Gabriel Prokofiev

Gabriel Prokofiev (born 1975 in London, UK) is a London-based composer, producer, and founder of the NONCLASSICAL record label and club night.

Gabriel Prokofiev was born in 1975 to an English mother and Russian father Oleg Prokofiev,[1] and is the grandson of the 20th-century composer Sergei Prokofiev. He studied composition at both Birmingham and York universities, but eschewed classical music for electronica,[2] and became a composer of garage music.[3] and producer of Dance, Electro & Hip-hop music under a variety of guises. He was one of the producers of Lady Sovereign's album Public Warning,[4] under the name Medasyn.[5]

He founded the independent record label Nonclassical in 2003 and returned to his classical roots, composing String Quartet No. 1 for the Elysian Quartet , which he released on NONCLASSICAL, complete with remixes of the original quartet. His other compositions include 2nd and 3rd String Quartets, a collection of piano pieces, Piano Book, for Russian virtuoso GéNIA, and Concerto for Turntables & Orchestra (2006) which was premiered by DJ Yoda at the 2011 BBC Proms, with the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain under Vladimir Jurowski and toured by the BBC Concert Orchestra as part of its educational programme. His Concerto for Trumpet, Percussion, Turntables and Orchestra (2014), was premiered by Marie Bédat (trumpet), Chantal Aguer (percussion), DJ Switch (turntables) and the fr:Orchestre de Pau Pays de Béarn: under Faycal Karoui at the fr:Palais Beaumont Centre de Congrès, Pau, France.

Other recent works include Concerto for Cello No. 1 (2013), commissioned by Alexander Ivashkin and premiered in St. Petersburg by Ivashkin and the St. Petersburg Philharmonic under Sabrie Bekirova , Concerto for Bass Drum and Orchestra (2012), premiered in the US by percussionist, Joby Burgess and the Princeton Symphony Orchestra under Rossen Milanov, (IMPORT/EXPORT) (2008), for Joby Burgess's group PowerPlant, using Global Junk objects, and Sleeveless Scherzo (2007), a piece for solo violin and solo dancer for Rambert Dance Company (choreographer Patricia Okenwa ). Prokofiev made his conducting debut with his concerto for 'dancing' viola, string orchestra, trombones & percussion, in the Paradiso, Amsterdam in 2008. In March 2009, his NONCLASSICAL club made its debut in New York at the cutting-edge Wordless Music series in New York, and at the Rock festival SXSW to favourable critical response.

Prokofiev has also composed for ballet. His first full-length ballet work, Ein Winternachtstraum, was written in 2011 and is in 2 acts, including Concerto for Turntables & Orchestra, and extracts from Mendelssohn's A Midsummer Night's Dream. The ballet was commissioned by Bern Ballett and was premiered in Stadttheater, Bern, Switzerland by Bern Ballett with choreography by Cathy Marston . In 2013 Karole Armitage choreographed extracts and remixes from his Concerto for Turntables and Orchestra, in her production 'Mechanics of the Dance Machine'. More recent works for dance include two ballets for electronics; Howl (2013), which premiered in Lucerne, Switzerland by Tanz Luzerner Theater and choreographer Maurice Causey , Strange Blooms (2013), which premiered at the Northcott Theatre, Exeter, UK by Shobana Jeyasingh Dance with choreography by Shobana Jeyasingh, and received its capital premiere at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank, London; and "Swipe" (2011), choreographed by Val Caniparoli, premiered by Richmond Ballet, and also performed by Smuin Ballet and Singapore Dance Theatre.

Selected works

Ballet

Orchestral

Chamber

Instrumental

Vocal

Film

References

  1. "PRS for Music Foundation - Gabriel Prokofiev". PRS for Music Foundation. Retrieved 2011-08-13.
  2. Colborne, Femke (2008-06-13). "Gabriel Prokofiev's Nonclassical club night breaks with tradition". The Times Online. Archived from the original on 7 September 2008. Retrieved 2013-09-01.
  3. Coffey, Russ (2004-03-02). "Prokofiev goes clubbing". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2011-08-13.
  4. Richards, Sam (2012-01-13). "Clubs picks of the week". The Guardian. Retrieved 2012-05-13.
  5. Richards, Sam (2006-12-15). "Odd one out is now in". The Age. Retrieved 2012-05-13.


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