Anthony Ritchie

Anthony Ritchie (born 1960) is New Zealand composer and academic. He is currently professor and head of performance at Otago University.[1] His works number over a hundred, and include three symphonies, two operas, seven concertos, choral works, chamber music and solo works.

Composer, Professor of Music and Head of Otago University School of Performing Arts.

Ritchie is the son of John Ritchie, a professor teaching composition and orchestration.[2] Anthony Ritchie completed a Ph.D. on the music of Béla Bartók in 1987, studying at the Bartók Archives in Budapest. He studied composition with Attila Bozay at the Liszt Academy, and completed his Mus.B (honors) at the University of Canterbury. Upon returning to New Zealand, in succession he took on the posts of Composer-in-Schools in Christchurch, Mozart Fellow at the University of Otago and Composer-in-Residence at the Dunedin Sinfonia, where he wrote his Symphony No. 1. He has worked as a freelance composer since 1994, and has written for a wide variety of performers including the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, the Auckland Philharmonia, Michael Houstoun and Wilma Smith. As well as having composed a large variety of vocal and instrumental works he has also written music for theatre and dance. Many of his works have been performed overseas, and a growing number are being recorded and published commercially.

Works

  • Concertino for Piano and Strings (1982)
  • Piano Concerto (1982)
  • Symphony No. 1, Boum (1993)
  • Flute Concerto (1993)
  • Viola Concerto (1994–95)
  • Concerto for Soprano Saxophone (1996; revised in 2002 for release as "Oboe Sonata")
  • Guitar Concerto (1997)
  • Double Concerto for Bass Clarinet and Cello (1999)
  • Symphony No. 2 The Widening Gyre (1999)
  • The God Boy, opera (2004)
  • Quartet, opera (2003)
  • "Clouds" Trombone solo (2005)
  • Symphony No. 3 (2010)
  • "Cartoon" Fantasy for oboe and orchestra (2017)
gollark: https://github.com/openai/glide-text2im
gollark: It seems kind of bad at doing multiple things at once.
gollark: I have finally gotten round to testing the public GLIDE model.
gollark: Since it seemed much more intelligent and thinky. Although in retrospect a lot of it is just boring but necessary glue code and similar.
gollark: I had actually expected codegen to take way longer before looking into this stuff in much detail (pre-Codex).

References

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