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Regina composer David McIntyre, whose first
symphony was premiered by the Regina Symphony Orchestra February 12, set
his sights high from the moment he began writing tunes.
David, who is originally from Calgary, started piano
lessons with his uncle when he was four. "I heard my uncle talk about the
big names, like Mozart and Beethoven, so I just pretended I was one of
those people who wrote the music he played." He would make up a tune, then
ask his mother if it was "Beethoven, Mozart or McIntyre."
Throughout high school David wrote songs for his
church choir and other groups of singers; then he went on to study at the
University of Calgary and the University of Southern Mississippi,
eventually obtaining a master's degree in composition while also studying
piano performance. In both Calgary and Mississippi, his primary teacher
was Luigi Zaninelli.
Obtaining his master's degree in composition wasn't
enough to convince him he was really a composer, though. "It was a long
time after I graduated from university that I dared even call myself a
composer, because that's so pretentious," David says. "You have to have a
body of work before anyone will believe you."
He spent a year in Calgary, then came to Regina in
1976 to teach at Canadian Bible College. As time went on he began writing
more and more music, much of it for particular instrumentalists. "Being a
pianist helped," David recalls. "I'd say, 'Will you play my piece if I do
a recital with you?'"
Eventually, he even began to make money as a
composer. "It takes a while to get commissions," David says, but in the
past few years, "that's been happening very well." As a result, since 1995
he's been freelancing as a composer and pianist.
Stravinsky tops the list of composers who have
inspired David's work. "When I first listened to him, something just
perked me. I always felt I didn't need to listen very much, I just needed
to listen to a few bars and then I was ready to go to work."
His other influences come from being a pianist.
"None of us are original, we grow in a soil that's rich in the past. It's
fascinating to look at your work to see elements of Scarlatti and Brahms
in the same piece, or voicings of Schubert.
"It's harder to learn from those around you--for one
thing, there are fewer recordings--so one is probably less influenced by
contemporaries than by those a generation or two generations before. I
always feel I'm not as up on what everyone else is doing as I should be!"
Even before he began freelancing, David knew he
wanted to write a symphony. He built up to it bit by bit, writing a lot of
sonatas--pieces for a solo instrument and orchestra--and writing a lot of
pieces for piano plus one other orchestral instrument. "I learned a huge
amount just from working through the piece with the players, and having
them make suggestions."
What made the project finally come together was a
commission. While talking to Sasha Koerbler in her office at CBC
Saskatchewan one day, David mentioned he was really interested in writing
a symphony. Through Sasha's initiative, David eventually received a
commission through the CBC's Radio Music Department. (In exchange, CBC
recorded the premiere of the symphony for later broadcast on CBC
Saskatchewan's Gallery program and nationally on Symphony Hall.)
Commission in hand, David began about two years go
actually putting things on paper, working with a pencil and manuscript
paper (although he used a computer program to copy the parts). "I threw
away lots and lots," he says, but he began finishing movements in October
of 1999, and finished the entire symphony on December 1.
And what was it like, sitting in the Centre of the
Arts listening to his first symphony? "I'd been listening to all the
rehearsals," David says. "This was like listening to the fourth rehearsal
in a way." As a result, even at the premiere, he was hearing things he
wanted to change, "most of it cosmetic, in terms of orchestral balance."
The standing ovation his symphony received was proof
that the Regina symphony audience, at least, judged it a success--and for
David, it's the response of the audience that matters most.
"You work carefully through the details of it, the
techniques of it, then you look back and this thing you've created has a
life of it's own, and speaks to people in ways you can't control," David
says. "When people feel things, when people either cry or laugh of feel
lifted up or joyful or exhilarated or compassionate or all of those things
through listening to music, that's a wonderful thing to do as a writer."