviewed in Tempo (Cambridge University Press, UK), Vol.67: No.257 (July 2011), ISSN: 0040-2982; EISSN: 1478-2286
- Literary Sources of Nineteenth-Century Musical Orientalism: The Hypnotic Spell of the Exotic on Music of the Romantic Period [80,000 words; 81 plates; line drawings + mus. exx.] (Lewiston, NY, US; Queenston, Canada; Lampeter, Wales: Edwin Mellen Press, July 2011). Foreword by Emeritus Professor Dolores M. Hsu (University of California, Santa Barbara). ISBN 10: pending ISBN 13: pending; 420pp.The Authors’ Foundation/Royal Literary Fund Award 2011 for this definitive two-volume, 900-page study of Orientalism in music and literature.
- A General Chronology of Nineteenth-Century European Musical and Literary Orientalism, 1798-1869 [Part 1] [70,000 words] (Lewiston, NY, USA; Queenston, Canada; Lampeter, Wales: Edwin Mellen Press, 2013). ISBN 10: pending ISBN 13: pending; ca.300pp. Contracted and forthcoming.
- A General Chronology of Nineteenth-Century European Musical and Literary Orientalism, 1870-1930 [Part 2] (Lewiston, NY, USA; Queenston, Canada; Lampeter, Wales: Edwin Mellen Press, 2013). ISBN 10: pending ISBN 13: pending; ca.300pp. Contracted and forthcoming.
- Practical Songwriting [70,000 words] (London: Robert Hale, 2011). ISBN pending; contracted and forthcoming.
- On Musical Composition: A Philosophy and Approach to Early 21st-Century Concert Music Composition [30,000 words] (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2012). ISBN pending; contracted and forthcoming.
Books (edited)
- The Musicians’ and Songwriters’ Yearbook 2007 (including chapter introductions and various essays) (London: Adam & Charles Black, 2006). With a Foreword by Peter Reichardt, former Chairman and CEO of EMI Music Publishing. ISBN 10: 0-7136-7531-4.
- The Musicians’ and Songwriters’ Yearbook 2008 (including chapter introductions and various essays) (London: A&C Black, 2007). With a Foreword by John Kennedy, OBE, former President of Universal Music International, and Chairman of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. ISBN 10: 0-7136-8472-0.
Chapters in Books
- “The Complete Songwriter/Producer”, invited chapter in Heart & Soul: Revealing the Craft of Songwriting, ed. Chris Bradford (London: Sanctuary Publishing, 2005)] ISBN 10: 1-8607-4641-1. Published in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Ivor Novello Awards, being an Official Guide to Songwriting, commissioned by the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters.
Articles – academic and general
- “Nostalgia, Exoticism and Brilliant Colour”, Arts Rondo (Melbourne) (Winter, 1992).
- “Orientalism” (An abbreviated version of the article “Orientalism: Counterpart of the Gothic in Nineteenth-Century Artistic Inspiration”),Udolpho, vol.26 (Autumn, 1996), 14-17. ISSN 1350-7796.
- “On Western Travellers who described and drew inspiration from "Eastern" instruments and music, ca.1830s-1850s”, FoMRHI Quarterly, no.98 (January, 2000), 41-45, Comm.1690. [FoMRHI Quarterly was the Journal of the Fellowship of Makers and Researchers of Historic Instruments.]
- “Musical Instruments Evocative of the Ancient Orient”, FoMRHI Quarterly, no.99 (April, 2000), 21-30, Comm.1707.
- “Oriental Colour and Atmosphere: Why Exotic Colour became Prominent in 19th- and early 20th-Century Orchestration”, FoMRHI Quarterly, no.102 (January, 2001), 23-28, Comm.1745.
- “Exoticism Globalised: The Forgotten Roots of World Music”, in Music Business Journal (April–June, 2001).
