Oberlin College and Conservatory

Q&A Session with James Dillon, composer

Monday, April 6, 2015 at 7:00pm to 9:00pm

Bibbins Hall (Conservatory of Music), 224
77 West College Street, Oberlin, OH 44074

A conservatory Q&A session with James Dillon, composer. 

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James Dillon is self-taught as a composer. He had early experiences with traditional music for bagpipes and played with his band Influx in the late 1960s. He studied art and design at the Glasgow School of Art in 1968, linguistics at University College London in 1970 and piano with Eleanor Purse in 1970–71. He later studied acoustics at the University of North London in 1971, rhythms of music from India with Punita Gupta in 1971–72 and mathematics with Gordon Millar at the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations in London in 1972 and attended seminars on computer music at IRCAM in Paris in 1984–85. He received an honorary doctorate from the University of Huddersfield in 2003.

Among his honours are First Prize in the competition of the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival in West Yorkshire (1978), the Kranichsteiner Musikpreis at the Ferienkurse in Darmstadt (1982) and the title Classical Musician of the Year from The Sunday Times in London (1989). He later earned a fellowship from the Japan Foundation in Tōkyō (1996) and four prizes in the Royal Philharmonic Society Music Awards (Chamber-Scale Composition, 1997, for TraumwerkBook 1; Chamber-Scale Composition, 2002, for The Book of Elements 5; Chamber-Scale Composition, 2005, for String Quartet No4; Large-Scale Composition, 2010, for Nine Rivers). Retrospectives of his music have been given in Paris (1985), Oslo (1989), Toulouse (1991), Brussels (1992), and New York, New York (2001).

Mr. Dillon taught at the Ferienkurse in Darmstadt from 1982–92, directed the faculty of composition at the Gothenburg Summer Academy in 1991 and served as co-composer-in-residence with Brian Ferneyhough at the Fondation Royaumont in 1996. He taught as a guest composer at Goldsmiths, University of London in 1989–90 and in 1991–92 and at Birmingham City University in 1993–94 and in 1995–96. He taught as International Distinguished Fellow at New York University in 2001–02. He taught as Professor of Composition at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis from 2007–14. He has given guest lectures in Australia, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, the UK, and the United States.

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