Saxophonist Trish Clowes has been described as “one of the
most agile and original jugglers of improv and adventurous composition to have
appeared in the UK in recent times” (John Fordham, the Guardian). A BASCA
British Composer Award winner and former BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist,
Clowes has received critical acclaim for all four of her releases for Basho
Records.
Her My Iris quartet – with Chris Montague on guitar, Ross
Stanley on piano and Hammond organ and James Maddren on drums – has been hailed
as “the jazz of the future” (Augsburger Allgemaine). The band have toured and
performed in the UK, Ireland and Germany, including appearances at the Barbican
(EFG London Jazz Festival), the National Opera House (Wexford), Gateshead
International Jazz Festival, Turner Sims, Women in (e)motion Festival and the
Stadthaus Ulm. They have also recorded broadcasts
for BBC Radio 3 and Radio Bremen. Their 2017 album, also called ‘My Iris’,
received plaudits and acclaim from jazz critics. Dave Gelly of The Observer
wrote that ‘with just four players, the variety of tone colour is remarkable’
and Cormac Larkin in The Irish Times suggested that “(My Iris) represents the
front rank of the new generation of UK jazz.” My Iris will release a brand new
album in May 2019.
Born on May 11th 1984, Clowes was raised in Shrewsbury,
Shropshire and moved to London in 2003 to study at the Royal Academy of Music, notably
with saxophonist Iain Ballamy and composer Pete Churchill. Clowes was later
honoured as an Associate of the Royal Academy of Music (2013). She formed her
first group ‘Tangent’ following a development award from the Musicians
Benevolent Fund (now Help Musicians UK) in 2008. Clowes’ first album ‘Tangent’
in 2010 featured this band, special guest pianist Gwilym Simcock and an
orchestra conducted by Jules Buckley and was noted for its “promise – and
ambitious vision” (Guardian). Her second album ‘and in the night-time she is
there’ (2012) featured an improvising string quartet led by Thomas Gould and
Clowes recorded her “highly individual” (Schweiz am Sonntag) third album
‘Pocket Compass’ (2014) while a BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist, working with
the BBC Concert Orchestra on three tracks.
Clowes has been commissioned by BBC Radio 3 on two occasions
to write for the BBC Concert Orchestra. The first commission, ‘The Fox, the
Parakeet and the Chestnut’, was premiered at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in 2014,
featuring a quintet with Gwilym Simcock, Mike Walker, Calum Gourlay and James
Maddren. The piece went on to win Clowes a BASCA British Composer Award in
2015. Clowes premiered her most recent commission, entitled ‘Loujean and Lucy’,
at the Royal Festival Hall in November 2017 as part of the EFG London Jazz
Festival – this time featuring just two soloists, Clowes and pianist Ross
Stanley. The piece celebrates the story of two women brought together through
the Homes for Syrians initiative. During the same concert Clowes and Stanley
made use of the hall’s famous organ, performing a duo version of Clowes’ ‘A cat
called Behemoth’ (inspired by a character in Bulgakov’s The Master and
Margarita).
Alongside her work as a performer and composer Clowes has
been curating her own new music project Emulsion since 2012, which she now
organises with saxophonist Tom Harrison. Emulsion has hosted various events and
festivals in London, Birmingham, Shrewsbury and at Cheltenham Music Festival,
receiving coverage on BBC Radio 3 along the way, and to date has commissioned
seventeen new works. Featured collaborators include ECM artists Food (Iain
Ballamy and Thomas Strønen), pianist-composers Nikki Iles and Robert Mitchell
and composers Joe Cutler and Cevanne Horrocks-Hopayian. Over the years the
project has received funding from PRS for Music Foundation, Arts Council
England, Musikfondene (Norway), Jerwood Charitable Foundation, Birmingham City
University and its own Kickstarter backers.
Other significant achievements include a television
appearance as part of BBC Proms Extra, a songs project called Under Your Wing
with vocalist Norma Winstone and guitarist Mike Walker (broadcast on BBC Radio
3, 2014), solo appearances with BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra (Celtic
Connections 2014) and Northern Sinfonia, a debut at Wigmore Hall (2015) with
the Heath Quartet and Gwilym Simcock and commissions for Onyx Brass and London
Sinfonietta.
After an inspirational experience at the Banff International
Jazz Workshop (2015, curated by Vijay Iyer), Clowes decided to research
Emulsion’s potential as an immersive performance space and is currently a PhD
candidate at the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire with a STEAM Scholarship. Her
supervisory team includes Dr Nicholas Gebhardt, Dr Joe Cutler, Dr Tony Whyton,
Dr Vijay Iyer and Fiona Talkington.
The work of a musician goes beyond the stage and Clowes is
passionate about her roles as professor at the Guildhall School of Music and
Drama and ambassador for the charity Donate4Refugees.
Website - http://trishclowes.com/
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