University student to head innovative event.
A celebrated multi-genre contemporary music festival returns to Birmingham next month.
Centred on improvisation and new music, Emulsion will be hosted at mac Birmingham for its seventh edition on Friday 2nd and Saturday 3rd November. As a music festival that celebrates the adventurous spirit and the open mind, Emulsion offers a melding of contemporary music, drawing from jazz, classical and folk traditions.
The brainchild of saxophonist, composer and Birmingham City University PhD student Trish Clowes, Emulsion VII will feature jazz pianist and composer Alexander Hawkins as its guest artist.
Emulsion provides a platform for contemporary composition and improvisation, and fosters collaboration between like-minded musicians. Clowes founded Emulsion in 2012 and Tom Harrison came on board as the festival’s Artistic Director four years later.
At the heart of its melting pot of musicians and ideas is the Emulsion Sinfonietta (front pic), a colourful line-up of trumpet, violins, saxes, oboe, cor anglais, cello, bassoon, electric guitar, bass and drum kit. The Emulsion Sinfonietta will perform on the evening of 2nd November along with Alexander Hawkins.
A happy by-product of several Emulsion festivals, the Sinfonietta has premiered 17 new works to date. Two of these works have gone on to win British Academy of Songwriters, Composers & Authors British Composer Awards in the Contemporary Jazz Category (Joe Cutler’s Karembeu’s Guide to the Complete Defensive Midfielder in 2016 and Cevanne Horrocks-Hopayian’s Muted Lines in 2017).
As well as being recognised at the British Composer Awards herself – winning in the Contemporary Jazz Composition category in 2015 – and a former BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist, Trish Clowes (pictured) is one of 50 STEAMscholars at Birmingham City University.
The research of the STEAMscholars is funded as part of the institution’s £3 million initiative to create new subject knowledge and to power cultural, societal and economic improvements locally, nationally and around the world.
Her research looks at the politics of participation within and around the space of the Emulsion festival, exploring the relationships between performers and audience members through her compositions.
Trish said: “I am very excited to present this seventh edition of Emulsion, which is also acting as a key case study for my PhD research. We have wanted to work with Alexander Hawkins for some time so we’re thrilled to have him as our special guest on Friday 2 November. As well as performing with us, he will present some of his own music and a work by the legendary composer-saxophonist Anthony Braxton.
“I am also excited to present Emulsify on Saturday 3rd November. This new immersive event, debuted at Emulsion VI, will allow audience members to explore morphing between the roles of listener and performer, and is a product of the illuminating research I have been conducting with local audiences, both for Emulsion VII and Emulsion VI in Shrewsbury earlier this year.”
Clowes has been working closely with fellow PhD candidate Percy Pursglove throughout this project and he will also present new compositions during the festival related to his own research, which is focused on the relationship between contemporary classical and improvised music.
Clowes is part of the Jazz Studies research cluster at Birmingham City University, which is led by Professors Nicholas Gebhardt and Tony Whyton, and Dr Nicolas Pillai.
Although only five years old, the cluster boasts more than forty members, including ten jazz researchers from across Birmingham School of Media and Royal Birmingham Conservatoire, eight doctoral students and leaders of the regional jazz community, as well as additional academic partners at University of Warwick, University of Amsterdam (Netherlands) and University of Music and the Performing Arts Graz (Austria).
Furthermore, the University’s new £57 million Royal Birmingham Conservatoire is home to Eastside Jazz Club, the first permanent jazz space in any UK conservatoire.
Emulsion VI took place earlier this year at The Gateway Education and Arts Centre in Shrewsbury. This followed last year’s festival at mac Birmingham, as well as three successful events in London, and one in collaboration with Cheltenham Music Festival.