Australian composer
Paul Stanhope is an Australian composer, conductor and music educator, known for his choral and instrumental music.
Early life and education
Stanhope was a student of Andrew Ford, Andrew Schultz and Peter Sculthorpe, and received the Charles Mackerras Scholarship to study at the Guildhall School of Music in London in 2000.[1]
Composition
In May 2004, he won first place at the Toru Takemitsu Composition Award for his work Fantasia on a Theme by Vaughan Williams,[2] and in 2010 was featured composer for Musica Viva,[3] resulting in the following report from artistic director Carl Vine:
Paul Stanhope’s contribution as Featured Composer for the 2010 Season set a new benchmark, with every one of his works standing proudly alongside the finest chamber music presented by our touring artists. His music left a powerful and enduring impression upon the year’s concerts, drawing liberal praise from an unprecedented number of our patrons.[3]
In 2011 Stanhope was awarded two APRA Australian Music Centre awards for the instrumental work of the year. In 2018 he was awarded the orchestral work of the year, and won again in 2017 and 2020.[1] In 2013 and 2014 he was the first composer to receive a Sidney Myer Creative Fellowship.[4]
A commissioned music-drama for large choir and orchestra premiered in 2014 titled Jandamarra: Sing for the Country, based on the life of a North resistance hero of the Bunuba nation of Western Australia. [4]
Conducting and teaching
Stanhope has held the post of musical director with the Sydney Chamber Choir,[5] and guest conductor of Gondwana Voices/Sydney Children's Choir,[6] and since 2014 has been the artistic chair of the Australia Ensemble at UNSW.[4]
As of 2021[update] he is associate professor of composition at the University of Sydney, and artistic director of choral programs at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music.[1]
Awards and nominations
APRA AMC Art Music Awards
Since 2003 APRA AMCOS (Australasian Performing Right Association and Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society) combined with AMC (Australian Music Centre) to present the Classical Music Awards at an annual ceremony.[7] In 2011 they were re-branded as the Art Music Awards.[7]
Other awards
References
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