Hubbry Logo
Richard MarriottRichard MarriottMain
Open search
Richard Marriott
Community hub
Richard Marriott
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Richard Marriott
Richard Marriott
from Wikipedia

Key Information

Richard Marriott (born 1951) is an American composer and performer. He has composed for film, television, dance, theater, opera, installations and video games. He is the founder and artistic director of the Club Foot Orchestra, an important modern ensemble for live music performance with silent films. His teachers include Dominick Argento and Paul Fetler at the University of Minnesota, Pauline Oliveros at UCSD, North Indian sarod master Ali Akbar Khan, shakuhachi master Masayuki Koga, and Balinese composers Nyoman Windha and Made Subandi. Marriott was a member of Snakefinger's History of the Blues[1] and has recorded with The Residents,[2] Brazilian Girls,[3] "Singer at Large" Johnny J. Blair, and many others. He performs on brass and woodwind instruments, Western and Asian.

Composing credits also include music for the feature film Rising Sun,[4] music for the CBS series The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat, the score for the 1988 Academy Award nominated short film Silver into Gold and the score for Legong: Dance of the Virgins commissioned by Gamelan Sekar Jaya and composed for Balinese gamelan and Western instrumentation.[5] He was employed as a staff composer for Atari Games 1992–1997, where amongst other things he composed the music for Mace the Dark Age and contributed compositions for LeapFrog Enterprises. He has worked with California-based choreographer Della Davidson since 1991,[6] and in New York with Yoshiko Chuma's School of Hard Knocks[7] and choreographer Yin Mei.[8]

Many of his recent compositions feature a synthesis of Asian and Western elements. A collaboration with Beijing-based librettist Xu Ying, entitled Prince Lan Ling, is scored for Western Symphonic Orchestra, Chinese instruments and singers, chorus and dancers.[9] Operas include Divide Light (with visual artist Lesley Dill) and Passion of Leyla (with librettist Ruth Margraff), and the experimental opera God Machine. Metropolis Violin Concerto premiered in 2015 with violinist Alisa Rose. The Klezmorim Bass Concerto premiered in 2018 with soloist Gary Karr and the Gonzaga University Orchestra, conducted by Kevin Hekmatpanah. The Ghost Ship Cello Concerto [10] also premiered in 2018, with soloist Matthew Linaman and the Oakland Symphony with conductor Michael Morgan.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Richard Marriott (born October 29, 1951) is an American composer, performer, producer, and instrument builder known for founding the Club Foot Orchestra and creating innovative musical scores for silent films. As founder and artistic director of the Club Foot Orchestra, Marriott has led the ensemble in developing and performing new accompaniments to classic silent films, drawing influences from diverse musical traditions and earning performances at prestigious venues including Lincoln Center, BAM, SFJazz, and the Smithsonian Institution. His work with the group has included collaborations with gamelan virtuosos for films set in Bali and regular contributions to the San Francisco Silent Film Festival across multiple years. Marriott's compositions extend beyond silent film scores to encompass opera, musical theater, concerto, film, television, dance, theater, installations, and video games. Notable works include the operas Divide Light and The Passion of Leyla, musical theater pieces Songs & Dances of Imaginary Lands, String of Pearls, and Godmachine, and the cello concerto The Ghost Ship, which premiered with the Oakland Symphony conducted by Michael Morgan. Through these diverse projects, Marriott has established himself as a versatile figure in contemporary music, particularly recognized for bridging traditional silent film presentation with modern compositional techniques.

Early life and education

Early life

Richard Marriott was born on October 29, 1951, in Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Limited information is available about his childhood or early years in Cleveland prior to his later relocation to the San Francisco Bay Area, where his professional career developed.

Education and musical influences

Richard Marriott's musical education incorporated a diverse range of Western and non-Western traditions under the guidance of several prominent teachers. He studied composition at the University of Minnesota with Dominick Argento and Paul Fetler. He continued his studies at the University of California, San Diego with Pauline Oliveros. To broaden his perspective beyond Western classical music, Marriott trained in sarod with Indian maestro Ali Akbar Khan. He also pursued shakuhachi studies with Japanese master Masayuki Koga. Additionally, his compositional approach was shaped by influences from Balinese composers Nyoman Windha and Made Subandi. These varied studies fostered Marriott's versatility as a performer on brass and woodwind instruments, encompassing both Western and Asian varieties. This eclectic training laid the foundation for his cross-cultural style, evident in later works that blend disparate musical elements.

Club Foot Orchestra

Founding and leadership

The Club Foot Orchestra was founded in 1983 by Richard Marriott in San Francisco as the house band for the performance art nightclub Club Foot in the city's Bayview district, where Marriott lived in the apartment directly upstairs. Clarinetist Beth Custer co-founded the ensemble with Marriott, contributing to its early development and ongoing membership. Marriott has served as the group's creative and artistic director since its inception, guiding a collaborative composition process in which he frequently leads the creation of material for the ensemble's versatile lineup of woodwinds, brass, strings, keyboards, guitar, and percussion. The orchestra's distinctive style blends Eastern European folk music, impressionism, jazz fusion, and other influences into dramatic, complex instrumental works. The ensemble performed regularly in San Francisco clubs during its early years and later appeared at prominent venues including the Castro Theatre as a home base for many events, Lincoln Center, SFJAZZ, the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, and other locations across the United States, Mexico, and Canada. Marriott continues to lead the active ensemble in recent years. In 1987, the group shifted focus to composing and performing live scores for silent films, beginning with their score for The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. This direction built on the orchestra's established sound and marked an evolution in its performance practice under Marriott's direction.

