Some fellow composers: Sandra Uitdenbogerd, Leanne Veitch, Theresa Wallner.
My style is based on a variety of influences including early music and early twentieth century music and late romantic music. It is mostly classical (as opposed to popular) and tonal. I tend to use simple chords but often use non-standard sequences of harmonies. Although there are some minimalistic tendencies I tend to go for "simplicity" in preference to extreme minimalism. To me the structure of music is very important. Music shouldn't ramble, it should be cohesive. These days most of my work is choral.
For the curious you can also see the score which the MIDI is derived from (pdf), This differs from the normal score in that it spells out certain details (such as trills). This gives a good idea of what Mup can and can't do.
Recording is of performance by David Smith and Michael Winikoff as part of the Melbourne High School, school play Plays and Players II, 1989.
Lament was performed on Saturday 8th October 1994, by the Melbourne University Choral Society, conducted by Andrew Wailes; and on Friday 9th December 1994, by the ANU (Australian National University) Choral Society, conducted by Trish Shaw. [PDF,MIDI,MP3]
Recording is of the MUCS performance, at Twentieth century lament, 8th October 1994.
Available on CPDL.
NEW A revised version of this piece is available (pdf)
Available on CPDL.
The Hollow Men was premierred on Saturday 5th September 1998, by the Melbourne Chamber Choir, conducted by Faye Dumont. A friend who attended the performance sent the following comment to the Australian choral-chat mailing list:
I went along to the Melbo Chamber Choir (formerly Fay(e) Dumont Singe-ers) concert Satdy night - no! It had *nothing at all* to do with one of the basses! Nothing!You can download Hollow men in PDF format (warning: 574K). Also available are MIDI renditions of the various parts. Note that the plain chant at the start of the last section has been left out since the notes aren't hard and the MIDI rendition completely fails to capture the freedom of chant. Also, the MIDI files miss the distinction between singing, speaking, and whispering.Anyway, they premiered Michael's "The Hollow Men" and all I can say is really puerile sounding stuff like "wow" and "wow" and maybe "wow"! It stayed with me for the past few days and was the most jaw-droppingly stunning thing I'd heard in a very long time indeed. Unfortunatement it wasn't recorded so if you missed it and didn't have a legit excuse like being out of the country or a previous engagement or you didn't know about it, then sucko to you with knobs on!
It was without doubt the standout piece of the evening and words fail me!
Noteworthy: PDF
(The indications "ripple" should be read as a squigley vertical line
in front of the note - unfortunately Noteworthy composer doesn't seem to
be able to do this.)
Mup: PDF, MIDI
Low-quality recording: MP3
(Recording is Michael Winikoff at home, 2002)
Another recording: MP3
(Recording from
Sandra
Uitdenbogerd's recital)
Available on CPDL.
Available on CPDL.
Recording is of the ROCS performance, 26th May 2000.
Available on CPDL.
Available on CPDL.
The first madrigal, Since first, is a love song, dedicated to my wife, Leanne. It should be sung gently, with bars 12 to 18 being particularly lyrical.
The second madrigal, Weep, began as being inspired by Weep O Mine Eyes, but ended up with a more biblical text, loosely based on the lamentations of Jeremiah.
The third and final madrigal, Pastime, is inspired by the well-known work attributed to Henry VIII. It adopts harmonies that suggest a medieval atmosphere, while using a rather modern alternating 3/4 and 6/8 time signature (a la Bernstein).
Download: madrigals.pdf, since.mid, weep.mid, pastime.mid.
The second movement, weep, has been revised slightly (September 2007).
Download: madrigals-v2.pdf, weep-v2.mid
Available on CPDL.
Download: australia.pdf, australia.mid.
ThisIsAustraliaSIV.mp3: a recording of the performance by the Sydney Intervarsity Choral Festival. Note that some of the tempi are faster than I would have preferred.
Available on CPDL.
Download: Deconstruct-v2.pdf (revised score)
Performance recording here
Download: rondo.pdf, the clarinet part, rondo.mid.
The setting incorporates the text in both English and Hebrew
(click here for an audio of the Hebrew pronunciation).
It also includes a violin, representing both my father's violin playing, and, in the closing bars of the work, the soul finding peace.
Download: blessing.pdf.
(NEW: you can also download the violin part, and both the
score and violin part transpose up a semitone)
Download: Score.
Download: Cover and notes,
Score
Download: Score.
The Lord bless you and keep you
(There are a number of translations of this text).
The Lord make his face to shine upon you, and be gracious
The Lord life up his countenance upon you, and give you peace.
A friend who attended the performance sent the following comment to the Australian choral-chat mailing list:
I went along to the Melbo Chamber Choir (formerly Fay(e) Dumont Singe-ers) concert Satdy night - no! It had *nothing at all* to do with one of the basses! Nothing!Anyway, they premiered Michael's "The Hollow Men" and all I can say is really puerile sounding stuff like "wow" and "wow" and maybe "wow"! It stayed with me for the past few days and was the most jaw-droppingly stunning thing I'd heard in a very long time indeed. Unfortunatement it wasn't recorded so if you missed it and didn't have a legit excuse like being out of the country or a previous engagement or you didn't know about it, then sucko to you with knobs on!
It was without doubt the standout piece of the evening and words fail me!
Blue Sky is an incomplete musical that Leanne and I are working on. The ROCS concert also included the premiere of Leanne's Wheel of the Year: A Pagan Song Cycle.
This is Australia was submitted to the ROCS Composition Competition, and was awarded first place.
The concert also included a performance of Leanne's Crescent Moon, which was also submitted to the composition competition, and was awarded second place.
(from http://www.esc-basel.ch)
"The Bells | With Bells Singing and Bells RingingA Project by Michel Uhlmann with Morgane Klein and The English Seminar Choir
- Friday, December 2, 2011, 8 pm - Offene Kirche Elisabethen Basel
- Saturday, December 3, 2011, 8 pm - Kirche Baden
This programme revolves around bells, with live compositions and performances by percussionist Morgane Klein in collaboration with the choir. Included are pieces about and with bells by Betsy Jolas and Maurizio Kagel as well as meditative moments with singing bowls and other cultic metal instruments. Especially for this project, the composer Michael Winikoff, New Zealand, will re-arrange his piece „Anthem for Doomed Youth“ for bells and choir. At the centre of the spectacle, new creations of sound are explored, with improvisation by the choir and the percussionist as well as elements of the English bell ringing tradition, which reaches far back in time. The programme is rounded off with pieces by Rachmaninov and Anne Boleyn as well as humoristic and satiric pieces like “Das Gläut zu Speyer” by Ludwig Senfl. Throughout the concert, bells are understood as causing chaos and creating order, and measuring time, mourning and joy."