- Source: John Mackey (composer)
John Mackey (born October 1, 1973) is an American composer of contemporary classical music, with an emphasis on music for wind band, as well as orchestra. For several years, he focused on music for modern dance and ballet.
Biography
John Mackey was born in New Philadelphia, Ohio and grew up in Westerville, Ohio, where he attended Westerville South High School. Though musicians themselves, Mackey's parents did not provide him with music lessons, and he never formally studied an instrument. His grandfather, however, taught him to read music and introduced him to digital music notation. Through experimentation with programs intended for entertainment rather than education, Mackey began to compose his own music. He wrote his first piece, Lacrimosa, at age 11, after being inspired by the film Amadeus. As a young composer, he took some lessons from one of his mother's friends, who had a Ph.D. in music.
Mackey received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1995 from the Cleveland Institute of Music, where he studied with Donald Erb. He then studied with John Corigliano at Juilliard, receiving a Master of Music degree in 1997. Mackey has stated his support for these institutions' policies of not requiring composers to perform an instrumental audition, as many composers, like himself, do not play an instrument. On this subject, Mackey has said, "There are obviously ways to compose music without playing a formal instrument."
Mackey lived in New York City from 1995 to 2005, where he collaborated frequently with choreographers such as David Parsons, Robert Battle, and Igal Perry. Mackey moved to Los Angeles in 2005. In April 2008, he announced on his blog his intention to move to Austin, Texas, explaining that much of his income is a result of commissions and other appearances in the Texas area. Then in March 2011, Mackey posted a blog to announce his move to Cambridge, Massachusetts in order for his wife to attend graduate school. In 2019, he moved with his wife to San Francisco, California, where he currently resides.
Concert band
Mackey's first professional work was writing for dance companies. However, after attending the College Band Directors National Association conference in Minneapolis, he received a commission to reorchestrate his 2003 orchestral work "Redline Tango" for concert band. After reluctantly accepting, he completed the concert band version in 2005, and it became a great success. Today, Mackey is world-renowned as a concert band composer, and most of his works from the past decade have been for concert band. He regularly receives commissions from high school bands, college bands, and professional wind ensembles in the United States and Asia.
List of works
= Orchestra
=Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night (1993)
Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra (2000)
Redline Tango (2003)
Antiphonal Dances (2003)
Under the Rug (2004)
Harvest: Concerto for Trombone and Orchestra without Strings (2009)
Aurora Awakes (2019)
Songs from the End of the World (2019)
= Wind ensemble/concert band
=Redline Tango (2005); won the ABA Ostwald Award
Sasparilla (2005)
Turbine (2006)
Strange Humors (2006)
Turning (2006)
Kingfishers Catch Fire (2007)
Concerto for Soprano Saxophone and Wind Ensemble (2007); a piano reduction is available as of 2013.
Clocking (2007)
Undertow (2008)
Asphalt Cocktail (2009)
Aurora Awakes (2009); won the ABA Ostwald Award and the NBA William D. Revelli Memorial Composition Contest
Harvest: Concerto for Trombone and Orchestra without Strings (2009)
Xerxes (2010)
Hymn to a Blue Hour (2010)
Foundry (2011)
Drum Music: Concerto for Percussion and Wind Ensemble (2011)
Sheltering Sky (2012)
High Wire (2012)
The Frozen Cathedral (2013)
The Soul Has Many Motions (2013)
Night on Fire (2013), movement II of "The Soul Has Many Motions" (available separately)
Unquiet Spirits (2013), movement III of "The Soul Has Many Motions" (available separately)
(Redacted) (2013)
Wine-Dark Sea: Symphony for Band (2014)
The Ringmaster's March (2014)
Lightning Field (2015)
Fanfare for Full Fathom Five (2015), for brass and percussion ensemble (and optional organ)
Liminal (2016)
This Cruel Moon (2017)
Antique Violences: Concerto for Trumpet and Wind Ensemble (2017)
The Night Garden (2017)
Snarl (2018)
The Rumor of a Secret King (2018)
Until the Scars (2019)
Places we can no longer go (2019), for vocal soprano and wind ensemble; text by A. E. Jaques
Sacred Spaces (2019)
Some treasures are heavy with human tears (2021)
Let Me Be Frank With You (2022)
A deep reverberation fills with stars (2022)
Divine Mischief: Concerto for Clarinet and Wind Ensemble (2022)
= Adaptable Ensemble
=This Cruel Moon – adaptable (2020), minimum 5-parts (SAATB)
Strange Humors – adaptable (2020), minimum 4-parts (SATB) plus djembe
Let Me Be Frank With You (2020), minimum 4-parts (SATB) plus drum set
Sheltering Sky – adaptable (2020), minimum 4-parts (SATB)
Night on Fire – adaptable (2021), minimum 4-parts (SATB) plus one percussionist
= Choir
=Alleluia (1992), for 5-part choir (S1, S2, A, T, B)
The Rumor of a Secret King (2017), for SATB choir; text by A. E. Jaques
Cradle Song (2021), for SATB choir; text by A. E. Jaques
= Chamber ensemble
=Elegy and Fantasie (1989, 1991), for violin and piano
Tango (1991), for viola and two pianos
Mom Song (1991), for flute, guitar, cello, and harpsichord
Piano Trio in Two Movements (1992), for violin, cello, and piano
The Other Side (1994), for double bass or cello and piano
Mood Indigo (1996), for piano and drum set
Strange Humors (1998), for string quartet and djembe
Damn (1998), for amplified clarinet and four percussionists
Voices and Echoes (1999), for string quartet
Rush Hour (1999, revised 2000), for clarinet, electric string quartet, and drum set
Breakdown Tango (2000), for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano
Juba (2003), for electric string quartet and percussion
Wrong-Mountain Stomp (2004), for violin, viola, and cello
Mass (2004), for percussion ensemble
Strange Humors (2008), for saxophone quartet and djembe
Sultana (2009), for saxophone and piano
Strange Humors (2012), for clarinet quartet and djembe
Unquiet Spirits (2012), for saxophone quartet
Hymn to a Blue Hour (2012), for trombone ensemble
Songs from the End of the World (2015), for vocal soprano and mixed chamber ensemble; text by A. E. Jaques; a piano reduction is available as of 2017.
Hymn to a Blue Hour (2021), for minimum 16-part ensemble
= Musical theater
=Score and songs for Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, Dallas Theater Center (2001)
= Notes
=References
Bibliography
Meet the Composer: John Mackey with UK Bands Meet the Composer: John Mackey with UK Bands UKNow (University of Kentucky)
John Mackey: The Composer, His Compositional Style and a Conductor's Analysis of Redline Tango and Turbine Rebecca L Philips' doctoral dissertation
JW Pepper long-form interview with John Mackey
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Penghargaan Grammy ke-53
- Penghargaan Grammy ke-54
- John Mackey (composer)
- John Mackey
- Harvest (disambiguation)
- New Philadelphia, Ohio
- Saxophone
- Steven Mackey
- Cleveland Institute of Music
- Mackey (name)
- Westerville South High School
- Percival Mackey