Sam Richards (writer)

Sam Richards (born 1949 in London), is an English writer, composer, improviser, jazz pianist and former folk music collector and performer. For most of his life he has lived in south Devon. His father was the writer and playwright Allen Saddler (1923–2011).

After studying with Alfred Nieman at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and being active in experimental music, he moved to Devon and quickly became involved in the performance and collection of folk music, accumulating some 600 hours of recordings from traditional performers. In the late 1980s his interest returned to avant-garde and experimental music, and he has composed and performed extensively in that genre. He taught at Dartington College of Arts and now teaches part time at the University of Plymouth

His writings include the books The Engaged Musician, John Cage as... and Sonic Harvest: Towards Musical Democracy; BBC Radios 2 and 3 documentaries including one on the composer Morton Feldman; and articles for Oral History, the Folk Music Journal, fRoots, Contemporary Music Review, Proof, The Wire and the New Statesman.

Early studies and folk music

Richards cites formative influences as Alfred Nieman and Cornelius Cardew. He studied with Nieman at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. He also took part in experimental music events organised by Cornelius Cardew.[1] In 1968 he moved from the Guildhall to Dartington College of Arts in Devon. He had already studied composition at Dartington Summer School of Music with French avant gardist Michel Decoust.[1]

In the 1970s he was a member of the folk trio Staverton Bridge with Tish Stubbs and Paul Wilson,[2][3] and later toured the English folk scene as a duo with Tish Stubbs. He devoted much time to folklore research mainly in England's Westcountry, concentrating on gypsies, farming communities and children's songs and tales,[4][5] writing several papers on these subjects.[6] A number of sound recordings made by him and of him performing are held by the British Library Sound Archive,[7] and the Sam Richards Folklore Archive of 500 hours of recordings of song, music and interviews made between 1972–1987 is held by the University of Plymouth.[8] In 1979 he and Tish Stubbs published The English Folksinger, a collection of folk songs with melodies; it includes a few songs which Richards wrote himself.[9] At this time he was director of the Westcountry Folklore Centre and co-director of People's Stage Tapes, which concentrated on releasing recordings of traditional and revival performers,[4] including a recording of Walter Pardon singing at a folk club in Torquay.[10] From 1982 to at least 1989 he jointly produced with Steve Roud a quarterly newsletter titled "Folk Song Research: A Newsletter for Researchers of Traditional Song".[11]

Avant garde and jazz

After some years specialising in musical anthropology and fieldwork, Richards wrote "Fool's Holiday", a quasi-minimalist score with much opportunity for jazz improvisation. In collaboration with Peter Kiddle of "Theatre of Public Works" this became a theatre/dance piece with references to ritual and folklore. It was performed in England and also in the BritEsch Festival in Luxembourg.

His recent premières include "Kropotkin", a large scale piece for many performers,[12] which was performed on 1 March 2009 as part of the Peninsula Arts Contemporary Music Festival, and "Four Sea Studies" – premièred by the Torbay Symphony Orchestra in 2010. His "Four Drones" was commissioned in 2009 by the Experimental Flute Ensemble and played in various venues around South Devon. Premièred in June 2009, was his "About Time: Voices" at the San Francisco Public Library, performed by the Cornelius Cardew Choir. In 2012 "Vox Populi" was performed for the Totnes Festival and on Soundart Radio. In 2014 a new composition for string players and the marble run at the Bovey Tracey House or Marbles was premiered.

Fish Music

"Fish Music" was an idea conceived when Richards was a student. Fish swimming in a tank become musical notation by means of a five line musical stave being placed across the glass. String players are instructed to choose a fish and follow its course behind the stave. A revised version in which a team of improvisers with backs turned to the fish respond to the string sound, was premièred by the strings of Ten Tors Orchestra at the National Marine Aquarium, Plymouth in 2008.[13] The earlier version had no improvisers, but had a pre-recorded soundtrack instead. This was the version filmed by Long Room Productions for their hour-long documentary about Richards entitled "Sonic Harvest". An updated version for filmed fish, string players and improvising soloists was presented in Plymouth city centre in the summer of 2013, using the city's large outdoor screen for the film of the fish. The filmed fish film was also used in 2015 for the CAM Festival at the Millennium Centre, Cardiff, with five string players and improvisers Lona Kozik, Gorwel Owen and Richards himself.

