23 July 1945, Sunderland, England
British composer and educator
Works for Brass Ensemble
- Aria for Philip (2000; revised 2019) for brass quintet
- Brass Quartet No. 1 (1968)
- Brass Quartet No. 2 (1968)
- Ceremonial (2009) for brass quintet
- Equale Dances for brass quintet
- Fanfare for a New Era (2017) for brass ensemble
- Fanfare for Europe (1973) for brass ensemble
- Fanfare for PL (2014) for brass ensemble
- Fanfare for the North (1990) for brass ensemble
- A Festival Fanfare (1978) for brass ensemble
- Flourish for an Occasion (1981) for brass ensemble
- Flourish for the Theatre (1991) for brass ensemble
- Music for an Occasion (2009) for brass quintet
- Music of the Angels (2019) for brass ensemble
- Processional (1992) for brass quintet
- Quintet for Brass (1967)
- Rousseau (1962) for brass ensemble
- Sonata for Four Trombones (1984)
- Susie’s Fanfare (1995) for brass ensemble
- Symphony in Two Movements (2015) for brass ensemble
- Three Dance Episodes (1974) for brass quintet
Biography
Edward Gregson graduated from London’s Royal Academy of Music in 1967, having studied piano and composition (with Alan Bush), and then completed a B.Mus (Hons) degree at London University. He is a composer of international standing whose music has been performed, broadcast, and recorded worldwide. He has written orchestral, chamber, instrumental and choral music, as well as making major contributions to the wind and brass repertoire. He has also written music for the theatre, film, and television.
His orchestral music has been performed by many orchestras and conductors worldwide, including all the BBC orchestras, the London Symphony, Royal Scottish National, Hallé, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, and Bournemouth Symphony orchestras; with conductors such as Martyn Brabbins, Edward Downes, Rumon Gamba, Alexander Gibson, Gunther Herbig, Kent Nagano, Gianandrea Noseda, Bramwell Tovey, and soloists including Ole Edvard Antonsen, Wissam Boustany, Olivier Charlier, Michael Collins, Nelson Goerner, Guy Johnston, Nobuya Sugawa, and Richard Watkins. His chamber music has been performed and recorded by groups including the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble, London Brass, the Navarra and Nightingale string quartets, the Nash Ensemble, whilst his music for brass bands has been performed by all the major ensembles in the world.
His music has been extensively broadcast and recorded, and perhaps of special note is the ongoing series of his symphonic music and concertos on the Chandos label performed by the BBC Philharmonic and BBC Concert orchestras, and London Brass – the latest volume being released in 2020. Included in this series are all his major concertos: horn (1971), tuba (1976), trumpet (1983), trombone (1979), clarinet (1994), piano (1997), violin (2000), saxophone (2006), cello (2007), and flute (2013). He has also recently embarked on a three-volume series of his instrumental and chamber music for the Naxos label, the first of which was released in August 2020. in addition, and of similar importance, is the six-volume survey of his complete music for brass band on the Doyen label.
His most recent compositions include Three Études for piano, recorded on the Naxos label by Murray McLachlan, an Oboe Concerto (A Vision in a Dream) for Jennifer Galloway and the BBC Philharmonic, a Euphonium Concerto for David Childs, The World Rejoicing (Symphonic Variations on a Lutheran Chorale) – a commission from five European countries due for various premieres in 2021 – and The Salamander and the Moonraker, a work for children’s choir, narrators and orchestra commissioned by the Hallé Concerts Society in 2018, with story and libretto by his wife Susan Gregson. In 2016, as Composer in Association with Black Dyke Band, he composed a Cornet Concerto and Four Études, and in 2017, as Composer in Residence at the Presteigne Festival, his 2nd String Quartet was premiered by the Nightingale Quartet from Denmark.
Edward Gregson has had an impressive career as an academic, from his time as Head of Composition and resident conductor in the music department of Goldsmiths College, University of London (1976-96), and where he was appointed a Professor of Music, to his tenure as Principal of the Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) in Manchester (1996-2008). He retired from academe in 2008 in order to concentrate on his composition.
He holds honorary degrees and fellowships from a dozen English universities and conservatoires, including the Royal Academy of Music, the Royal College of Music, Manchester University and Lancaster University. He is also a Companion and Emeritus Professor of the RNCM and has won many awards and prizes. He has been a Writer Director of the Performing Right Society since 1995, and has also served on many international music juries, worked as jury member and expert commentator for the BBC’s Young Musician of the Year programs, and as a conductor has premiered many works by UK composers. He has also written a number of scholarly articles for various publications.
References