BBC Music Magazine

MEET THE COMPOSER Philip Venables

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Born in Chester in 1979, Philip Venables made his breakthrou­gh in 2016 with 4.48 Psychosis. The award-winning opera has just been revived by the Royal Opera House, where he was also the company’s first composer-in-residence. Venables’s new violin concerto will be premiered by Pekka Kuusisto at the BBC Proms on 17 August.

‘Venables plays Bartók’ is the title of my new concerto. It is about my teacher’s teacher, a Hungarian who fled the revolution in 1956. I met him twice. The first time, I played him a piece of Bartók I was learning for my Grade Six violin exam. The concerto revolves around that moment, then works backwards through his remarkable life. The main protagonis­t is the violin, but there are two parallel life stories alongside it.

I’m very keen to have a formal idea for a piece before I start.

I’m not the kind of person for whom a piece comes out of the material. I usually try to make a form that I then write into, if you like. Usually I do a lot on paper first, planning and working on the text if there is one, planning structure, thinking about what I want it to achieve. Then I’ll start writing music.

My writing changed a lot when I moved to Berlin. Trying to develop a career as a composer when you’re young and living in a city like London is hard, because

of the cost of living and all the speculativ­e work you need to do – entering competitio­ns, building up your portfolio, finding your voice. Time is a commodity people don’t o!en have in London. I found I had more space and time in Berlin. Tenacity is a challenge for composers. I ended up having my big break a few years ago with 4.48 Psychosis. Until that point, I’d been slogging away, with bits of success but not that much, for ten or 15 years. The opera completely changed that. The career span for composers is so slow-moving and long-term. You’ve got to stick at it. Music-drama is my niche really. It’s been nice to find that and pursue it. It makes the whole thing far more enjoyable – if the process of writing isn’t fun, then I shouldn’t be doing it. I’m starting my next opera in the autumn.

It’s a true story using lots of materials from the internet and found reportage, so it’s a semidramat­ised, semi-documentar­y opera. It’s a kind of modern-day Romeo and Juliet story.

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‘The career span for composers is long-term’
Waiting game: ‘The career span for composers is long-term’

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