Paul Patterson

Paul PattersonBorn in 1947, Paul Patterson entered the Royal Academy of Music in 1964 as a trombone player before turning to composition and he has retained strong links with the Royal Academy ever since, first as Head of Composition and Contemporary Music and now as the Manson Professor of Composition.

His flair in producing works which are both challenging and accessible for performers and listeners has resulted in a series of highly regarded works, spreading his name all over the world. In 1997, in celebration of his 50th birthday, he was the featured composer on BBC Radio 3′s Composer of the Week.

He has held many distinguished positions, Composer-in-Residence for South East Arts in Canterbury, Artistic Director of the Exeter Festival, and currently Composer-in-Residence of the National Youth Orchestra.

Many honours bestowed upon him include the Medal of Honour from the Polish Ministry of Culture and the Royal Philharmonic Society for outstanding services to contemporary music.

www.paulpatterson.co.uk

Commissions and Performances
Allusions for Two Solo Violins and Strings – 2007
14 March 2007: Civic Hall, Stratford-upon-Avon (world premiere)
28 April 2008: Hagley Festival
23 June 2007: Corsham Festival
28 July 2007: Aberystwyth Festival
13 December 2007: Mikkeli City Orchestra, Finland,

Allusions for Two Solo Violins and Strings
False Impressions
Mindscape
Beneath the Surface

Paul Patterson has had a long relationship with the world of the string instrument. Works like the Sinfonia for Strings, Tides of Mannanan, the Cello Concerto and the Violin Concerto are central to his instrumental output. Patterson was asked to write a work for the Orchestra of the Swan as a result of a close working relationship with the orchestra over the last few years. When asked about writing a work for the Orchestra, Patterson commented: “Over the years I have been so impressed by the unique quality of sound which Orchestra of the Swan’s string section creates. When I was invited to write a piece to celebrate my 60th birthday with them, I was immediately drawn to the idea of writing for the strings. Allusions has turned out to be a real show piece for the two brilliant soloists from the orchestra, David Le Page and Cathy Leech, and for the string orchestra itself. There’s a lot of fun about it, with plenty of ‘chasing’ between the soloists and orchestra, and a very lively orchestral accompaniment to the dialogue between the two soloists.” The work is dedicated to the Orchestra’s Artistic Director, David Curtis.

This cleverly thought out eighteen-minute work owes its existence to three operatic characters, each of which are given musical characterisation in an appropriate, musically speaking, stylistic manner. Love and/or seduction play a major part these character’s lives.

False Impressions, the first movement, depicts Sir John Falstaff, with the musical material based on the fugue from the finale of Verdi’s opera. The introspective second movement, Mindscape, inherits the dark world of Don Giovanni’s meeting with the Commendatore whilst the sprightly third movement, Beneath the Surface, quotes directly from Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro.
Paul Patterson

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