Dimitris Maronidis (b.1980) composes acoustic, electroacoustic, mixed media and interactive music. In his most recent works he tries to bring together these fields and he explores extensively algorithmic processes for organizing his musical material. He uses technology to experiment, explore and expand the properties of sounds.
Dimitris has studied Counterpoint, Orchestration and Composition at the State Conservatory of Thessaloniki. From 1998 to 2006 he studied at the Music Department of Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and between 2006 and 2010 he was a PhD student at the University of York funded by the State Scholarships Foundation of Greece (IKY). In 2011 he moved to United States of America and pursued a post-doc research as a visiting Fulbright scholar at Harvard University.
He has studied computer music at the Institute of Psychoacoustics (IPSA) in an experimental project held at the Aristotle University in collaboration with the American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association (AHEPA) Hospital) directed by Thanassis Rikakis. There he was introduced to the techniques of computer assisted composition (CAC) and electronic music.
His works have been performed in many places and festivals around the world by decent ensembles and orchestras (Lorraine Symphony Orchestra (FR), State Orchestra of Thessaloniki (GR), State Orchestra of Athens (GR), Nieuw Ensemble (NL), dissonArt ensemble (GR), ContraTempo Chamber Orchestra (GR), Diotima Quartet (FR), Chimera Ensemble (UK) etc).
He has lectured in composition, music theory and orchestration classes at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. He is currently teaching orchestration at the State Conservatory of Thessaloniki and electronic music at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.
Maximilian Marcoll (*1981) studied percussion, instrumental and electronic composition in Lübeck and Essen, Germany. He lives in Berlin. In his series «Compounds» (since 2008) he focusses on the transcription of concrete sounds, mostly recorded in everyday life situations, and the creation of a material network, on which the pieces of the series are based. The development of software also is a part of his compositional activities. In 2010, the software quince was released.
M.Marcoll is a member of the artist group stock11. He lives and teaches in Berlin.
Carlo Ciceri was born in La Spezia in May 1980. After graduating in piano, he moved to the Conservatorio della Svizzera italiana in Lugano, where he received a Master in Conducting (led by G. Bernasconi) and Composition (with N. Vassena and G. Verrando). At the same time, he followed academies and masterclasses throughout Europe and studied composition with J. Baboni Schilingi and F. Voisin at the Conservatoire de musique de Montbéliard. He is also graduated in Musicology at the University of Pavia (Faculty of Cremona). His production, winner in recent years of several international competitions and performed by numerous ensembles in Europe, focused mainly on instrumental music, from pieces for solo instruments to orchestral works. The more recent compositions are written for amplified ensemble and electronics and for electric instruments. He teaches Computer-assited Composition at the Conservatorio della Svizzera Italiana in Lugano and at IRMUS, Scuola Civica di Musica in Milan. In 2010 he co-founded M()A, a group of composers who develops site-specific musical projects. In 2012 he co-founded Crile, a research collective of Dance, Music and New Media. He is part of the artistic committee of the electric ensemble RepertorioZero, ensemble in residence 2012–2014 at Festival Milano Musica and winner of the Silver Lion at the 55. Biennale Musica of Venice 2011.
Mario Mary is a Doctor of “Aesthetic, Science and Technology of Arts” (University Paris VIII), actually he teaches “Electroacoustic Composition” at Prince Rainier III Music Academy of Monaco, and is the artistic director of Monaco Electroacoustique – Electroacoustic Music International Encounter.
Between 1996 and 2010, he teaches at the University Paris VIII and is the artistic director of the Computer Music Series of Concerts
Mario Mary begins his musical studies in Argentine, where he’s graduated as Composition Professor at the National University of La Plata. Simultaneously, he studied Orchestral Conducting and Computer Music. Since 1992 he has continued his studies in Paris, at GRM, National Conservatory of Music, IRCAM and University Paris VIII. He worked as a composer in research at the IRCAM, where he realized “AudioSculpt Cross-Synthesis Handbook” in 1995, and “Control editors” (interfaces Open Music for AudioSculpt) in 2003. His aesthetic interests are directed toward the creation of music whose search generates emergent signs of the new century aesthetic tendencies. Since he was fifteen years old, he has been developing the technique of Electroacoustic Orchestration and the concept of Polyphony of the Space. Recently, he has begun to incorporate in his musical work experimental video images devised by him. His works are played in many different contemporary international music exhibitions.
Mario Mary is a Doctor of “Aesthetic, Science and Technology of Arts” (University Paris VIII), actually he teaches “Electroacoustic Composition” at Prince Rainier III Music Academy of Monaco, and is the artistic director of Monaco Electroacoustique – Electroacoustic Music International Encounter.
