Hannah Kendall (born 1984 in London) is a British composer currently based in New York.[1]
Kendall grew up in Wembley, where her mother is the head teacher in a primary school.[1] One of two children, her parents are originally from Guyana. Her grandfather was a jazz musician and her family stimulated her interest in the creative arts.[1] Kendall attended the University of Exeter where she majored in vocal studies and composition, studying with Joe Duddell. She also gained a Masters at the Royal College of Music, studying with Kenneth Hesketh, as well as arts management at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama.[2]
In 2015, Kendall was noted as one of the "brilliant female composers under the age of 35".[3] She featured on BBC Radio 3's Composer of the Week.[4] All five composers of the week were women and this was part of Radio 3's International Women's Day celebrations, which were highlighted in The Guardian.[5] Also in 2015 Kendall won a 'Women of the Future Award' in the Arts and Culture category.[6]
Her one-man chamber opera The Knife of Dawn, with a libretto by Tessa McWatt and based on the incarceration of political activist Martin Carter in the then British Guiana in 1953 was premiered in 2016 at the Roundhouse.[7][8]
Her piece The Spark Catchers premiered at the BBC Proms in August 2017 and is inspired by the work of poet Lemn Sissay.[1] The performance was released on CD by NMC in January 2020.[9] Kendall returned to the Proms for the delayed first night of live music (due to the pandemic) on 28 August 2020 with the world premiere of Tuxedo: Vasco 'de' Gama for orchestra, inspired by the work of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat.[10]
Kendall has worked for both the Barbican and London Music Masters charity in arts management roles.[1] She is currently on the DMA (Doctor of Musical Arts) programme at Columbia University in New York as Dean's Fellow.[9]
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