Articles – business and technology
- Digital Distribution and the Music Industry : Summary of the Proceedings of the First European Conference on Digital Distribution and the Music Industry, London, 22–23 May 2000, 14pp. (High Wycombe: Buckinghamshire University College, 2000).
- “History of Copyright – a Chronology in Relation to Music”, Music Business Journal, Jan. 2001. ISSN 1473-6233.
- “Celestial Cinema”; or, “From Celluloid to Silicon: eCinema, Cyberentertainment and the Napsterization of Hollywood”, American Outlook, Vol.IV, No.4 (July/Aug, 2001), 28-33. [A summary of the implications of digital distribution for the world-wide film, music and games industries] ISSN 1099-8896. Research commissioned by the Hudson Institute. (Featured cover article: “Hollywood Napstered”.)
- “Celestial Jukebox”, American Outlook (Jan/Feb, 2001), 42-44. [A summary of the implications of new music technology] ISSN 1099-8896. Research commissioned by the Hudson Institute.
- “The Sound of Money”, American Outlook, Vol.V, No.3 (Summer, 2002), 41-45. [On the tendency of the global music industry to work against its own interests, by encouraging the mass production of bigger – but blander – popular songs] ISSN 1099-8896. Final in a series commissioned by the Hudson Institute.
Radio Programmes
- “Cultural Years: Music, the Arts and Society at the time of the Great International Exhibitions, 1851-1937”, being a series of seven x (average) 90 min. radio programmes [totalling 120,000 words], written and presented for 3MBS-FM Fine Music Radio (Melbourne), and broadcast fortnightly from 1 April 1990 – with an introductory article in Libretto (April, 1990), p. 7.
Public Lectures
- “The Work of a Composer”, for the Funtington Music Society (The Chapel, University of Chichester, 27th Oct., 2010). Reviewed in the Chichester Observer (11th Nov., 2010), p. 35.
Verse, Essays and Belles-Lettres
- “The Curse of Limock Park”, in The Civil Service Author, no.142 (Oct/Nov 1998) pp. 10–14. ISSN 0959-0064.
- Antique Sonnets, First Series (Malvern, UK: Tillet Press, 2000).
- Antique Sonnets, Second Series (Malvern, UK: Tillet Press, 2003).
- Two Lyrics (Malvern, UK: Tillet Press, 2005).
- Forms and Possibilities: Selected Verse (1983–2002), with an Essay on Melancholia, “The Muse of Bile” – An Appreciation and A Defence of the Artist’s Temperament (Wollongong, Australia: Wirripang, 2011). ISBN 13: 978-1-8768-2923-0
Other publications and roles
- MANAGING EDITORSHIP, Music Business Journal (2001–2006) ISSN 1473-6233 (co-founder).
- SERIES EDITORSHIP, The Academy Popular Music Tuition Series (36 vols.) (ca.11,000 pages) (Academy Music Services UK, 2003–2005; now updated annually) (original commissioner).
- CONSULTANT EDITORSHIP, The Musicians’ and Songwriters’ Yearbook (2007 and 2008 edns.) (London: Adam & Charles Black) (founder).
References
- ^ “Jonathan Little’s Story”, article on Musicians Benevolent Fund (UK) website [online], May 2010. MBF (UK) 2010 Story - Jonathan Little, http://www.helpmusicians.org.uk/help_you/professionals/professional_development/jonathan_littles_story.aspx
- ^ See reviews in Fanfare (US), Vol.31: No.5 (May–June 2008), pp.179-180 and Fanfare (US), Vol.32: No.2 (Nov-Dec 2008), p.77
- ^ See Musical Opinion (UK), No.1468 (Jan-Feb 2009), p.7.
