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I’ve been very busy in Hol­land, com­pos­ing like crazy. Sev­eral pieces recently fin­ished for var­i­ous projects. I’ve updated var­i­ous pages on the site to reflect more cur­rrent infor­ma­tion and hope to give more details as soon as pos­si­ble. Stay tuned!

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Since the age of two, I have wanted to play the drums. A big part of my music career has been as a per­cus­sion­ist, and it was through per­cus­sion that I started with con­tem­po­rary clas­si­cal music. It was also the cat­a­lyst for my explo­ration of many other kinds of music, and I was quite active as a per­former until recently.

As a child, I moved between clas­si­cal per­cus­sion and jazz drum­ming, thanks to the influ­ence of my teacher, Trevor Bran­den­burg. Because the clas­si­cal per­cus­sion reper­toire is largely mod­ern, I had an early expo­sure to twentieth-​century music, and I always liked it. I had had rel­a­tively lit­tle expe­ri­ence with the clas­si­cal West­ern canon, so I never learned the mis­con­cep­tion that mod­ern clas­si­cal music is dif­fer­ent, weird, or “dif­fi­cult”. Also being a per­cus­sion­ist, I didn’t focus very much on pitch aspects of music until my later teens.

After high school, I decided I would study jazz drum­ming, so I enrolled in the jazz pro­gram at Grant MacE­wan Col­lege (GMC) in Edmon­ton. Brian Thur­good, my teacher at GMC, encour­aged me to pol­ish my tech­nique and work towards a pro­fes­sional level of per­for­mance. I enjoyed this chal­lenge, and my play­ing improved tremen­dously. How­ever, the more I refined the skills I had in jazz and pop, the more I was curi­ous to learn about other kinds of music. I was espe­cially inter­ested in Cuban music, and stud­ied pri­vately with Cuban per­cus­sion­ist Mario Allende for sev­eral years. I also took some courses at the Uni­ver­sity of Alberta on Ghana­ian Ewe music.

The Cuban stud­ies in par­tic­u­lar had an influ­ence on me, and I even­tu­ally ended up study­ing in Havana (see Cur­ricu­lum Vitæ). My curios­ity for explor­ing new kinds of music also led me to start com­pos­ing. I started out doing arrange­ments for bands I played with, then even­tu­ally began com­pos­ing my own songs. Grad­u­ally I became more inter­ested in learn­ing how to write for instru­ments I didn’t play and that weren’t nor­mally part of the jazz/pop ensemble.

After mov­ing to Toronto in 2002, the demands of my com­po­si­tional career pre­vented me from doing much per­form­ing. Since that time, most of my per­for­mance projects have been based around free improvisation.

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Below is a selected list­ing of some of my per­form­ing experiences.

2001–2002
  • Per­cus­sion for the Acad­emy of Strings Orches­tra, Edmon­ton, con­duc­tor: Tanya Prochazka
2001
  • Drums for band Crush­ing Jane, Edge­Fest, Edmon­ton
    Drums and aux­il­iary per­cus­sion for Nuffsed and FORM jazz choirs, Edmon­ton, direc­tor: Scott Leithead
2000–2001
  • Con­gas and bon­gos for salsa group Bomba, Edmon­ton (subbing)
1999–2000
  • Drums for the Grant MacE­wan College/University of Alberta jazz band
1997–2000
  • Drums for pop band Cove
1998–2001
  • Grant MacE­wan Col­lege Per­cus­sion Ensem­ble, Edmon­ton, direc­tor: Brian Thurgood
1998
  • Soloist for Con­certino for Marimba and Winds by Alfred Reed, John L. Haar The­atre, Grant MacE­wan Col­lege, Edmon­ton, con­duc­tor: Arthur Milan
1996–1998
  • Per­cus­sion for the Edmon­ton Youth Orches­tra, con­duc­tor: Michael Massey
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I play the fol­low­ing cat­e­gories of per­cus­sion. I also own most of these instruments:

  • Drum­set, includ­ing rock, jazz, pop, and Cuban styles
  • Mal­let per­cus­sion, espe­cially the marimba
  • Orches­tral per­cus­sion of all kinds
  • Cuban per­cus­sion, includ­ing con­gas, bon­gos, tim­bales, batá, güiro, etc.
Texting and Driving (2007–2008)
Instru­men­ta­tion: gtr
Dura­tion: 9’00
Commissioned by Paul Bowman
mp3 listen to Texting and Driving — I
mp3 listen to Texting and Driving — II
mp3 listen to Texting and Driving — III
Per­form­ers: Guitar – Paul Bowman
Pro­gramme Note

Always on. Instan­ta­neous. No down time. Avail­able. Abbre­vi­ated. Abuse of excla­ma­tion marks. Multi-tasking. Frag­men­ta­tion. Ille­gal? Dan­ger­ous… In-the-moment. Mul­ti­ple direc­tions. Too many vari­ables to con­sider at once. Impa­tient. Faster. Abstrac­tion. Con­crete. Asphalt. Fol­low­ing dis­tance. Reaction time.

Instru­men­ta­tion: flt + voice, perc + voice
Dura­tion: 11’00
mp3 listen to Shit Around The World — I
mp3 listen to Shit Around The World — II
mp3 listen to Shit Around The World — III
Per­form­ers: Flute – Solomiya Moroz, Percussion – Nicholas Jacques
Pro­gramme Note

This piece is based on the sound of the word shit in twelve dif­fer­ent lan­guages. It trav­els from west to east geo­graph­i­cally across the world. The lan­guages were cho­sen either because I speak them, or because I could find a native speaker of that lan­guage to teach me how to say shit. I did, how­ever, attempt to keep a some­what even spac­ing between geo­graph­i­cal areas, although a com­pletely even dis­tri­b­u­tion would have been, of course, impos­si­ble to realize.