Between 1996 and 2010, he teaches at the University Paris VIII and is the artistic director of the Computer Music Series of Concerts
Mario Mary begins his musical studies in Argentine, where he’s graduated as Composition Professor at the National University of La Plata. Simultaneously, he studied Orchestral Conducting and Computer Music. Since 1992 he has continued his studies in Paris, at GRM, National Conservatory of Music, IRCAM and University Paris VIII. He worked as a composer in research at the IRCAM, where he realized “AudioSculpt Cross-Synthesis Handbook” in 1995, and “Control editors” (interfaces Open Music for AudioSculpt) in 2003. His aesthetic interests are directed toward the creation of music whose search generates emergent signs of the new century aesthetic tendencies. Since he was fifteen years old, he has been developing the technique of Electroacoustic Orchestration and the concept of Polyphony of the Space. Recently, he has begun to incorporate in his musical work experimental video images devised by him. His works are played in many different contemporary international music exhibitions.
Juhee Chung studied music theory at the Ewha Women’s University in Seoul. She also received a bachelor’s degree in composition at Berklee College of Music and a diploma in composition with Isabel Mudry at the Frankfurt Musik Hochschule. She continued her studies in composition with Isabel Mundry and also dabbled on computer music with Gerald Bennett at the Musikhochschule Zurich.
Her pieces were performed in various music festivals in Korea, Germany, North America, Hungary, China, Hong Kong, Romania, Austria, France and Belgium. She received many commissions and foundation grants. At present, she takes a position at Jeju National University as an assistant professor and a director of Jeju composer’s association in Korea.
Françoise Barrière was born in 1944 in Paris. Her classical training includes Piano at the Conservatoire de Versailles, Harmony and Counterpoint at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique, Paris. Other less classical training includes her work at Service de la Recherche, ORTF and Ethnomusicology at the Ecole Pratique de Hautes Etudes. In 1970, she founded in collaboration with Christian Clozier, the Groupe de Musique Expérimentale de Bourges (now called the International Institute of Electroacoustic Music of Bourges) which they co-direct. She organizes the Festival «Synthese», the Bourges International Competitions, acts as director of the magazine «Faire» (edition GMEB, 1971–1975) and as Manager of the Company «Mnémosyne Musique Media» that published the CDs of «Cultures Electroniques», a collection devoted to the laureates of the Bourges Electroacoustic Music Competitions. Furthermore, Françoise Barrière is a founding member of the International Confederation of Electroacoustic Music (ICEM) and is its president since 2005. Her works have been played worldwide in numerous festivals, concerts and on national radio networks.
Wolfgang Suppan, geboren in Vöcklabruck (Oberösterreich) lebt und arbeitet seit 1989 in Wien. Er studierte in Wien bei Dietmar Schermann (Tonsatz), Tamas Ungvary (Elektronische Musik) und Michael Jarrell (Komposition). Auslandsaufenthalte führten ihn nach Berlin und an das IRCAM in Paris. Seit 1996 unterrichtet Suppan an der Musikuniversität Wien Tonsatz und Komposition. Seine Werke werden bei bedeutenden Festivals gespielt wie den Salzburger Festspielen, Wien Modern, Musikprotokoll Graz, den Donaueschinger Musiktagen, der Musikbiennale Zagreb, von renommierten Interpreten wie dem Hagen Quartett, Klangforum Wien, Ensemble SurPlus Freiburg, Ensemble l’Itinéraire Paris oder dem SWR Sinfonieorchester Baden-Baden und Freiburg. Neben der intensiven Beschäftigung mit Elektronischer Musik gilt sein Interesse spartenübergreifenden Projekten mit Film, Tanz und Literatur. 2008 war er Stipendiat des Berliner Künstlerprogramms (DAAD).
Der mexikanische Komponist Arturo Fuentes (geb. 1975) kam 1997 nach Europa; sein musikalischer Weg führte ihn von Mailand über Paris und Wien bis nach Innsbruck, wo er heute lebt. Er hat bei Franco Donatoni in Mailand und bei Horacio Vaggione in Paris studiert. Arturo Fuentes komponiert instrumentale und elektronische Musik und entwickelt Musiktheaterprojekte, die Tanz, Video und Elektronik miteinander verbinden. Seine Musik ist ein akribisch arrangiertes, kaleidoskopisches Chaos, das die Grenzen von Dynamik, Klangfarbe, Textur und Virtuosität auslotet. Fuentes erhielt den ersten Preis des elektroakustischen Kompositionswettbewerbs Música Viva (Portugal), den Suvini Zerboni – Preis und den Preis des Festivals Lagonegro. Ausserdem war er nominiert für den Staubach Preis des Internationalen Musikinstituts Darmstadt (Deutschland), die European Competition for Live Electronic Music Projects (Gaudeaumus, Niederlande) und den Prix Ars Electronica in Linz (Österreich). In Frankreich erhielt er das Nadia Boulanger – Stipendium und das Stipendium des französischen Außenministeriums/Fonca; in Österreich das Staatsstipendium für Komposition.
