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Michael Nyman Orchestra

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18-624: The Michael Nyman Orchestra is a group that expands on the Michael Nyman Band for specific album work, often for movie soundtracks . In 1993, the Michael Nyman Band joined an orchestra for the first time in their recording history with MGV: Musique à Grand Vitesse . The album credit is to "The Michael Nyman Band and Orchestra". The Michael Nyman Orchestra has operated as a formal group since then. Such soundtrack albums as Practical Magic , Ravenous , The End of

36-405: A band member) and Exit No Exit , and plan to record the third recording of Nyman's four string quartets. They are produced by David Cunningham . Many of the current and former band members, including John Harle , Alexander Balanescu , Dave Lee , Madeleine Mitchell , Andrew Findon , and Simon Haram , have released solo albums that include performances of Nyman's music. The membership in

54-426: A group of friends and expert musicians intimately identify their total commitment, virtuosity, and joyous enthusiasm." As the works on the album were written as concert pieces before being transmuted into film music, some of the selections, particularly "Chasing Sheep Is Best Left to Shepherds" contain more material than their film versions, and some are very different in style, such as "An Eye for Optical Theory", with

72-661: A tempo more than double from its original in The Draughtsman's Contract . The other films from which the music is derived are A Zed & Two Noughts (where it was originally not performed by the Michael Nyman Band), Drowning By Numbers , The Cook The Thief His Wife & Her Lover , Making a Splash , and Prospero's Books . Nyman created a similar album in 2005 with The Composer's Cut Series Vol. II: Nyman/Greenaway Revisited . Fan reaction has generally been that The Essential Michael Nyman Band

90-420: Is a studio album featuring a collection of music by Michael Nyman written for the films of Peter Greenaway and newly performed by the Michael Nyman Band . It is the seventeenth album release by Nyman. The album features liner notes by Annette Morreau , who describes the album as "a summation and digest of ten years of progress in the performance of music by a composer -- a composer with whom, so evidently,

108-447: Is actually composed of the concert versions of various film pieces, having undergone years of revisions and refinement, are significantly different from their soundtrack counterparts, to a far more severe extent than typical differences between classical music performances. This album also contains two cuts from the film score to A Zed & Two Noughts , which was originally performed by an orchestra of musicians who were never members of

126-457: Is the superior album. Tracks 1-3 from The Draughtsman's Contract . Tracks 4-5 from A Zed and Two Noughts . Tracks 6-8 from Drowning by Numbers . Tracks 9-10 from The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover . Track 11 from Making a Splash . Track 12 from Prospero's Books . "Stroking" is not the same piece that was known as "Stroking" on, The Kiss and Other Movements , but rather, "Gliding." Track 2, An Eye for Optical Theory ,

144-608: The Campiello Band , is a group formed as a street band for a 1976 production of Carlo Goldoni 's 1756 play, Il Campiello directed by Bill Bryden at the Old Vic . The band did not wish to break up after the production ended, so its director, Michael Nyman , began composing music for the group to perform, beginning with "In Re Don Giovanni ", written in 1977. Originally made up of old instruments such as rebecs , sackbuts and shawms alongside more modern instruments like

162-403: The banjo and saxophone to produce as loud a sound as possible without amplification, it later switched to a fully amplified line-up of string quartet , double bass, clarinet , three saxophones, horn , trumpet, bass trombone , bass guitar, and piano. This lineup has been variously altered and augmented for some works. The band's first recorded album on a professional label was Nyman's second,

180-518: The Affair , The Claim , and The Libertine are credited to this Orchestra. While the former two titles lack detailed credits, the latter three albums show that most of the Orchestra has remained consistent. From the 2000 soundtrack album The Claim . Michael Nyman Band The Michael Nyman Band , formerly known as

198-430: The Affair , The Claim , and The Libertine are credited to this group, first implied on that 1994 album. While the former two titles lack detailed credits, the latter three albums show that most of the band (not to say most of those credited as full members over its history) performs in the Orchestra. The band's existence is far from over, however, as Nyman orchestrated his 2002 opera, Facing Goya , specifically for

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216-589: The band is rather fluid, though it has had many core members. Often, whoever plays with the band on a given album is credited as a full member, though just as often, non-members are credited as guest artists. The following people have received credit as full-fledged members on at least one album, followed by a list of every instrument that they have been credited with playing at any time. The recordings prior to Michael Nyman (1981) did not credit individual band members. (Listed chronologically) The Essential Michael Nyman Band The Essential Michael Nyman Band

234-482: The band, with solos by band members Nyman, Balanescu, Perry, and Leonard. Similarly, The Piano was performed by members of the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra with Harle, Roach, Findon, and Nyman, but is also part of the band's repertoire. In 1993, the band joined with an orchestra for the first time in their recording history with MGV: Musique à Grand Vitesse , a piece commissioned for

252-602: The band. His previous two opera recordings include band members but are not formally credited to the band, and one, the aforementioned Noises, Sounds & Sweet Airs , uses a full-scale orchestra, without Nyman at the baton. Man and Boy: Dada (2004) and Love Counts (2005; recorded 2007), Nyman's newest operas, feature the band conducted by Paul McGrath . In 1996, another offshoot group, The Nyman Quartet, consisting of Cathy Thompson, Gabrielle Lester, Kate Musker, and Tony Hinnigan, recorded The Ballad of Kastriot Rexhepi (with Sarah Leonard --the only singer ever credited as

270-487: The opening of a TGV line, first performed on 26 September 1993, in which the band, according to Nyman's own liner notes, represents the tracks , "resisting the temptation of the concerto grosso ". The album credit is to "The Michael Nyman Band and Orchestra". The group has largely been superseded by the Michael Nyman Orchestra . Such soundtrack albums as Practical Magic , Ravenous , The End of

288-558: The self-titled Michael Nyman (1981), which mostly comprised pieces written for the early films of Peter Greenaway . This album was not released on compact disc until 2012. Another self-titled album (1995) has appeared as a promotional item compiling tracks from various other albums, and should not be confused with this one. Along with soundtracks to Greenaway's The Draughtsman's Contract , Drowning by Numbers , and The Cook The Thief His Wife & Her Lover , their 1980s output included The Kiss and Other Movements (which includes

306-410: The soundtrack for Greenaway's Prospero's Books (1991). Conversely, Nyman composed music for another adaptation of William Shakespeare 's The Tempest , the ballet-opera Noises, Sounds & Sweet Airs , soon after Prospero's Books , some of which was derived from La Traversée de Paris . Their 1992 album, The Essential Michael Nyman Band , may appear to be a greatest hits compilation, but

324-575: The titular art song ; a song from Nyman's projected Tristram Shandy opera; a tango ; a movement from the same work as "Memorial" as used in Greenaway's 26 Bathrooms ; and a performance of music (not the original soundtrack) from Greenaway's Making a Splash ) and the modern dance work And Do They Do . They also made a limited edition recording of Nyman's La Traversée de Paris in 1989; many of its individual movements were soon to be dismantled, revised, or simply transplanted whole, to serve as

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