Dave Smith is an English composer, arranger and musical performer. Since 1971 he has been associated with the English school of experimental music.
Life and career
After attending Solihull School, he read music at Magdalene College, Cambridge. In the 1970s, Smith was a member of the Scratch Orchestra and a participant in several composer/performer ensembles. The first of these was a keyboard duo with John Lewis which played minimalist and systemic works by British and American composers as well as by themselves. Several concerts with Michael Parsons and Howard Skempton featured at this time, as did a short-lived five-piano group and an involvement with the People's Liberation Music group of Laurie Scott Baker, Cornelius Cardew and others. From 1977 he played in John White's Garden Furniture Music Ensemble alongside Mason and Gavin Bryars: his close association with the music of White, Bryars and Cardew has continued ever since. In the 1980s he was a founder-member of the English Gamelan Orchestra and Liria, the first British groups to specialise in, respectively, Javanese classical and Albanian folk musics. Up to 1977 his music was largely minimalist. His style quickly developed into a highly eclectic pool of ideas ranging musically from the abstract to the markedly referential and which on occasion is informed by a political consciousness and commitment reminiscent of the later Cardew. His acknowledged influences range from Alkan, Ives and Szymanowski to Albanian folk music, Duke Ellington, Tom Dissevelt and those with whom he has worked. The range of ideas is most clearly chronicled in a series of recital-length solo Piano Concerts, works which encompass an entire concert with varieties of styles. Many of his piano works have been encouraged and performed by John Tilbury. Smith has taught at Finchley Catholic High School, Kingsway-Princeton College and De Montfort University and currently lectures in music at the University of Hertfordshire. His work with students has resulted in a large number of arrangements, particularly for tuned percussion groups, as well as performing versions of Grainger's Random Round, Reich's Music for 18 Musicians and several works by Carla Bley. Other arrangements include a solo piano version of Holst's The Planets and reductions for violin and piano of a number of Albanian works for violin and orchestra. He is an active member of CoMA for whom he has composed works for large, flexible ensembles such as Murdoch or Fred West – which is best? Reconsidered, and Whiskies of Islay.
Selected works
Continuum for at least two pianos
Swings for two pianos
Diabolus maximus for five pianos
Diabolus apocalypsis for 2 electric organs, piano and electric piano
Moderation in nothing for sopranino recorder/electric piano, ocarina/guitar, wine glasses/bell/voice and electric organ/cymbals
2nd piano concert – "Ireland one and Ireland free" : includes Ireland one and Ireland free, I fought a monster today, Michael Collins amongst the mapmakers and The Armagh women
3rd piano concert : includes Toccantella, Al contrario and Guaracha
4th piano concert : includes African mosaic
5th piano concert – "Alla reminiscenza" : 1 movement
6th piano concert : includes Ogives 1, 2 + 3 and Beyond the Park
7th piano concert : includes Inter alia, Zytnia and Number seven's done a runner
8th piano concert : includes ABC, Nails and Frivolous and vexatious
9th piano concert : 3 movements – On the virtues of flowers, On the virtues of forests and On the virtues of wild birds
10th piano concert – "75 one-minute pieces"
11th piano concert : includes ... and with thy daring folly burn the world, In support of the Intifada and 3 Kerala song arrangements
12th piano concert : includes The myth of Sisyphus
Publications
Smith, Dave, “Following a straight line: La Monte Young”, Contact, 18, winter 1977–8; republished in the Journal of Experimental Music Studies at: http://www.experimentalmusic.co.uk/emc/Jems_files/Smithyoung.pdf
Smith, Dave, “The Piano Sonatas of John White”, Contact, 21, autumn 1980; republished in the Journal of Experimental Music Studies at: http://www.experimentalmusic.co.uk/emc/Jems_files/Smithwhite.pdf
Smith, Dave, “Albus Liber: Exploits and Opinions of John White, Composer Volume I”, Atlas Press, 2014.