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Home > News > Blog > What Composers Really Need

What Composers Really Need

If you’ve heard a piece of new music performed by an orchestra, chamber group or choir, it has probably come about because the group of performers, the venue or the organisation that has arranged the event has asked a composer to write them a piece and found the resources to make this happen. The nature of this commissioning process has always formed an important part of composers’ careers and it can vary enormously. In the best situations it might be a profound and collaborative meeting of minds between artistic director and music creator. In the worst, a brief transaction which might not have any influence on the way the composer’s creative voice develops. On top of this, commission fees which influence composers’ working conditions are hugely inconsistent and research demonstrates that this situation isn’t improving. As a result, composers often find themselves being forced to squeeze their creative process into unrealistic timeframes set by others and/or into a timetable dominated by the other better paid activities that enable composers to survive.

Isn’t it time then to think about what composers really need to realise their potential? And, in spite of the wider financial challenges faced by all, could those who work with composers help by adapting their processes and understanding of what it takes to write a new piece of music?

When we talked to composers (to inform the scope of a new fund that we’ve launched at PRS for Music Foundation), the responses confirmed that their needs are not dissimilar to those working in other art forms. The difference lies in the level of attention these needs receive.

PRS for Music Foundation presents Composer Focus 25th February 2016 at London’s Living Room, City Hall, London, Great Britain Welcome speech from Munira Mirza (Deputy Mayor for Education and Culture of London) Vanessa Reed (Executive Director PRS for Music Foundation) Panel discussions: The Composers’ Workspace and Putting Composers in the Driving Seat Photograph by Elliott Franks Image licensed to Elliott Franks Photography Services

PRS for Music Foundation presents Composer Focus 25th February 2016 at London’s Living Room, City Hall, London, Great Britain Welcome speech from Munira Mirza (Deputy Mayor for Education and Culture of London) Vanessa Reed (Executive Director PRS for Music Foundation) Panel discussions: The Composers’ Workspace and Putting Composers in the Driving Seat Photograph by Elliott Franks Image licensed to Elliott Franks Photography Services

Let’s take the example of workspaces – the importance of retaining visual artists in London through affordable studios is something you can read about in the Evening Standard, backed by research and international benchmarking. The fact that, for some composers, it’s also crucial to have somewhere other than their bedroom to write their next piece, tends to be overlooked. The act of composition might require isolation in a quiet, private space but many composers also like the idea of being able to brush shoulders with other creative people during their working day. The problem is that they don’t have the cash it takes to afford this in London and there aren’t many studio providers which have considered how they might cater for the basics a composer needs.

Our research also revealed that composers would like more control over their own destiny. Many composers want to spearhead their own projects, have more control over their time and how much they get paid and be able to say no to some of the usual offers of work. This applies both to the music they write and the other bits around the edges (admin, promotion, travel) which tend to be self-funded. Direct funding of individual artists has been widely discussed across other art forms . However, I sense that the music sector is still not completely comfortable with artist-led approaches, even if composers who set up their own groups have been doing it for years.

Of course, there are many world-class organisations in the UK which commission composers, are sensitive to how they work and provide vital platforms for their development. These organisations need continued support. But for composers to develop on their own terms and to be understood beyond the parameters of what’s gone before, surely it’s time to open things up and offer more choice?

As Judith Weir, Master of the Queen’s Music suggests,

On the (rare, happy) occasions when a new music project receives a grant, the funding is channelled via various levels of administration; the grant-givers themselves, the producers, the orchestral/ensemble managements. What if the money went straight to the composer? Would new music be different?

PRS for Music Foundation’s Composer Fund was launched at the Mayor of London’s Living Room on 25th February 2015.

Follow Vanessa Reed on Twitter: www.twitter.com/vanessa_prsf

 

(Updated blog- first published on Huffington Post 25/02/2015)