Richard Carrick Explained

Richard David Carrick (born 1971 in Paris, France) is an American composer, pianist and conductor.[1] He was a Guggenheim Fellow in Music Composition for 2015–16 while living in Kigali, Rwanda. His compositions are influenced by diverse sources including traditional Korean Gugak music, the flow concept of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Gnawa Music of Morocco, Jazz, experimental music, concepts of infinity, the works of Italo Calvino and Ludwig Wittgenstein, and his work as improviser.[2]

He is co-founder/co-artistic director of the critically acclaimed experimental music ensemble Either/Or with whom he performs regularly as pianist and conductor.[3]

Carrick is currently Chair of the Composition Department at Berklee College of Music. In 2011 and 2013 Carrick was Adjunct Associate Professor of Composition at Columbia University[4] and taught composition and history at New York University 2009–2012. For a decade he trained young composers for the New York Philharmonic in New York City and internationally.

He has received numerous awards including a 2015–16 Guggenheim Fellowship, 2015 Gugak Fellowship for Korean Traditional Music, and a Fromm Commission of Harvard University.[5]

His music, described as "charming, with exoticism and sheer infectiousness" by Allan Kozinn of The New York Times,[6] has been performed internationally by the New York Philharmonic, Vienna's Konzerthaus, ISCM World Music Days-Switzerland], Darmstadt Summer Festival, Tokyo International House, Merkin Hall, Nieuw Ensemble, JACK Quartet, Nouvel Ensemble Moderne, soloists Tony Arnold, Marilyn Nonken, Magnus Andersson, Carin Levine, Rohan de Saram, David Shively, and others.

Education

He received his BA in Mathematics and Music from Columbia University with Mario Davidovsky,[7] a Masters and Doctorate from the University of California-San Diego with Brian Ferneyhough, and pursued further studies at IRCAM (Stage d'Ete) and the Koninklijk Conservatorium in The Hague.

Career

Recent works include the 2015 CD release, Cycles of Evolution, which incorporates pieces commissioned and performed by the NYPHIL BIENNIAL, Either/Or, Sweden's Ensemble Son, Hotel Elefant, The String Orchestra of Brooklyn, and DZ4. Carrick conducts or performs on all works on this CD, including Namdaemun, Adagios, Dark Flow Double Quartet, and more. Carrick's improvisation-based disc Stone Guitars garnered critical attention in both the new music and guitar worlds. The hour-long Flow Cycle for Strings (released on New World Records in 2011[8]) is regularly performed by soloists and duos/trios. Other recent works include String Quartet #2-Space:Time, Harmonixity for Saxophone Quartet and la touche sonore for solo piano. He also writes large-scale multi-media works combining video, electronics and live musicians, including the "operatically ambitious" (The Village Voice) Cosmicomics, based on stories by Italo Calvino and the "apocalyptic" [New York Arts] Prisoner's Cinema.

Select recent works are published by Project Schott New York.[9]

As conductor and pianist, he has premiered numerous works by distinguished composers including Helmut Lachenmann, Chaya Czernowin, Jonny Greenwood, Karin Rehnqvist, George E. Lewis, Elliott Sharp, John Zorn, Anthony Coleman.

He also improvises on piano and occasionally on electric guitar. Works include a solo electric guitar CD (Stone Guitars) in preparation, solo piano CD, as well as performances with Jin Hi Kim, Chris Cochrane, Annie Gosfield, David Wallace, and others.

He has given University masterclasses on his own compositions in Tokyo, Seoul, London, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Paris, Darmstadt, and New York City.

Selected works

Orchestral
Chamber music
Piano

Electric Guitar Quartet

Vocal

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Composer website.
  2. Web site: Linear Notes by George Lewis on Carrick's Flow Cycle.
  3. Web site: Either/Or.
  4. Web site: Columbia U. Music Dept. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120718001616/http://music.columbia.edu/people/bios/rcarrick. July 18, 2012.
  5. Web site: Fromm Foundation. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140827120923/http://www.music.fas.harvard.edu/fromm.html#winners. August 27, 2014.
  6. Web site: New York Times Review.
  7. Book: Columbia College (Columbia University). Office of Alumni Affairs and Development. Columbia College today. Columbia College (Columbia University). 2013–2014. New York, N.Y. : Columbia College, Office of Alumni Affairs and Development. Columbia University Libraries.
  8. Web site: The Flow Cycle – New World Records.
  9. Web site: Project Schott New York Publisher.