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Robert Fokkens

Biography

Robert Fokkens is a South African classical music composer. He is among a new generation of younger composers in post-apartheid South Africa. He was educated in Cape Town at Rondebosch Boys’ School.Robert Fokkens is a South African classical music composer. He is among a new generation of younger composers in post-apartheid South Africa. He was educated in Cape Town at Rondebosch Boys’ School. He currently teaches composition at Cardiff University School of Music. His works are frequently performed in the UK, Europe and South Africa, including performances at the Wigmore Hall, the Purcell Room, the Holland Music Sessions, the Spitalfields Festival, the South African National Arts Festival in Grahamstown, and the Royal Festival Hall.[1] He had works performed in Japan, Australia and the USA, and his music has been broadcast on BBC Radio 3.[2] His music is included on a 2005 CD of South African choral music, Towards the Light, recorded by the Commotio choir. Fokkens previously studied at the South African College of Music at the University of Cape Town with Peter Klatzow, and at the Royal Academy of Music, where he held the Manson Fellowship in 2001–2. He has received many awards and scholarships and completed his PhD, supervised by Michael Finnissy at the University of Southampton in 2006. The composer explored writing contemporary music theatre which escapes both ‘opera’ and ‘music theatre’ traditions, and aims at a wider audience than most contemporary music. His dramatic work is in the growing field of ‘physical theatre’, inspired by companies like Frantic Assembly, Gecko, Complicité, Theatre O and Ridiculusmus. Current musical interests are in South African traditional musics, particularly Xhosa and Zulu bow music, and jazz and electronica. Since 2008 Fokkens has been vice-president of NewMusicSA, the South African section of the International Society for Contemporary Music.

News / Ranking / Titbits / Awards

He was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy of Music in 2014 for making a “significant contribution to the music profession”. I studied at the University of Cape Town and at the Royal Academy of Music, also holding the Manson Fellowship at the RAM in 2001-2002.

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