Raymond Deane
Raymond Deane is an Irish composer.
Biography
Deane was born in Tuam, County Galway and brought up on Achill Island, County Mayo. From 1963 he lived in Dublin, where initially he studied the piano at the then College of Music with Fionn Ó Lochlainn. He studied at University College Dublin, graduating in 1974, and became a founding member of the Association of Young Irish Composers, a predecessor of today's . He won a number of awards as a pianist. In 1974, Deane won a scholarship to study with Gerald Bennett at the Musikakademie in Basle, Switzerland. He moved on to Cologne as a student of Mauricio Kagel but was persuaded to change to studying with Karlheinz Stockhausen, which Deane abandoned after six months "due to Stockhausen's lack of engagement with his students at this period". With a DAAD scholarship, Deane continued his studies with Isang Yun in Berlin.In the 1991 Accents Festival in Dublin, he was the featured composer, also at the 1999 Sligo New Music Festival. He represented Ireland in several ISCM festivals, and works were performed at the festivals l'Imaginaire irlandais, Voyages, Warsaw Autumn, and more than once at the UNESCO International Rostrum of Composers. He was also the artistic director of the first two RTÉ Living Music Festivals, showcasing the music of Luciano Berio and contemporary French music respectively. In 2010, a portrait concert of his chamber music took place at the Southbank Centre, London.
Deane was awarded a Doctorate in Composition by Maynooth University in 2005. He has been a member of Aosdána, the Irish state-supported academy of creative artists, since 1986.
Besides his music, Raymond Deane is known for his social commitment and human rights activism, particularly for the , which he co-founded in 2001, and the Irish Anti-War Movement. He cited early experiences of bullying in his childhood as a potential cause of this commitment: " I have internalised the certainty that this bullying was a defining factor in my personal growth, eventually leading to my sporadic activism on behalf of the downtrodden".
Deane has always been active as a writer of essays and critic on music, having published in Irish journals such as "In Dublin", "Soundpost", the "Journal of Music in Ireland" and in some academic books. In 1991, he published a mock-Gothic novel called Death of a Medium. He also wrote an autobiography, covering the years up to about 1987, which was published in 2014.
Music
Raymond Deane is "one of the most prominent figures in contemporary Irish composition". His work can be divided into three phases, one ending in 1974 before his studies abroad, the second ending in 1988 – a period he described as "a process of learning, assimilating and overcoming that assimilation – and the period since then, which has been described as a "re-gathering" Several works of his middle phase are consciously constructed in a technical manner to avoid the trend towards neo-romanticism that he perceived among many of his contemporaries. According to Fitzgerald, "Deane strives to achieve a dialectical drama without regressing to nineteenth-century norms of developmentalism. The result is a heterogeneous and impure dramatic discourse." Zuk wrote, "Even at first hearing, it is evident that his work is a product of a highly reflective mind, being for the most part intensely serious in tone, though shot through at times with an idiosyncratic humour and on other occasions pervaded by a distinct spirit of playfulness".Selected works
The following list is based on Zuk, p. 121-5; more recent ones from CMC profile.Operas
Orchestral
- Embers for string orchestra
- Enchaînement
- de/montage
- Thresholds
- Quaternion for piano and orchestra
- Krespel's Concerto for violin and orchestra
- Catenae
- Oboe Concerto
- Dekatriad
- Five Piece Suite for string orchestra
- Ripieno
- Violin Concerto
- Concursus for violin, viola and string orchestra
- Samara
- Hungarian Jewish Melodies for violin, viola, cello and string orchestra
- A Baroque Session for violin, viola, cello and string orchestra
- Embers for string quartet
- Lichtzwang for cello and piano
- Aprèsludes for flute, cello, clarinet, percussion, harp, viola, cello
- String Quartet I: Silhouettes
- Seachanges for piccolo, violin, cello, piano and percussion
- Catacombs for clarinet, violin, cello, piano
- Moresque for oboe and percussion
- Marche oublié for violin, cello, piano
- String Quartet II: Brown Studies
- Parthenia Violata for violin and piano
- Pentacle for violin and cello
- String Quartet III: Inter pares
- String Quartet IV: Equali
- Brève for viola solo
- Marthiya for violin, viola, cello
- Venthalia for flute/alto-fl/piccolo and piano
- Quadripartita for violin, viola, cello, double bass
- Danse de la terre for violin, viola, cello
- String Quartet V: Siberia
- String Quartet VI
- Orphica
- Linoi
- Piano Sonata No. 1
- Triarchia
- Piano Sonata No. 2
- Avatars
- Contretemps for 2 pianos
- After-Pieces
- Rahu's Rounds
- Siris
- Noctuary
- Legerdemain
- Tapestry XIII: The Walling of Ros
- Raccordement
- Tristia for soprano and ensemble
- Archair for soprano and ensemble
- ...e mi sovvien l'eterno... for mixed choir
- November Songs for mezzo and ensemble
- ...una musica riposa for mezzo, oboe, cello, piano
- Two Songs for Paris for mezzo, viola and piano
- So Quiet Now... for soprano, viola and piano
- Voices, Receding for soprano and piano
- Galar an ghrá for baritone and piano
- Death of a Medium
Recordings
- Avatars, Jimmy Vaughan, on: Goasco GXX003-4.
- Dekatriad, Irish Chamber Orchestra, Fionnuala Hunt, on: Black Box Music BBM 1013.
- Quaternion, Krespel's Concerto, Oboe Concerto, National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland, Colman Pearce, on: .
- After-Pieces, Seachanges and Catacombs, Marche oublié, String Quartet II: Brown Studies on: Black Box Music BBM 1014.
- Ripieno, Violin Concerto, Samara, RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, Gerhard Markson, on: .
- Apostille, David Adams, on: .
- Five Piece Suite, Young European Strings Chamber Orchestra, Ronald Masin, on: .
- Noctuary Books I and II, Hugh Tinney, on: and .
- Embers, performed by RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, Gerhard Markson, on: .