Mark Nichols (composer)

Mark Nichols (born February 22, 1964) is an American playwright, composer and lyricist, best known for his musicals Little Boy Goes to Hell (1988), Joe Bean (2003), and How to Survive the Apocalypse (2009). He is also known in the northwestern United States for his work with Fred Jamison (aka Beaverchief of the Lummi) for whom he arranged 20 Northwest Coast Native songs for orchestra, girl choir, and rock band, performed by the Seattle Symphony in 1996.

Career

Nichols began his writing career as a solo artist on Seattle's PopLlama Records after playing keyboards in bands like The Squirrels and Prudence Dredge.

Nichols has composed extensively for Seattle film director, Garrett Bennett, and scored all but one of his films, which include End of the Icon, Farewell to Harry, and A Relative Thing. He has written over twenty published works for theater, particularly rock operas, but also a number of operas for children and underscores for straight plays. He is one of the founders and composers for the Seattle/Mumbai rock band Manooghi Hi. As an orchestrator he is known for his work on the classic Sub Pop album by Jeremy Enigk Return of the Frog Queen. Mark has produced a number of other seminal northwest albums, particularly Trillian Green's Metamorphosis, "Awesome"'s CD, Delaware, and Manooghi Hi's debut Hi. In many countries in Europe his orchestrations for Sub Pop, Glitterhouse Records, folk rock artists The Walkabouts have been widely heard. He received honors for his string arrangements for Norwegian Band Midnight Choir. His score for the Brecht masterpiece Caucasian Chalk Circle has been performed in Cape Town, London, Boise, Chicago, Omaha, Seattle, Helena, Walla Walla, and New York. His surround-sound design for Lauren Weedman's Bust! has been duplicated in many venues around the United States.

Little Boy Goes to Hell

In 1987 The "epic rock fable" Little Boy Goes to Hell, was released as a four-record set with book and marked the composers first attempt at the quirky and ambitiously playful American style of musical theater writing which he says came from "his own twisted musical and spiritual life". At the time the show was being created he was consistently experiencing temporal lobe epilepsy which he said was symptomatic of what he calls a "fear of fear itself". The semi-autobiographical sprawling journey story revolves around a man who believes he's the devil. The central conflict concerns his "Psychologist's" challenge to "find a fresh soul", one "given willingly". The bulk of the story follows a young boy's journey home from the hospital as he meets the Jungian clown archetypes along the forest pathway. "As a young man I created a storybook hell to calm my realworld fear of hell". It apparently worked as the composer's epilepsy subsided a few years after Little Boy was first performed at Seattle's Annex Theater in 1988. Goldmine Magazine said of Little Boy: "At last Seattle has a rock musical to do itself proud." The show was also given the award "Art Project of the Year," by The Backlash Magazine.

Joe Bean

The second show to achieve the level of notoriety of Little Boy, Joe Bean, was suggested by his long-time collaborator, Bob McAllister, a Bainbridge Island High School English teacher who had hired Mark to write a spring musical based on the biblical story of Job. Nichols says he did everything possible to make "a depressing story" as much fun as he could, using a plethora of musical styles from Gilbert and Sullivan-inspired chorus to Grunge-era dirge rock to a sort of primal Dead Can Dance sound. "The twist," says Nichols, "was that I had no intention of making the characters of God and the Devil simple." What he did was expand them into a set of "New Age Gods" who torture the wonderfully adaptable Joe Bean in an effort to see how far a "polytheistic modern rich hippy" can be pushed. In the end Joe has fallen from "the luckiest man ever" to a homeless waif, yet in his misery is finally able to see clearly the metephorical and actual difference between character/spirit and play/reality. Nichols has cited one of his biggest theatrical influences as Pirandello's Six Characters In Search of An Author.

How to Survive the Apocalypse (aka "Burning Opera")

The most widely popular of the Nichols epic rock operas was created by Erik Davis, Christopher Fuelling, Dana Harrison and Mark Nichols, based on the story of the real-life Burning Man festival, which takes place every year on the Black Rock Desert in Nevada, and its real-life founders. The opera jumps between three time periods in the festival's history: 1986, when "the man" was first burned on San Francisco's Baker Beach; 1996, when the festival experienced its first real tragedies and deep philosophical clashes; and the present day, as seen through the eyes of three "newbies" who undergo a series of unnerving trials during their first 24-hours on the desert. The opera had its first production in 2009 at San Francisco's Teatro Zinzanni and played to standing ovations. Publicity for the opera described it as "theatrical freak-out that combines rock opera, vaudeville, and a Dionysian revival show that is just as inspired and terrified by current events as you are. Part mutant mystery play, part crash-course in proactive future culture." The concept of epic rock opera seems to have grown in this opera to include an audience immersive tour of crazy art cars and weirdos and "makers", which, like Burning Man itself, asks there be "no spectators."

Theater Works

Orchestrator, Arranger or Producer

Soundtracks

External links

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