Dismissal from Dartington

From 2006, Richards was an outspoken opponent of the proposed closure and move to Falmouth of Dartington College of Arts, the last small independent arts college in the UK, where he had taught part-time for 30 years.[14] He was a founder member of the "Save Dartington College Campaign" which existed not only to save the college, but to question the processes and interests which led to its closure.[1] Richards said that "the whole ethos of Dartington can't and won't be transplanted down there. Once you have taken it away from the place where it grew from, it will become something else."[15]

He was suspended from the college over a satirical article he published on the campaign website that criticised the college administration and, in particular, principal Andrew Brewerton. Following a hearing, he was dismissed for gross insubordination, a decision that he appealed against, maintaining that it was unfair and biased against him. The appeal tribunal agreed that if Richards apologised to Brewerton he could be reinstated, giving guidelines as to what the apology should contain. However, the apology he wrote was not accepted by Brewerton and Richards refused to compromise further.[16]

Current activities

Richards has worked part-time at the University of Plymouth since the early 1990s. He lectures in music,[17] and is a member of Peninsula Arts Contemporary Music Group which organises the Peninsula Arts Contemporary Music Festival. In 2012 he became a member of the Board of Soundart Radio, a community FM radio station for the Totnes area. In November 2012 he became Chair of Soundart's Board. He is also an improviser and jazz pianist., and players with the improving group Half Moon Assemblage with Lona Kozik, Elie Fruchter and, occasionally, Tim Sayer. He also does regular monthly gigs with the Jazzlab, an experimental band that plays free jazz, electronic/instrumental freeform pieces, and sometimes Richards' own poetry - which has a political edge. As a poet and reader he occasionally participates in local readings and has guested at The Language Club, Plymouth.

Publications

Discography

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Sam Richards interviewed by Kate Jago of PROOF". www.artcornwall.org. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  2. "FTX-144 FOLK AT FOXHOLE Richards, Wilson & Stubbs". folktrax-archive.org. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  3. "Paul Wilson: Biography". DevonTradition.org. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  4. 1 2 Michael Pickering; Tony Green, ed. (1987). "Notes on Contributors". Everyday Culture: Popular Song and the Vernacular Milieu. Milton Keynes: Open University Press. ISBN 0-335-15289-9.
  5. For details of a recording session with farmers in Chagford, see: Rice, Jason (2002). "Merrymaking with the Rice Family" (PDF). What's Afoot. Bideford: Devon District Folk Committee (67): 4, 31.
  6. See for instance:
    1. "Joe Hill: A Labour Legend in Song". Folk Music Journal, Vol. 4, No. 4 (1983), pp. 367–384. Retrieved 28 January 2011. (On JSTOR: subscription required for full article)
    2. Sam Richards (1987). "Westcountry Gipsies: Key Songs and Community Identity". In Michael Pickering; Tony Green. Everyday Culture: Popular Song and the Vernacular Milieu. Milton Keynes: Open University Press. pp. 125–49. ISBN 0-335-15289-9.
  7. "Search results for 'Sam Richards'". British Library Sound Archive Catalogue. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  8. "Local studies in Devon : a directory of resources". Devon County Council. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  9. For instance, "Evening Love Song", p. 106; "King Kong", p. 218.
  10. See:
    1. "Walter Pardon CD Booklet Notes". Musical Traditions. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
    2. Schofield, Derek (13 June 1996). "Obituary: Walter Pardon". London: The Independent. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  11. Ives, Edward D. (1989). "Folk Song Research: A Newsletter for Researchers of Traditional Song (review)". Folk Music Journal. EFDSS. 5 (5): 660–661.
  12. Paisey, Kim. "PACMF09: Kim Paisey previews 'Kropotkin' by Sam Richards". Interdisciplinary Centre for Computer Music Research. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  13. "Stringing together a tune". Western Daily Press. Bristol. 30 October 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2011. (Subscription required)
  14. "Drama at Dartington College of Arts". artsHub. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  15. Hodges, Lucy (2 August 2007). "Wacky , zany – threatened ... Dartington is a successful college with a colourful history. So why is it facing closure?". The Independent. London. Retrieved 28 January 2011. (Subscription required)
  16. Newman, Melanie. "Principal rejects 'insincere' apology". Times Higher Education. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  17. "Computer Music Research". Interdisciplinary Centre for Computer Music Research. Retrieved 28 January 2011.
  18. 1 2 "green ltd". Retrieved 29 January 2011.

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.