- ^ “A British composer makes a big wave in the concert music world”, in ASCAP (US) Playback magazine, Summer 2006.[online]First major ASCAP (US) 2006 Story http://www.ascap.com/playback/2006/summer/faces_places/london/jonathanlittle.html
- ^ See biography and works list at: http://www.australiancomposers.com.au/
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Cultural Years: Music, the Arts and Society at the time of the Great International Exhibitions, 1851-1937”, being a series of seven x (average) 90min. radio programmes, written and presented for 3MBS-FM Fine Music Radio (Melbourne), and broadcast fortnightly from 1st April, 1990 – with an introductory article in Libretto (April, 1990), p.7.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Nostalgia, Exoticism and Brilliant Colour”, Arts Rondo (Melbourne Winter, 1992).
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Orientalism” (An abbreviated version of the article “Orientalism: Counterpart of the Gothic in Nineteenth-Century Artistic Inspiration”), Udolpho, vol.26 (Autumn, 1996), 14-17.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “On Western Travellers who described and drew inspiration from "Eastern" instruments and music, ca.1830s-1850s”, FoMRHI Quarterly, no.98 (January, 2000), 41-45, Comm.1690.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Musical Instruments Evocative of the Ancient Orient”, FoMRHI Quarterly, no.99 (April, 2000), 21-30, Comm.1707.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Oriental Colour and Atmosphere: Why Exotic Colour became Prominent in 19th- and early 20th-Century Orchestration”, FoMRHI Quarterly, no.102 (January, 2001), 23-28, Comm.1745.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Exoticism Globalised: The Forgotten Roots of World Music”, in Music Business Journal (April–June, 2001).
- ^ Wheatley, John, “Jonathan Little: Terpsichore and other Works” [CD Review], in Tempo (UK), Vol.62: No.243 (Jan. 2008), pp.88-89.
- ^ “Little, Jonathan: Terpsichore and Other Works” [CD Review] in Fanfare (US), Vol.31: No.5 (May–June 2008), pp.179-180.
- ^ See “Lynn René Bailey: The Want List 2008”, in Fanfare (US), Vol.32: No.2 (Nov-Dec 2008), p.77.
- ^ See Wheatley, John, “Jonathan Little: Polyhymnia” [CD Review], in Tempo (UK), Vol.64: No.253 (July 2010).
- ^ See “Jonathan Little’s Story”, article on Musicians Benevolent Fund (UK) website re Professional Development Award [online], May 2010. MBF (UK) 2010 Story - Jonathan Little http://www.helpmusicians.org.uk/help_you/professionals/professional_development/jonathan_littles_story.aspx
- ^ See:http://www.acm.ac.uk
- ^ Little, Jonathan and Katie Chatburn, eds, The Musicians and Songwriters Yearbook 2008 (London: A&C Black, 2008). http://www.amazon.co.uk/Musicians-Songwriters-Yearbook-2008-Essential/dp/0713684720
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Celestial Jukebox”, in American Outlook (Jan/Feb, 2001), 42-44.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “Celestial Cinema; or, From Celluloid to Silicon: eCinema, Cyberentertainment and the Napsterization of Hollywood”, in American Outlook, Vol.IV, No.4 (July/Aug, 2001), 28-33.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “The Sound of Money”, in American Outlook, Vol.V, No.3 (Summer, 2002), 41-45.
- ^ Little, Jonathan, “The Complete Songwriter/Producer”, in Heart and Soul: Revealing the Art of Songwriting, ed. Chris Bradford (London: Sanctuary Publishing, 2005).
- ^ Little, Jonathan, Digital Distribution and the Music Industry. Summary of the Proceedings of the First European Conference on Digital Distribution and the Music Industry, London, 22–23 May 2000, 14pp. (High Wycombe: Buckinghamshire University College, 2000).
- ^ First reviewed by John Wheatley in Tempo, Vol. 65, No.257 (July 2011) (Cambridge University Press,UK), pp.92-3.
- ^ See biography and works list at: http://www.australiancomposers.com.au/
External links
Persondata |
Name |
Little, Jonathan |
Alternative names |
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Short description |
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Date of birth |
1965 |
Place of birth |
Melbourne, Australia |
Date of death |
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Place of death |
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