Patrick John Morris

Patrick Morris
Birth name Patrick John Morris
Also known as Mister P.
Born 13 April 1948
Highgate, London, England
Died 16 January 2008(2008-01-16) (aged 59)
Highgate, London, England
Occupation(s) Composer, musician, songwriter
Instruments Piano, vocals
Years active 1969–2008

Patrick John Morris (13 April 1948 – 16 January 2008) was a British composer, musician, and songwriter.

He was educated at Highgate School, Guildhall School of Music, the Royal Academy of Music, and University College London, where he obtained a degree in philosophy.

Disillusioned with contemporary classical music in the style of Stockhausen and Boulez, he developed a style that one critic, Jonathan Witshire, [1] has called "residual", a label he accepted. He described his main musical influences as Erik Satie and Brian Eno,[2] whom he rated as the most important composers of the twentieth century. His style is associated with that of his contemporary Howard Skempton and has been compared to younger composer Simon Rackham.[3]

He placed his works into three groups, piano music, instrumental pieces and songs. For the songs he set poems to music and sang them, verses by A. E. Housman, W. E. Henley, Walter de la Mare and other well-known poets, and particularly the Australian-born poet Vicki Raymond.[4] From about 1990 he wrote and sang his own songs, mysterious poems evoking an atmosphere of mortality, lonely, marginalised characters, and wistful melancholy.

He gave regular concerts in St Michael's Church, Highgate. His music has been played on Radio 3, he has performed in Germany, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

He produced a number of cds, including They call him Mister P, The world of Mister P, The essential Mister P and Slow bulldozing with Mister P.

He also wrote the soundtrack for a number of arthouse films, including the documentary LuXus, about abstract painter Philip Diggle.[5]

For the last few years of his life he returned to the house in Highgate where he had spent his childhood and where he was found dead on 16 January 2008.

References

  1. http://www.composers-uk.com/patrickmorris/augur.htm
  2. "Patrick Morris: CV". Composers-uk.com. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
  3. Music and Musicians International, Volume 37 Filmtrax, 1988 p. 100
  4. See her entry in The Oxford Companion to Twentieth Century Poetry in English by Ian Hamilton, OUP 1996, or her entry in New Oxford Book of Australian Verse, 1986.
  5. "Karlovy Vary International Film Festival". Retrieved 29 April 2011.
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