Bill Hopkins (composer)
Bill Hopkins | |
---|---|
Born | George William Hopkins 1943 |
Died | 1981 |
Era | 20th Century |
Bill Hopkins (5 June 1943 – 10 March 1981) was a British composer. He also published music criticism, mostly under the name G. W. Hopkins.
Biography
Hopkins was born in Prestbury, Cheshire, and educated at Hillcrest Grammar School and Rossall School, Lancashire; his mother's disability meant she was unable to look after him, and he was raised by aunts. Studies with Luigi Nono at Dartington Summer School consolidated his interest in serialism; subsequently he studied at Oxford University with Edmund Rubbra and Egon Wellesz.
In 1964 he went to Paris, ostensibly to study with Olivier Messiaen but with the prime objective of meeting and studying with Jean Barraqué. Returning to England, he supported himself as a music critic in London and then, after moving first to Tintagel, Cornwall and subsequently to Peel, Isle of Man, by translation and writing music criticism. He married Clare Gilbert in 1972. Subsequently, he taught at Birmingham University and University of Newcastle upon Tyne before succumbing to a heart attack, in Chopwell, near Newcastle, at the age of 37. His few pupils included the British composers Paul Keenan and Patrick Ozzard-Low.
He was upset at an under-rehearsed first performance of En attendant in 1977 and this possibly discouraged him from composition for a while. He was working on an opera project, tentatively called Nes and later Play on Music, but little if any of this was completed.
Works
This listing is of Hopkins' completed and acknowledged works. For further information about other works, see Paul Griffiths' provisional catalogue.[1]
- Sous-structures. Solo piano. 1964, first performed 1965 (publ. Universal Edition, UE17700)
- Two Pomes (James Joyce). Soprano, bass clarinet, trumpet, harp, viola. 1964, first performed 1968 (publ. Universal Edition, UE14204)
- Musique de l'indifférence, Ballet after Samuel Beckett. Orchestra, 1964–65, first performed 2019 (publ. Ricordi) Nkoda
- Sensation (Rimbaud, Beckett). Soprano, tenor sax, trumpet, harp, violin. 1965, first performed 1965. (publ. Schott)
- Etudes en série. Solo piano. 1965–72, first complete performance 1997. (publ. Schott)
- Pendant. Solo violin. 1969, rev 1973, first performed 1975. (publ. Universal Edition, UE17943)
- Nouvelle etude hors série. Solo organ. 1974, first performed 1993. (publ. Universal Edition, UE17303)
- Lindaraja by Claude Debussy, orchestrated by Hopkins. Orchestra. 1975, first performed 2019. (publ. Universal Edition, UE18459)
- En attendant. Flute, oboe, cello, harpsichord. 1976–77, first performed 1977. (publ. Schott)
The Bill Hopkins Collection at the Paul Sacher Foundation, Basel, holds Hopkins' manuscripts.[2]
Recordings
His complete piano works have been recorded by Nicolas Hodges, (col legno, 2000). En Attendant, Two Pomes, Pendant and Sensation have been recorded by Music Projects/London and Richard Bernas, (NMC, 1992).[3]
A new complete recording of his acknowledged works is in preparation.
Bibliography
- Anon, "Musique Contemporaine à l'American Center", Le Monde, 4 December 1965. [Review of premiere of Sensation]
- Boivin, Jean, La Classe de Messiaen, (Paris, Christian Bourgois, 1995), pp.424-5
- Griffiths, Paul, "Bill Hopkins: A Provisional Catalogue of Compositions and Writings", Musical Times cxxii (1981), 600
- Griffiths, Paul, "Hopkins, Bill", in Sadie, Stanley (ed.) The New Grove Dictionary of Music & Musicians, Second Edition (2001), Vol. 11, pp. 698-9
- Hodges, Nicolas, "The Music of Bill Hopkins: A Preliminary Approach", Tempo No.186, September 1993
Notes
- ^ Griffiths, Paul, "Bill Hopkins: A Provisional Catalogue of Compositions and Writings", Musical Times cxxii (1981), 600
- ^ https://www.paul-sacher-stiftung.ch/de/sammlungen/f-j/bill-hopkins.html
- ^ https://www.nmcrec.co.uk/recording/hopkins-gilbert
External links
- 1943 births
- 1981 deaths
- 20th-century classical composers
- Twelve-tone and serial composers
- British classical composers
- British male classical composers
- Alumni of the University of Oxford
- Academics of Newcastle University
- People educated at Hillcrest Grammar School
- People educated at Rossall School
- People from Prestbury, Cheshire
- Academics of the University of Birmingham
- 20th-century British composers
- 20th-century British male musicians