The
acclaimed composer Michael Nyman wrote a new piece of music for Great North Run Culture exploring the internal physical
and psychological journey of a runner taking part in the world’s largest
half-marathon.
Best
known for his soundtrack to the Oscar-winning film The Piano and for
his long collaboration with director Peter Greenaway, Nyman has
previously written music inspired by sport and by science. This is the
first opportunity he has had to combine both passions.
Based on collaboration with the Sports Science department at Leeds
Metropolitan University, this innovative new piece will be performed by
the internationally renowned Michael Nyman Band and will feature
accompanying visuals by moShine.
After premiering at The Sage Gateshead in September 2007, the Nyman
Band toured across Europe before returning to perform the piece at the
Barbican in London in December.
"(The piece) sprang from discussions with scientists about the
physiology and experience of the runners. The piece ran with visuals by
moShine; slow-motion shots and colourful abstract versions of muscle
function or blood flow. The music was a suite of ten movements at widely varying paces. Its
discontinuity at first seemed at odds with the subject, but it focused
on different elements the nerve ends, the bone structure and worked
towards a sense of near-stasis infused with a mix of pain and pleasure.
It evoked states that music may not have visited before, at least this
side of Africa." The Independent
"The initial movements establish an exuberant, carnival atmosphere which gradually settles into a concentrated, dream-like reverie." The Guardian