Biography |
CAROLINE SZETO, composer
BIOGRAPHY
Caroline Szeto is a Sydney-based composer. She began her musical training on the piano and has received diplomas in piano performance from the Trinity College of Music, London and the Australian Music Examinations Board. Szeto completed her studies in composition with Eric Gross and Peter Sculthorpe, graduating with BMus Hons, MMus Hons and PhD under the supervision of Anne Boyd, from the University of Sydney, where she has lectured in harmony. Szeto has received several prizes and awards including a Composer Fellowship from the Performing Arts Board of the Australia Council for the Arts, the Ignaz Friedman Memorial Prize and the Donald Peart Memorial Prize. She was a finalist in the 2007 Classical Music Awards in the prestigious category of Instrumental Work of the Year. Szeto has twice been selected as a participant for the National Orchestral Composers' School where two of her orchestral works, Energy and Energy II were performed. Both these works and ABC Fanfare, which was commissioned by the ABC for their 60th anniversary, are performed regularly. Szeto's orchestral works have been performed by the Tasmanian, Adelaide, Sydney, Melbourne and Queensland Symphony Orchestras. Both Energy and ABC Fanfare were included in the Second International Festival of New Music for Orchestra held in the Czech Republic. Other international music festivals in which SzetoŐs works have been performed include the ISCM-ACL World Music Days 2007. Much of Szeto's other music is performed by leading ensembles and soloists, and some works are commissioned for festivals: Prelude and Monkey's Cry for 1999 Australian WomenŐs Music Festival, Impulse for ENERGEX Brisbane Festival 2000, Dawn Day Dusk for National Festival of WomenŐs Music 2001 and Stringing for 2009 International Festival of the Federation of Australasian Mandolin Ensembles (FAME). Several of Szeto's works consist of Chinese elements. For example, poems from the Tang dynasty, as well as Chinese harmony and musical structure are used in Images of Li Po rhythmic patterns are adopted in The Third Station of the Cross and also in many other works; a Chinese word is employed in Energy and aspects of Chinese harmony are utilized in many works including YunnyŐs Treat. The Australian Music Examination Board syllabus includes several of Szeto's works: A Game, Study No.1 and Study No. 2. CD recordings of SzetoŐs works are available. Other musical activities have included Noh Drama, Mediaeval Music Drama, production of computer-generated sound synthesis for music theatre, and keyboard performances in opera production and in electronic and computer music concerts.
Copyright © by Caroline Szeto.
|