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Cevanne Horrocks-Hopayian is a British composer, singer, harper and dancer. She is considered one of today's leading emerging composers.〔(), London Symphony Orchestra Discovery, accessed 29 November 2015.〕 Born in Suffolk, England and of British/Armenian descent,〔(), National Trust, accessed 28 November 2015〕 she trained in composition at Junior Guildhall School of Music and Drama, before gaining a first in Music from Girton College, Cambridge University. She attended the advanced New Music, New Media course at the Britten-Pears School in Snape in 2005 and held a scholarship at Trinity College of Music in London in 2006–07. At Cambridge, she was awarded the Rima Alamuddin Composition Prize in 2004, the Turle Scholarship for Music in 2006, the Gamble Prize for Research in 2006. Sound and Music (formerly ''spnm'') awarded her their Artistic Director (then Kuljit Bhamra) Project: Bhangra Latina, in 2007.〔Pritchard, Alwynne: 'New notes, music uncharted', ''spnm'': ''New notes'', May 2008 p. 4ff〕〔Cornwell, Jane: "They're bringing Bhangra back", ''London Evening Standard'', ''This is London'', 22 September 2008.〕 She was part of the 2006 "Orchestra in a Village" project, led by the London Mozart Players with Fraser Trainer,〔(Orchestra in a Village: Report by Cambridge Music Festival ), cammusic.co.uk; accessed 2 May 2015.〕〔(Royal Philharmonic Society Awards, finalists 2006 ), rpsmusicawards.com; accessed 2 May 2015.〕 that reached the final of the Royal Philharmonic Society Music Awards. She was nominated by Sound and Music (''spnm''), for the British Composer Awards 2009; she was nominated for an Arts Foundation Award in 2010; and in 2010–11 was one of the London Symphony Orchestra's Panufnik composers. 〔(Profile ), panufnik.wordpress.com; accessed 2 May 2015.〕 An Arts Council England Award enabled her to record her first (pop) album, Big Ears. She also arranged and produced Jessica Hynes' song 'Peekaboogie' (2013). She was appointed composer-in-residence at Handel House Museum in 2012.〔(Profile ), handelhouse.org; accessed 2 May 2015.〕 She won an Arts Council England Award for her work, "The Evolution of Eve" (2012), and a PRS award for Consortium5's commission ''L'envoi'', commemorating the death of suffragette Emily Wilding Davison.〔(''L'envoi'' ), bbc.co.uk; accessed 2 May 2015.〕 She wrote and performed the children's opera ''The Kingnapped King and the Pirate Queen'' for the Aldeburgh Festival Fringe (2014). "The Evolution of Eve" was developed with Sveriges Radio into a broadcast aimed at young people in 2013,〔(Sveriges Radio ) accessed 2 May 2015.〕 where it was judged one of the five best radio dramas in the world by the international Prix Marulić in 2015.〔https://www.facebook.com/PrixMarulic/photos/pcb.811927012189971/811926985523307/?type=1&theater; accessed 17 May 2015〕 Her work has a strong visual and tactile element, which she calls "Eye Music", structuring rather than simply decorating her music.〔(Official website ); accessed 2 May 2015.〕 She is inaugural composer-in-residence〔(London Symphony Orchestra website ), lso.co.uk; accessed 2 May 2015.〕 for the London Symphony Orchestra at Khadambi Asalache House, 575 Wandsworth Road, and is a London Symphony Orchestra Soundhub Associate and broadcaster on ResonanceFM for London Symphony Orchestra Soundhub.〔() ()() Accessed May 2015〕 ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Cevanne Horrocks-Hopayian」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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