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David Raphael Scott (b. 1962) has
been writing music for over 25 years. His earliest creative
efforts—best described as a blend of world and classical music
styles—were produced using a primitive arrangement of discarded tape
recorders.
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When he graduated to a real multi-track
recording platform (in 1980), he wrote, arranged, and produced over 150
songs and instrumental pieces in about two years. This very early
education in the techniques of harmonic layering, instrumental
arranging and formal pacing, laid the groundwork for his current style.
Since those early days, David has
written over forty pieces of contemporary classical instrumental and
vocal music. Recently, his compositional method has become more and
more analogous to the techniques found in painting, where a blank space
is given implied structure by a horizon line and vanishing points, with
detail added to this background in myriad layers. In his compositions,
David therefore attempts to engage the listener on a number of
different levels simultaneously. The surface of the music (the melodic
ideas and gestures) is often saturated with colour, while the
underlying structure (the harmony and counterpoint) is always implied.
David feels fortunate to have studied composition with two of Canada’s
most distinguished senior composers, Robert Turner and Violet Archer.
He is a graduate of the Universities of Manitoba and Alberta, and holds
a Doctorate in Composition from the University of British Columbia.
David has also studied composition with Michael Matthews, Alfred
Fisher, Stephen Chatman, Keith Hamel, and orchestration with Malcolm
Forsyth. In his student years, David received numerous prizes for his
compositions including those from Music Inter Alia (Winnipeg), PROCAN
(Toronto), and BMI (New York).
David is a member of the Canadian League of Composers and is an
associate of the Canadian Music Centre. In 2001, he joined the new
music organization GroundSwell as an Artistic Co-Director.
Premieres and commissions include those by the St. Lawrence String
Quartet, the Molinari String Quartet, the Atlantic String Quartet, the
Victoria Symphony, the Saskatoon Symphony, the Winnipeg Youth Symphony,
the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra, the Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra,
the Koszalin State Philharmonic Orchetra of Poland, the
Eckhardt-Gramatté Competition, the Manitoba
Registered Music Teachers Association, The Royal Canadian College of
Organists, GroundSwell, Array Music, the Hammerhead Consort, Ensemble
Mondetta, Duo Concertante, the Agassiz Music Festival, soprano Valdine
Anderson and other chamber groups and soloists. His music has been
presented throughout Canada, in the United States, Europe and the
former Soviet Union. CDs of David's music, recorded on the Vienna
Modern Masters and Arktos labels, are available through the Canadian
Music Centre.
David Scott is married to Laurel Howard, violist, teacher and
administrator, and they have two children, a dog and two freshwater
snails. He lives and works in Winnipeg and has a near-pathological
obsession with impractical automobiles.
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