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Philip Sawyers (born 20 June 1951) is a British composer of orchestral and chamber music, including four symphonies.

Sawyers was born in London. He began composing as a teenager, studying at Dartington College of Arts in Devon with Colin Sauer (violin) and Helen Glatz (composition). His studies continued at the Guildhall School of Music where his teachers were Joan Spencer and Max Rostal (violin), and Buxton Orr, Patric Standford and Edmund Rubbra (composition).[1]

A career as an orchestral violinist, starting in 1973 with the Royal Opera House Orchestra, Covent Garden, left little room for composition. During this time Sawyers was also teaching, primarily as the violin coach for the Kent County Youth Orchestra, and as a visiting teacher at schools and colleges. This lasted until 1997, when he opted to spend a year in postgraduate study at Goldsmiths College, leading to a resumption in composition. From 2000-2013 he was an examiner for the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music.[1]


Music


Sawyers mostly favours traditional forms and absolute music with few programmatic overtones.[2] The composer has said he felt that his largely tonal music, influenced by Hindemith, was "distinctly out of fashion" during the last three decades of the twentieth century.[3] His first works date from his time as a student in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but he received little attention as a composer until 2001 when one of those student pieces, the Symphonic Music for Strings and Brass (1972), was taken up and performed by the Grand Rapids Symphony Orchestra in the USA.[3] The orchestra went on to record the piece alongside the Symphony No 1 (2004), released internationally in 2011.[4] Commissions and further performances followed.

Sawyers has benefited from his association with the Nimbus Alliance record label and the American conductor Kenneth Woods, resulting in recordings of many of his recent orchestral works and concertos.[5] After recording the one movement Second Symphony, Woods and the English Symphony Orchestra commissioned the Third in 2016. Like the First Symphony, the Third is a full-scale, four movement work. It was premiered at St John's Smith Square in London on 28 February 2017.[6] Recordings of Hommage to Kandinsky (2013) and the Fourth Symphony (2017) were released in June 2020.[7]

The hour-long oratorio Mayflower on the Sea of Time, libretto by Philip Groom had been scheduled to receive its premiere performance on 25 April 2020 at Worcester Cathedral, with a repeat in July 2020 at the Three Choirs Festival,[8] but the April performance was cancelled due to coronavirus. The Symphony No 5 was premiered on 28 August 2021 at the MahlerFest in Colorado.[9]

Orchestral

Concertante

Chamber

Instrumental

Vocal and choral


References


  1. "Philip Sawyers – Composer – Composer". Philipsawyers.co.uk. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  2. "SAWYERS Symphony 1 - Nimbus NI6129 [JF] Classical Music Reviews: August 2014". Musicweb-international.com. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  3. "Philip Sawyers Interview". Compositiontoday.com. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  4. "Grand Rapids Symphony Bio 580 words". Kathrynkingmedia.com. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  5. "Products". Chandos.net. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  6. "Concert on 28 February 2017 - St John's Smith Square, London - Philip Sawyers: Birth of a Symphony, with the English Symphony Orchestra". Concert-diary.com. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  7. "Philip Sawyers – Symphony No. 4, Hommage to Kandinsky (NIMBUS) | Kenneth Woods - conductor". Kennethwoods.net. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  8. Composer's website
  9. Composer's website





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