Chris GendallChristopher Thomas Gendall (born 1980) is a New Zealand composer and lecturer in composition at the University of Auckland. Early life and educationBorn in 1980 in Hamilton Gendall studied composition at Victoria University in Wellington.[1][2] Gendall studied under Roberto Sierra and Steven Stucky at Cornell University and was awarded his PhD in 2010 with his thesis entitled New Musical Rhythm: Toward a Reductive Analytical Method for Music since 1900.[3][2] CareerIn 2009 Gendall, along with Gillian Whitehead, Ross Harris, John Psathas and Eve de Castro-Robinson, was one of the composers chosen by SOUNZ (Centre for New Zealand Music) to compose for SOUNZtender an online auction in which anyone could put up a tender for a composer's work.[4][5] Gendall's composition Suite for String Orchestra was written while he was Composer in Residence at the Banff Centre in Alberta.[6] In 2010 he was appointed as the Creative New Zealand/Jack C Richards Composer in Residence at the New Zealand School of Music at Victoria University.[7][8] The Vector Wellington Orchestra (now Orchestra Wellington) appointed Gendall as their Composer in Residence for 2011.[7][9] His Triple Concerto for the orchesta and the NZTrio was performed in 2012.[10] Gendall was Mozart Fellow at the University of Otago in 2016 and 2017.[11][12][13] During the residency he composed Talking Earth for brass band.[14] In 2020 on the 250th anniversary of Beethoven's birth he received a commission from the Auckland Philharmonia and composed Disquiet for piano trio based on Beethoven's piano trio Op. 70 no. 2.[15][16] Gendall has participated in a number of international festivals and conferences including the Wellesley Composers’ Conference, the Aspen Music Festival, the Britten-Pears Contemporary Composition programme, the Royaumont Voix Nouvelles Composition Course, and the Aldeburgh Festival and his works have been performed by orchestras and ensembles in New Zealand and elsewhere.[2][11] Gendall has also worked for RNZ as an assistant producer for the Upbeat programme.[7] In 2018 he was president of the Composers Association of New Zealand.[17] He has also been a mentor for the NZSO National Youth Orchestra Composer in Residence in 2017, 2018, 2020 and 2024, and for the NZSO Todd Young Composer Award in 2017.[18] Awards and honoursGendall won two awards in 2005 and 2006: a New Zealand Symphony Orchestra Todd Young Composer Award and an ASCAP Foundation Morton Gould Young Composer Award.[7] In 2008 he won the SOUNZ Contemporary Award at the APRA Awards for Wax Lyrical.[11] Selected works
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