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Jonathan Dove

Jonathan Dove

Jonathan Dove is best known as a composer of operas and choral music. His airport-comedy Flight was premièred at Glyndebourne in 1998 and broadcast on Channel 4. The Glyndebourne production of Flight has toured Europe and new productions have followed in the USA and Germany – all meeting with an enthusiastic response from both audiences and music critics. In 2005 Flight was seen in Boston and again at Glyndebourne, in March 2006 it received its Australian première during the Adelaide Festival for which it won the Helpmann Award for Best Opera.

Dove has written over a dozen operas, including Siren Song and L’Augellino Belverde, which received its highly acclaimed UK première by the Guildhall School of Music & Drama in June 2005. He has also written four large-scale community operas and a church opera, Tobias and the Angel , which re-opened the Young Vic's renovated theatre in October 2006. The Young Vic also presented The Enchanted Pig, a musical fairy tale, as its Christmas Show in December 2006/January 2007 with subsequent tour around the UK.

Dove's television opera When she died... was first broadcast in 2002 to an audience of nearly a million viewers in the UK alone and a staged version was premièred at Kammeroper Vienna in March 2007. Man on the Moon, a TV opera about the first moon-landing, was first broadcast on Channel 4 in Decemeber 2006 and won the Opera Special Prize at the Rose d’Or Festival for Television Programming in 2007 and a Gold Medal at the Park City Film Music Festival 2008. Kwasi & Kwame, a chamber opera adapted by Arthur Japin from his bestselling novel The Two Hearts of Kwasi Boachi,was commissioned by Opera OT Rotterdam and toured the Netherlands from October 2007 until April 2008. Opera North and Sadler’s Wells commissioned The Adventures of Pinocchio, which premièred in December 2007 in Leeds with subsequent tour around the UK. Pinocchio, the recipient of the British Composer Award for Stage works in 2008, was staged by Minnesota Opera in 2009.

Coming from a family of architects, Dove’s work has often been associated with buildings. He wrote music for the opening ceremonies of the Millennium Dome and the Millennium Bridge and provided the score for a film about the architect Carlo Scarpa. Film and architecture come together in one of his latest projects, Work inProgress, 14 site-visits for piano and orchestra, composed for the opening season of The Sage Gateshead (the new music-centre designed by Norman Foster) which also incorporated a film of the building process.

The activity of building features in two of the three community operas he wrote for Glyndebourne, and also in The Palace in the Sky, a community opera produced at the Hackney Empire by English National Opera and Hackney Music Development Trust. Dove’s commitment to working in the community is also shown in The Hackney Chronicles, an opera for primary school children for Hackney Music Development Trust; Dove also collaborated with the Trust on Hear Our Voice, a cantata developed with young people setting writings of children of the Holocaust. On Spital Fields, a Community Cantata for 200 performers, received its première in the 2005 Spitalfields Festival and won a RPS as well as a British ComposerAward. Dove has a long-standing relationship with the Spitalfields Festival and was its artistic director from December 2001 until July 2006. Spitalfields Festival won a RPS Award as Best Festival for the 2006 festivals (summer and winter).

Acknowledged as a highly-accomplished composer of theatre-music, Dove has written for the National Theatre (most recently providing music for His Dark Materials), for the Royal Shakespeare Company, and for the New York Shakespeare Festival. He has written scores for over thirty plays, has been Music Adviser to the Almeida Theatre since 1990 and is an Associate of the National Theatre. Films include Venus Peter and Prague. In 1998 Dove was joint winner of the Christopher Whelen Award for his work in the fields of theatre music and opera, and in 2008 he received the Ivor Novello Award for Classical Music.

Find out more about Jonathan Dove


Jonathan spoke to the PRS Foundation about some of his favourite new music

"It's always exciting to hear new music live, and a lot never makes it to CD, but I'm glad I can keep returning to these pieces for ear-opening inspiration".

George Benjamin: Three Inventions (Nimbus: NI 5505)
This always makes me think of someone imagining music for the very first time: completely new and strange and inviting.
www.fabermusic.co.uk/serverside/composers/Details.asp?ID=BENJAMIN,%20GEORGE

Judith Weir: A Night at the Chinese Opera (NMC DO60)
Startling by daring to be simple and clear and yet completely fresh and unpredictable.
www.schirmer.com/composers/weir/bio.html

Thomas Ades: Asyla (EMI Classics 7243 5 56818 2 9)
This piece ranges from dark and awe-inspiring to impish, mischievous and wild - an adventure in sound!
www.emiclassics.com/artists/biogs/ades.html

Harrison Birtwistle
One of the extraordinary things about his music is that it can sound ugly and primitive the first time you hear it, then you go back years later and it sounds beautiful and lyrical - and so full that you're always noticing something new in it.
www.braunarts.com/birtwistle/