Silent film rescoring

Richard Marriott has established himself as a leading figure in the modern rescoring of silent films through his founding role with the Club Foot Orchestra, creating original compositions that blend diverse musical styles to accompany restored classics. His initial foray into this field came with the score for The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, composed in 1987 and premiered at the Mill Valley Film Festival that year. This was followed by a 1989 score for Nosferatu, collaboratively developed with Gino Robair, which debuted at New Music America in New York City. Marriott composed a score for the 1991 Moroder restoration of Metropolis and produced an entirely new version in 2019 that incorporated kinetic sound-producing sculptures by artists including Matt Heckert. Additional feature scores from the 1990s include Sherlock Jr. in 1992, Pandora's Box in 1995, and The Hands of Orlac in 1997. In 1999, Marriott co-composed a score for Legong: Dance of the Virgins with Balinese composer Made Subandi, integrating gamelan and Western instruments; a version of this work appeared in 2004. Subsequent major scores encompass Battleship Potemkin and The Phantom of the Opera in 2005, as well as Go West in 2015. Marriott and the orchestra have also created scores for several Buster Keaton short films, including Cops in 1993, and revised or new accompaniments for One Week and The Blacksmith in 2018. These works highlight Marriott's approach of leading the ensemble in innovative, genre-blending accompaniments tailored to each film's visual and narrative elements.

Media compositions

Film work

Richard Marriott has composed music for independent films and short films, showcasing his versatility as a composer outside his primary work with the Club Foot Orchestra. He provided additional music and served as conductor (uncredited) for the 1993 thriller Rising Sun, directed by Philip Kaufman and starring Sean Connery and Wesley Snipes. In 1987, Marriott composed the score for the short documentary Silver Into Gold, directed by Lynn Mueller. The film, which profiles the life and career of athlete Jesse Owens, received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary Short Subject at the 60th Academy Awards in 1988. His later independent film credits as composer include Love Suicides (2007), Intifada NYC (2009), and the television movie Red Terror on the Amber Coast (2009). These works reflect Marriott's eclectic and experimental approach to scoring, consistent with the stylistic range he developed through his ensemble projects.

Television and animation

Richard Marriott contributed to the CBS animated series The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat (1995–1997) as a composer and musician. He was credited as a musician for 12 episodes between 1995 and 1996. Marriott also provided original music for one episode in 1995. In addition, he wrote "The Meat Song," which featured in one episode that year.

Video game work

Richard Marriott contributed original music to arcade titles developed by Atari Games. His most prominent contribution is the soundtrack for Mace: The Dark Age, a fighting game released in arcades in 1997. The game's music has been documented in game credits and fan-preserved recordings.

Other artistic work

Dance and theater collaborations

Richard Marriott has maintained a long-term collaboration with choreographer Della Davidson since the early 1990s, composing six evening-length scores for her works over more than a decade and a half. This partnership began with The Ten PM Dream, which premiered in March 1992 at Theater Artaud in San Francisco with live music performed by the Club Foot Ensemble. The collaboration continued with Night Stories: The Eva Luna Project, premiered in September 1997 at the same venue and also featuring live accompaniment by the Club Foot Ensemble, drawing from Isabel Allende's stories. Subsequent works include Desire for the Safety of Day (2002), A Dream Inside Another (2005), Collapse (2007), and The Weight of Memory (2008, co-choreographed with Ellen Bromberg), demonstrating the sustained creative exchange between the composer and choreographer. Marriott has also collaborated with New York-based choreographer Yoshiko Chuma and her company, the School of Hard Knocks, contributing scores to her contemporary dance productions. One documented work from this partnership is Page Out of Order: M, which premiered in January 2007 at DTW in New York. In addition, Marriott composed for choreographer Yin Mei, providing music for City of Paper, an evening-length dance work that premiered in January 2009 at the Asia Society in New York and was performed with the Momenta Quartet. These collaborations reflect his ongoing involvement in interdisciplinary dance projects across different regions and artistic communities.

Opera and concert compositions

Richard Marriott's operas and concert compositions reflect his collaborative approach and interest in blending diverse musical traditions, including elements of jazz, world music, and experimental forms. His operas include Godmachine, an experimental work featuring interactive electronics that premiered at California State University, Hayward in June 2002. Divide Light, a chamber opera created in collaboration with visual artist Lesley Dill and drawn entirely from Emily Dickinson's poetry, premiered at Montalvo Arts Center in 2008 with The Choral Project and Del Sol String Quartet. The work employs eight operatic voices and a string quintet alongside large-scale projections of Dickinson's texts, words scrawled on costumes, and other visual elements to connect 19th-century Transcendentalism with contemporary concerns. The Passion of Leyla, a Sufi-inspired chamber opera with libretto by Ruth Margraff inspired by Sufi love poetry and Koranic stories, was workshopped by San Jose Stage Company in August 2016. Lan Ling, a collaboration with Beijing-based librettist Xu Ying, is scored for Western symphonic orchestra alongside Chinese instruments, singers, chorus, and dancers to fuse Eastern and Western traditions; it was finished in 2005 but remains unproduced. Marriott's concert works feature several concertos. The Metropolis Violin Concerto premiered in February 2015 with violinist Alisa Rose and the Dartmouth College Wind Ensemble conducted by Matthew Marsit. The Concerto for Bass and Orchestra premiered in April 2018 with bassist Gary Karr and the Gonzaga University Orchestra. The Ghost Ship Cello Concerto, commemorating the 2016 Ghost Ship fire in Oakland, premiered on November 16, 2018, with cellist Matthew Linaman and the Oakland Symphony conducted by Michael Morgan. Structured in three movements, it depicts exhilaration, freedom, and discovery in the first, the incendiary night of the fire in the second, and the ensuing anger, loss, and nostalgic reflection in the third.
Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.