Denis Smalley studied music at the University of Canterbury (New Zealand) — Diploma in organ performance, and MusB — and the Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand) — BMus honours in composition. He then taught music at Wellington College for three years prior to gaining a French Government bursary which enabled him to study in Paris (France) in 1971. He spent a year in Olivier Messiaen’s composition class at the Conservatoire de Paris, and at the same time took the electroacoustic music course run by the Groupe de recherches musicales (Ina-GRM). He was among the first composers to complete the newly established “Diplôme de musique électroacoustique et de recherche musicale.”
He then moved to the UK, where he completed the DPhil in composition at the University of York. In 1975 he took up a Composition Fellowship at the University of East Anglia (Norwich, UK) and was appointed Lecturer in 1976 (Senior Lecturer from 1988), with special responsibility for electroacoustic composition activities and courses. In 1994 he was appointed Professor of Music and Head of the Department of Music at City University, London (from September 2016 known as City, University of London) (UK). He remained Head until 2005, but took up the Headship again in 2008 until his retirement from the university later in 2009. He is now Professor Emeritus. In 2010 he was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of Huddersfield (UK) in recognition of his achievements in electroacoustic music, and in 2013 he became an Honorary Professor at the University of Kent (UK).
Works have been commissioned by: Groupe de recherches musicales (Ina-GRM); Barry Anderson / West Square Electronic Music Association; Tim Souster / Electronic Music Now; Bath Festival; clarinettist Roger Heaton, Michael Nicholas / Norwich Cathedral Choir; Philip Mead / Sonic Arts Network (SAN); South Bank Centre (London); Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre (BEAST); Groupe de musique expérimentale de Marseille (GMEM); Sveriges Radio Malmö; Wayne Siegel / Dansk Institut for Elektronisk Musik (DIEM); Sonorities Festival (Belfast); Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (HCMF) / Centre for Research in New Music (CeReNeM); and School of Music and Fine Art of University of Kent.
His music has received a number of international awards: the Fylkingen Prize (Stockholm, Sweden, 1975), Bourges Electroacoustic Awards (France, 1977, ’83, ’92), the Special Prize of the International Confederation of Electroacoustic Music (CIME, 1983), NEWCOMP (USA, 1984), and the Golden Nica of Prix Ars Electronica (Linz, Austria, 1988).
He has taken a keen interest in the performance of electroacoustic music, and pioneered the concept of sound diffusion in the UK, developing the first sound diffusion system from 1976 at the University of East Anglia (Norwich, UK). For ten years from 1976 he was very active in promoting electroacoustic music in a number of concert tours for the Arts Council Contemporary Music Network, working with such composers and performers as Sarah Walker (voice), John Tilbury (piano), Singcircle (with Trevor Wishart), John Wallace (trumpet; with Tim Souster). He has been responsible for the sound production for some key electroacoustic events, such as the Electric Weekend on the South Bank in London in 1987, and the BBC Promenade concert celebrating the 10th anniversary of the founding of the Electroacoustic Music Association of Great Britain (EMAS) — which became, in 1990, the Sonic Arts Network (SAN), which in turn became, in 2008, Sound and Music.
He served on the Music Advisory Panel of the Arts Council of Great Britain (1978-82), and was Chair of the British Section of the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM, 1979-82). He was a founder member of the Electroacoustic Music Association of Great Britain (EMAS, 1979) serving on the Committee until 1990.
Denis Smalley is also notable as a writer on the aesthetics of electroacoustic music. In particular, he has developed the notion of “spectromorphology” (the shaping of sound spectra through time), expanding concepts initially articulated by Pierre Schaeffer, in order to explain sonic relationships in their musical context. The most widely read article — Spectromorphology: Explaining Sound-Shapes — has been published in English, French, German, and Italian. A follow-up article — Space-Form and the Acousmatic Image — elaborates spatial concepts relating to spectromorphology. With Lelio Camilleri he conceived and edited the first publication in English devoted to the analysis of electroacoustic music (Journal of New Music Research, 1998). With Simon Emmerson he was responsible for the entry on Electroacoustic Music in the 2000 edition of the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. A book in the Ina-GRM’s Polychrome Portraits series was published in 2010 in English (No. 15), and in 2011 in French (No. 16).
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