Françoise Barrière was born in 1944 in Paris. Her classical training includes Piano at the Conservatoire de Versailles, Harmony and Counterpoint at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique, Paris. Other less classical training includes her work at Service de la Recherche, ORTF and Ethnomusicology at the Ecole Pratique de Hautes Etudes. In 1970, she founded in collaboration with Christian Clozier, the Groupe de Musique Expérimentale de Bourges (now called the International Institute of Electroacoustic Music of Bourges) which they co-direct. She organizes the Festival «Synthese», the Bourges International Competitions, acts as director of the magazine «Faire» (edition GMEB, 1971–1975) and as Manager of the Company «Mnémosyne Musique Media» that published the CDs of «Cultures Electroniques», a collection devoted to the laureates of the Bourges Electroacoustic Music Competitions. Furthermore, Françoise Barrière is a founding member of the International Confederation of Electroacoustic Music (ICEM) and is its president since 2005. Her works have been played worldwide in numerous festivals, concerts and on national radio networks.
Geboren 1956 in Rauschengesees (Thüringen). Ersten Klavier- und Orgelunterricht erhielt er beim Ortspfarrer Gerhard Volts 1974 begann er ein Studium der Kirchenmusik in Eisenach und Halle/Saale (Orgel bei Gottfried Preller und Hans-Günter Wauer, Tonsatz bei Johannes Petzold), welches er 1979 beendete. Während dieser Zeit besuchte er regelmässig den Ferienkurs für Neue Musik in Gera, besonders die Kompositionskurse bei Paul-H. Dittrich und die Elektronikkurse bei Lothar Voigtländer. Von 1979–82 arbeitete Helmut Zapf als Kantor und Organist an der Stadtkirche in Eisenberg (Thüringen). 1982 wurde er Meisterschüler an der Akademie der Künste der DDR in Berlin bei Prof. Georg Katzer und studierte dort, mit der Unterbrechung als Bausoldat (Waffenverweigerung), bis 1986. Seitdem arbeitet er als freiberuflicher Komponist und lebt in Panketal bei Berlin. Im Lehrauftrag unterrichtet er die Fächer Tonsatz, Kontrapunkt und Kompostion an der HfM Hanns Eisler und an den Musikschulen Kreuzberg und Neukölln. 1992 gründete er in seiner Kirchgemeinde gemeinsam mit seiner Frau die Zepernicker RANDFESTSPIELE, ein Konzertwochenende für Neue Musik. Im Rahmen der Kreuzberger Klangwerkstatt gründete Helmut Zapf 1994 das Ensemble JungeMusik Berlin, welches heute als Festivalensemble einen ständigen Bestandteil der Klangwerkstatt und der Randfestspiele darstellt.
Alfred Zimmerlin wurde 1955 in Zürich geboren. Er studierte Musikwissenschaft und Musikethnologie an der Universität Zürich bei Kurt von Fischer und Wolfgang Laade, Musiktheorie bei Peter Benary und Komposition bei Hans Würthrich und Hans Ulrich Lehmann. Seit 1980 ist er in der Werkstatt für improvisierte Musik (WIM) Zürich tätig. Zimmerlin erhielt etliche Preise und Stipeniden, darunter die Werkjahrstipendien des Aargauischen Kuratoriums und der Stadt Zürich, den Musikpreis der C. F. Meyer-Stiftung, den Kulturpreis 2014 des Kantons Zürich und den Zolliker Kunstpreis 2014. Seit 2010 ist er Dozent für Improvisation an der Hochschule für Musik in Basel. Seine Werkliste umfasst Klavierstücke, Kammermusik mit oder ohne Live-Elektronik, Vokalmusik, Orchestermusik, Musiktheater, aber auch Arbeiten für Rundfunk und Film. Zimmerlin ist auch als improvisierender Musiker tätig – als Cellist – und ist in zahlreichen Formationen in Europa und den USA aufgetreten. Er ist Mitglied von KARL ein KARL, einem Komponistenkollektiv und Improvisationstrio (mit Peter K Frey und Michel Seigner), das seit 1983 in unveränderter Besetzung besteht.