The winners for the 2017 Art Music Awards have been announced
The 2017 Art Music Awards took place in Sydney’s City Recital Hall this evening, honouring the creators, performers, and lovers of contemporary art music, contemporary jazz and experimental music.
With the awards in their seventh year, tonight saw winners honoured across eleven national categories, and eight state and territory categories, with coveted awards being handed out for categories such as the Orchestral Work Of The Year, Performance Of The Year, an Vocal/Choral Work Of The Year.
Melbourne-based composer Liza Lim was the big winner of the evening, taking home the Instrumental Work Of The Year award for How Forests Think, and the Vocal/Choral Work of The Year for Tree Of Codes.
The Orchestral Work Of The Year award went to Lyle Chan for Serenade for Tenor, Saxophone and Orchestra (“My Dear Benjamin”), Performance Of The Year went to Peter de Jager for his piano performance of Chris Dench’s ‘Piano Sonata’, while Tom O’Halloran received the Jazz Work Of The Year award for Now Noise.
Incredible tribute to John Pochée at the #ArtMusicAwards. Wow and thank you composer Roger Frampton, Sandy Evans & #TenPartInvention pic.twitter.com/DdbgigNiut
— TheIndustryObserver (@theindustry_o) August 22, 2017
What a send-off with the Narli Ensemble! Congrats to all the #ArtMusicAwards finalists & winners! pic.twitter.com/geRfCu1FQS
— TheIndustryObserver (@theindustry_o) August 22, 2017
2017 ART MUSIC AWARDS WINNERS
Orchestral Work of the Year
Title: Serenade for Tenor, Saxophone and Orchestra (“My Dear Benjamin”)
Composer: Lyle Chan
Text: Benjamin Britten and Wulff Scherchen
Performer: Andrew Goodwin tenor, Michael Duke saxophone, Queensland Symphony Orchestra and Paul Kildea conductor
Performance of the Year
Performer: Peter de Jager
Title: Piano Sonata
Composer: Chris Dench
Vocal/Choral Work of the Year
Title: Tree of Codes
Composer: Liza Lim
Performer: Ensemble MusikFabrik; Cologne Opera, Clement Power conductor, Massimo Furlan director
Publishers: Universal Music Publishing MGB Australia, obo G. Ricordi & Co. Bühnen- und Musikverlag GmbH
Jazz Work of the Year
Title: Now Noise
Composer: Tom O’Halloran
Performer: Memory of Elements
Instrumental Work of the Year
Title: How Forests Think
Composer: Liza Lim
Performer: ELISION, Wu Wei soloist, Carl Rosman conductor
Publishers: Universal Music Publishing MGB Australia, obo G. Ricordi & Co. Bühnen- und Musikverlag GmbH
Award for Excellence by an Organisation
Speak Percussion for their 2016 program and sustained contribution to Australian music
Award for Excellence by an Individual
Daryl Buckley for over thirty years of contribution to the international projection of Australian contemporary performance, ideas and practice
Award for Excellence in Music Education
Moorambilla Voices for their 2016 season
Award for Excellence in a Regional Area
Tura New Music for their 2016 Regional Program
Award for Excellence in Experimental Music
Clocked Out with Bruce and Jocelyn Wolfe for The Piano Mill Project
Award for Excellence in Jazz
Andrea Keller for the creation, presentation and release of contemporary jazz in 2016
2017 ART MUSIC AWARDS – STATE and TERRITORY AWARDS
ACT Award for Instrumental Work of the Year
The 7 Great Inventions Of The Modern Industrial Age by Sally Greenaway
NSW Award for Excellence in Music Education
Sydney Improvised Music Association (SIMA) for Young Women’s Jazz Workshop program
NT Award for Excellence in a Regional Area
Ngarukuruwala for Ngiya Awungarra (I Am Here, Now)
QLD Award for Excellence by an Individual
Vanessa Tomlinson for conceiving and curating the 2016 Australian Percussion Gathering
SA Award for Performance of the Year
Adelaide Chamber Singers for Agnus Dei (Do Not Stand At My Grave And Weep) by Paul Stanhope
TAS Award for Excellence by an Organisation
Mona for Dark Mofo 2016
VIC Award for Performance of the Year
Chamber Made Opera for Permission To Speak by Kate Neal
WA Award for Jazz Work Of The Year
Help You Along Your Way by Daniel Susnjar
This article originally appeared on The Industry Observer, which is now part of The Music Network.