Sam Hayden (born 1968) is an English composer of classical and electronic music and an academic. His music has won several prestigious prizes and been performed widely at international music festivals.[1]
Biography
Hayden was born in Portsmouth and grew up in Balham, South London. He played the trumpet, before turning to writing music at the age of nineteen, having found in the activity of composition "the perfect synthesis of the musical, the creative and the intellectual."[2]
Hayden's music is primarily scored for acoustic instruments, but he has also worked extensively with the computer programming environment Max/MSP, notably collaborating with the violinist Mieko Kanno on music for e-violin and computer. He has also used the OpenMusic software (designed at IRCAM) to create computer-generated music.[5]
Recordings of his music have been released by labels including NMC[9] and Divine Art.[10] His music has been published by Verlag Neue Musik, Faber Music and Composers Edition.[11]
Hayden has been the recipient of many prizes and awards including first prize in the 1995 Benjamin Britten International Competition (mv for orchestra, 1991/92) and the composition prize of the 4th Gaudeamus International Young Composers' Meeting 1998.[13]
He was awarded a summer 2000 residency at the Civitella Ranieri Center in Umbria, and a Fulbright Chester Schirmer Fellowship for Music Composition enabling him to work with Brian Ferneyhough and Chris Chafe at Stanford University in the autumn of 2001. He was also granted a 3-year Fellowship by the Arts and Humanities Research Board.[5]
Sunk Losses for orchestra, composed during a residency at the Akademie Schloss Solitude Stuttgart in 2002, won first prize in the second Christoph Delz Foundation Composers' Competition and received its first performance by the Saarbrücken Radio Symphony Orchestra during the festival Musik im 21. Jahrhundert, in Saarbrücken in May 2003.[13]
^Hayden, Sam; Windsor, Luke (2007). "Collaboration and the Composer: Case Studies from the End of the 20th Century". Tempo – A Quarterly Review of Modern Music. 61 (240): 28–39. doi:10.1017/s0040298207000113. S2CID144989481. ProQuest1217928.
^ ab"Biography". Sam Hayden, composer. Retrieved 2 October 2014.