Cameron Sinclair (composer)

Cameron Sinclair is a Scottish composer and percussionist based in London. In 2004 he was nominated for a British Composer Award for The Secret of the Universe.[1]

In 2002 he was awarded a Fellowship from the Arts Council of England to become Artist in Residence at Cittadellarte, an institution directed by world-renowned visual artist Michelangelo Pistoletto dedicated to cross-disciplinary work in Northern Italy. In 2003, he was Music Director and arranger for English Pocket Opera's new version of Carmen, which involved hundreds of Islington schoolchildren alongside a professional cast.

In 1998 he was Artistic Director of Centre Stage, an Arts Council of England project, creating a new opera for 1000 young people throughout London, performed as a professional National Theatre production. In 2000 he made his conducting debut at the BBC Proms, directing Nitin Sawhney's Urban Prophecies with Joanna MacGregor, Ensemble Bash and tabla player Aref Durvesh at the Royal Albert Hall. He also conducted a recording of the piece for the Soundcircus label.

He is Director of the Vietato L'Accesso Festival, which took place in Biella, Italy in September 2003. Devised in collaboration with visual artists, architects, environmentalists and local food producers, the festival was a series of events, including a participative concert La Memoria dell'Acqua, which invited local people to become involved in the regeneration of old industrial buildings and change their perceptions of the neglected river area.

Site-specific work includes an installation for Michelangelo Pistoletto's Arte al Centro exhibition in Turin, Italy, which is on a European tour, featuring so far in galleries in Amsterdam, Antwerp and Zurich. Other major installations integrating sound, art and performance include Safe and Sound, commissioned by Helix Arts for the City of Sunderland and Corridors of Power, selected for the International Society of Contemporary Music Festival and awarded the SPNM Butterworth Prize for new work.

Works

Works include

He teaches at the Royal College of Music Junior Department.

References

  1. "British Composer Awards shortlist honours top 30". The Stage. 12 November 2004. Retrieved 17 August 2011.

External links

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