SoundWaves Music Space invites 60 young musicians - any instrumentation / all skill levels - to join Ireland’s Bangers and Crash Percussion Sextet, featuring the music of composer Brian Irvine, in a spectacular surround-sound concert experience at the Visual Theatre.
Over three days, participants will workshop, practise and rehearse with six master percussionists.
These distinguished musicians will lead participants on an inspiring journey of auditory immersion and percussive exploration, culminating in a public performance on Day 3.
This unique project offers young participant musicians the opportunity to:
This programme is designed to provide an exciting educational experience, enhancing the participants’ skills, creativity, understanding of professional performance, and innovative music creation.
About Bangers and Crash Percussion Sextet ›This unique and innovative music experience is a one-time opportunity to unleash your creativity through fun workshops and dynamic rehearsals. By joining the Bangers and Crash project you'll be part of a high-energy performance alongside Ireland’s top orchestral percussionists and performing a specially commissioned piece of music written by the renowned composer Brian Irvine. The key takeaways for participants include:
Musical Exploration
Creative Collaboration
Sound Design
Professional Performance
Personal Development
Fees
Lunch
Consent Forms
Schedules and Materials
Who can apply:
This project is ideal for any young musician who is:
Registration Procedure
This event is proudly supported by
Bangers and Crash Percussion is Ireland's premier percussion ensemble, led by some of Ireland's leading percussionists: Alex Petcu-Colan, Emma King, Caitríona Frost, Brian Dungan, Patrick Lynch, and John Rousseau-Parlane.
Bangers and Crash Percussion explores a diverse repertoire that spans Western contemporary percussion, Afro-Cuban rhythms, Japanese taiko, Spanish flamenco, and Javanese gamelan.
With a mission to make percussion music accessible to all, their shows present a spectacular array of instruments, including marimbas, vibraphones, tubular bells, wind chimes, crotales, tambourines, and drums, as well as a fascinating array of ad hoc materials such as scrap metal, marbles, and smashed plates to create a fantasia of percussion sonorities.
The ensemble's past projects include large-scale productions for Cork Midsummer Festival and PIMA! Fest, a successful 8-date Music Network tour, collaborations with Irish National Opera, and performances at prestigious events like Body & Soul. Additionally, Bangers and Crash Percussion has conducted over 100 workshops in schools across Ireland, fostering a love for percussive music among young learners.
An active freelance musician, Alex performs with a wide variety of ensembles and in a range of settings. In particular, he enjoys working with composers to create new works that push the boundaries of what music for percussion can be. He is a regular guest with The Hard Rain Ensemble and a member of Crash Ensemble. Their most recent works include the world premieres of large-scale compositions by Andrew Hamilton, Barry O’Halpin, and Donnacha Dennehy. He has also commissioned several new works for viola and percussion duo with Nathan Sherman, some of which have been released on CD by the Ergodos label. Additionally, he runs his own ensemble, the Bangers and Crash Percussion Group, who play everything from intimate concerts and workshops to massive projects featuring hundreds of instruments.
Brian Irvine is a Belfast born composer whose unique musical world combines the known and the unknown, the free and the fixed, the schooled and the unschooled. He is driven by a single desire to connect, disrupt, reinvent and re-imagine all aspects of life, people, society, art and understanding in any and as many ways possible. His huge output includes operas, film scores, large scale oratorios, orchestral, ensemble, chamber, solo and dance works as well as games and installations. Often combining and layering diverse, experimental and opposing elements his music has been commissioned, broadcast and performed all over the world by a vast array of performers and organisations, including Irish National Opera, London Symphony Orchestra, Welsh National Opera, RTE National Symphony Orchestra, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Red Note Ensemble, Ulster Orchestra, Fidelio Trio to name but a few.
Emma King is a percussionist based between Brighton and Northern Ireland whose reputation has grown rapidly in the UK, particularly through her performances as a Cajónero at the Glasgow and London Drum Shows. Emma joined the West End/Broadway percussion show STOMP in 2014 and has toured extensively with them throughout the world. Her theatre credits include opening the 2018 Adelaide Festival with LFO and the Steven Sater London Showcase. In 2018, Emma performed in the Irish National Tour of a new opera by John O’Brien and The Everyman Theatre Cork, "The Nightingale and the Rose." In 2021, she was part of the creative team as Percussion Director for Rough Girls, produced by the Lyric Theatre, Belfast. Her television appearances include Live at the London Palladium on ITV and The Late Late Show on RTÉ. In the studio, Emma's work as a body percussion artist can be found on the "Secret Life of Humans" soundtrack.
Brian studied at Trinity College, the Royal Irish Academy of Music, and the Kodály Institute of the Liszt Academy in Budapest. As an orchestral percussionist, he works with the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, the RTÉ Concert Orchestra, and the Ulster Orchestra. He is also a timpanist and a founding member of Fishamble Sinfonia, as well as an assistant to the RIAM Percussion Ensemble. Brian loves to perform new music. For Northern Ireland Opera in Belfast, Brian played the frenetic percussion part—with its massive instrumental array extending to fishing reels and bags of broken crockery—in the Irish premiere (2017) of Thomas Adès’ Powder Her Face. He is an assistant to Richard O’Donnell, Director of the RIAM Percussion Ensemble, with whom he has toured to New York many times since 2010.
A George Moore Scholar and recipient of the Jones Engineering Exceptional Graduating Student Scholarship, John is an ambitious young percussionist. As a solo performer, John achieved success in 2018 in the Freemasons Young Musician of the Year, being awarded the third-place prize. More recently, John was also named one of the University Concert Hall’s Rising Stars and was granted an opportunity to perform a solo recital in April 2021. A regular on the professional freelance circuit, John often performs with the RTÉ Concert Orchestra, Dublin Concert Orchestra, Orchestra of Ireland, National Symphony Orchestra, Irish National Opera Orchestra, Bangers and Crash Percussion Group, Gaiety Theatre Live Orchestra, and Wexford Festival Opera orchestra.
Patrick Nolan enjoys an eclectic career as a freelance percussionist. Originally from Dublin, he moved to Glasgow in 2009 to study at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, where he was an ABRSM scholarship recipient and winner of the Governors' Recital Prize. Patrick regularly performs with orchestras across Ireland and the UK, including the RTÉ Concert Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra, Irish National Opera, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Irish Chamber Orchestra, and Scottish Opera. Passionate about new music, Patrick performs with Crash Ensemble, Red Note Ensemble, and the Glasgow Percussion Collective. He has worked as a Lead Musician for Sistema Scotland, engaging with deaf children.
Patrick holds a BA in Music Performance from the CIT Cork School of Music. His versatility spans a range of genres, using both drum kit and percussion instrumentation. As an orchestral percussionist, he has played with the RTÉ Concert Orchestra, RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, Cork Opera House Concert Orchestra, and Cork Pops. As a jazz musician, he co-founded a new big band called the Cork City Jazz Orchestra and has had the opportunity to play with many greats such as Scott Hamilton, Dick Oatts, Grace Kelly, Bruce Barth, Ryan Quigley, and many more.