© Jonathan Wrather
Born: 1981
Brief Biography:
Born in 1981, Helen studied oboe with John Anderson and composition with Julian Anderson and Edwin Roxburgh at the Royal College of Music. In 2003 she won a British Composer Award for her Oboe Concerto, and was awarded the intercollegiate Theodore Holland Composition Prize in 2003 as well as all the major composition prizes in the RCM. In 2008 she was awarded a Leonard Bernstein Fellowship to study at the Tanglewood Music Center where she studied with John Harbison, Michael Gandolfi, Shulamit Ran and Augusta Read Thomas. Grime was a Legal and General Junior Fellow at the Royal College of Music from 2007 to 2009. She became a lecturer in composition at the Department of Music at Royal Holloway, University of London, in January 2010.
Helen has had works commissioned by some of the most established performers including London Symphony Orchestra, BCMG, Britten Sinfonia, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and the Tanglewood Music Center. Conductors who have performed her work include Daniel Harding, Pierre Boulez and Yan Pascal Tortelier. Her work Night Songs was commissioned by the BBC Proms in 2012 and premiered by the BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Oliver Knussen. In 2011 she was appointed Associate Composer to the Hallé Orchestra for an initial tenure of three years. Her first commission for them, Near Midnight, is to be premiered on May 23 2013 and a recording of her orchestral works performed by the Hallé will be released as part of the NMC Debut Disc Series in 2014. Upcoming performances include the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra performing Everyone Sang in May 2014 and a new string trio commissioned by Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and Wigmore Hall for April 2015
For a complete biography, click here.
Key Works: - Virga
(2007; orchestra) - Clarinet Concerto
(2009; soloist and large ensemble) - A Cold Spring
(2009; large ensemble) - Everyone Sang
(2010; orchestra)
| Career Highlights: - 2005-07 Legal & General Junior Fellow at the Royal College of Music
- 2003 Winner of a British Composer Award for the Oboe Concerto
- 2003 Awarded the intercollegiate Theodore Holland Composition Prize as well as all the major composition prizes at the RCM
- 2008 Awarded a Leonard Bernstein Fellowship to study at the Tanglewood Music Center
- 2009 Featured composer in the Philharmonia Orchestra’s Music of Today series
- 2010 Recipient of the Lili Boulanger Memorial Fund
- 2010 Named Associate Composer of The Hallé from the 2011/12 season
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Critical Acclaim “…there could be no question of the distinctiveness of this promising young composer’s ear.” Bayan Northcott, The Independent “…Helen Grime’s expertly written and intensely lyrical Oboe concerto dazzlingly played by the composer herself ….the concerto is an impressive piece of work from a composer with something to say.” Michael Tumelty, Glasgow Herald “…Helen Grime demands a large orchestra. Her use of it is sparing, authoritative and bold. She has an acute ear-adroitly finding matches for the sounds she seeks in the sounds particular instruments are capable of making. Helen Grime is one to watch…" Kenneth Carter, Classical Source "...one of the most promising younger-generation composers in the UK." Andrew Clark, FT Full Biography:
Helen Grime was born in 1981. She studied oboe with John Anderson and composition with Julian Anderson and Edwin Roxburgh at the Royal College of Music. She graduated from the BMus course with First Class Honours and completed her Masters with Distinction in 2004. From 2005-07, Helen was a Legal & General Junior Fellow at the RCM. In 2001 she wrote Doorstepping Susanna, a short opera, for ENO Studio and Tête à Tête Opera. In 2003 Helen’s Oboe Concerto was premiered by the Meadows Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Peter Evans, with Helen as soloist. In 2004, she performed the concerto with the RCM Sinfonietta conducted by Neil Thomson. Helen won the Making Music category of the 2003 British Composer Awards with Oboe Concerto, and was awarded the intercollegiate Theodore Holland Composition Prize in 2003 as well as all the major composition prizes at the RCM. Following winning the British Composer Award, BBC Radio 3 commissioned Chasing Butterflies for 100 violas led by the BBCSSO viola section and conducted by Martyn Brabbins.
Helen’s music has been performed by some of the finest orchestras and ensembles including the LSO, Philharmonia, BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia, BCMG, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Hebrides Ensemble and the Kungsbacka Trio. Her music has been broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and 4. Romance, for violin and piano, has been released on Usk Records performed by Alexandra Wood and Huw Watkins and Nobody Comes for voice and piano appears on the NMC Songbook disc performed by Jean Rigby and Huw Watkins.
Helen attended the Britten-Pears Contemporary Performance and Composition course in 2005, and in 2006, the Aldeburgh Opera Writing workshops. In 2008 she was awarded a Leonard Bernstein Fellowship to study at the Tanglewood Music Center where she studied with John Harbison, Michael Gandolfi, Shulamit Ran and Augusta Read Thomas. A commission by the Tanglewood Music Center, a work for solo clarinet and ensemble, was performed at the 2009 Festival of Contemporary Music. The orchestral piece Virga, commissioned by the LSO in partnership with UBS received its first performance in July 2007 conducted by Yan Pascal Tortelier. Virga was performed at the 2009 BBC Proms by the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Oliver Knussen. Virga received its French premiere with the Orchestre de Paris and Pierre Boulez in May 2010. Other performances include those with the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra under Daniel Harding and the RSNO with Stéphane Denève.
Other commissions include Everyone Sang, an orchestral work written for the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra's 75th Birthday in 2010, Into the faded air for the Britten Sinfonia, which received its premiere tour in January 2008 and A Cold Spring for ten instruments commissioned by the Aldeburgh Festival for the BCMG under Oliver Knussen, and premiered in June 2009.
Helen’s music was featured as one of the Philharmonia’s Music of Today concerts in January 2010 where her Clarinet Concerto received its UK premiere along with a new work for violin and viola, To see the summer sky. Also in 2010 she was awarded the Lili Boulanger Memorial Fund and appointed as Lecturer of Composition at Royal Holloway, University of London.
More recently she wrote the critically acclaimed Oboe Quartet, a commission from Winsor Music which was premiered in Boston in 2012. This piece received its UK premiere in 2013 performed by Nicholas Daniel and members of the Britten Sinfonia. Also in 2012 Helen was commissioned by the BBC to write Night Songs for Oliver Knussen’s 60th birthday Prom. It was premiered by the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Knussen .
Helen has been Associate Composer of The Hallé since the 2011/12 season. The appointment has an initial period of three years and the first commission from them, Near Midnight will be premiered on May 23 2013 at Bridgewater Hall.
Upcoming performances include the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra performing Everyone Sang in May 2014 and a new string trio commissioned by Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and Wigmore Hall for April 2015.
The music of Helen Grime is published exclusively by Chester Music Limited.
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