Lyell Cresswell
Acclaimed New Zealand-born composer who made his home in Scotland
Lyell Cresswell, composer. Born: 13 October 1944 in Wellington, New Zealand. Died: 19 March, 2022 in Edinburgh, aged 77
In the 1980s, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra performed a new work by Lyell Cresswell. Older members of the orchestra remember with fondness the New Zealand-born composer seated quietly among the audience wearing a T-shirt that identified its wearer as a “living composer”. It was a silent protest against orchestras’ tendencies to favour the music of dead composers.
For Cresswell, who lived most of his highly productive life in Edinburgh, but maintained a regular professional presence in his native New Zealand, such muted eccentricity was perfectly in tune with his ambivalent personality and charm. On the outside, he was quietly spoken with a tendency to speak tersely and hurriedly, punctuated by an infectious giggle. Inwardly, he was a creative heavyweight, his music channelling the real Lyell: original, quirky, humorous, honest and, where necessary, ferociously caustic.
In 2016, having received a prestigious arts foundation laureate, he was asked on New Zealandradio what motivated him as a composer. He responded: “What I’m doing is writing my own biography. If I were doing it with words, I’d just be telling a pack of lies, but when i’ m writing music I find it’s impossible to tell lies. I’m telling my story, my view of the world, in terms of feelings and emotions.”
That admission chimes with Edinburgh author and poet ron Butlin, whose close friendship with the composer extended to creative collaborations, includingtwo short opera projects for Scottish Opera.
As a composer, though, everything Cress well produced was pointedly genuine. His output was immense, covering all genres from solo voice and chamber ensemble to large-scale orchestra, choral and opera, emanating from a musical voice that was probing, proficient, relevant and fiercely original.
Those who shared that adventure benefited greatly from it. As an undergraduate at Edinburgh University in the 1970s, the young sir james macmillan fell under cress well’ sspell,e specially his early orchestra l work Salm, a vivid exploration of the beguiling heterophonic techniques of Gaelic psalm singing which had won Cresswell the Ian why tea ward .“it had a huge impact on me ”, recalls Macmillan,whose adoption of the same techniques were key in shaping his own musical fingerprint.
Lyell Cresswell was born in Wellington, New Zealand, in 1944 to jack, an accountant, and Muriel. both parents were committed members of the Salvation Army, through which the young lye ll–learning the trumpet–experienced music from a young age. After graduating from Rongotai Boys’ College, Cresswell attended Victoria University in Wellington, studying composition with Douglas Lilburn (a pupil of Ralph Vaughan Williams). There, he met and fell in love with fellow music student Catherine Mawson, a cellist. They wed in 1972.
That same year, the newlyweds moved to Aberdeen where Cresswell had secured a scholarship to pursue a PHD in composition. He became close friends with fellow student Michael Tumelty, former music critic of the Herald, whose later recollection of Cress well’ s music offers an early insight into the power and density in his orchestral scores. “They looked like landscapes in sound, with great slab-like format ions of notes, sometimes monolithic, sometimes imperceptibly slow-moving,” wrote Tumelty in 2001.
Cresswell went on to study in Utrecht, then a hotbed of contemporary music, moving to Cardiff in 1978 where her an the city’s Chapter Arts Centre. Scotland lured him back, as Edinburgh University’s Forman Fellow in Composition from 198082, then to Glasgow University as Cramb Fellow in Composition from 1982-85. Thereafter, now settled in Edinburgh, and clear in his mind that teaching was not his preferred option, Cresswell set out on a path dedicated wholly to composition.
It was the right decision. The commissions kept coming, both from Scotland and New Zealand, which enabled him and Catherine to make regular visits home. The Royal Scottish National Orchestra, which had performed the award-winning Salm, showcase d cress well as a featured composer in the 1984 Musica Nova Festival in Glasgow. As artistic director of the Edinburgh contemporary arts Trust, he further established his own name, but equally he promoted works by others who intrigued him, including fellow composers from New Zealand who feature dint woe cat new Music NZ Festivals.
A close association with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra resulted in some of his most audacious works, from the epic Shadows Without Sun, for which he drew on his own experiences in (albeit selfimposed) exile, and his concerto for chamber orchestra, Of Smoke and Bickering Flame, to the completion of a movement from the unfinished symphony No 3 by Edward Harper, a close friend who had just died.
If his operatic prowess was never fully exploited, the two short works he and librettist Ron Butlin produced in response to Scottish Opera’s Five-15 project – The Perfect Woman (2008) and The Money Man (2010) – were highly acclaimed successes. “Scottish Opera’s original intention was to stage an extended version of The Money Man, but ironically funding issues put paid to that ,” recalls but lin .“it was all written, but it’s never been performed.”
Cresswell’s music has been lauded worldwide, from performances at the Warsaw Autumn,bbc prom sand edinburgh International Festival, to Tokyo, Bologna and New Zealand. among numerous awards were the inaugural Elgar Bursary and Sounz Contemporary Award for his Piano Concerto.
Cresswell died in March from liver cancer, complicated by Covid. He is survived by his wife Catherine.