Overview
Biography
Born in Amsterdam, Joël Bons trained in the modernist composition tradition. His teenage years however were steeped in the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Frank Zappa and later Stravinsky. He became acquainted with music from all over the world already in early childhood, through the unique record collection of his parents: boogie woogie, Mexican mariachi, polyrhythmic African percussion, Indian ragas, the irregular time signatures of the Balkans, plucked chitarrones from Venezuela and pipas from China. He learned to play the guitar, formed a band and wrote music for it. When this became so complex that he could not play it any more, it was time to go to the conservatory. There he studied with Robert Heppener, after which he attended summer courses in Siena with Franco Donatoni and in Darmstadt, visited music festivals in Venice, Donaueschingen and Paris and continued his studies in Freiburg with Brian Ferneyhough.
Joël Bons' music has been performed by a.o. Irvine Arditti, AsianArt Ensemble, Asko|Schönberg, Ives Ensemble, Little Giant Chinese Chamber Orchestra, Netherlands Wind Ensemble, Omnibus Ensemble, Radio Chamber Orchestra, Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, Guangxi Symphony Orchestra and Vancouver InterCultural Orchestra.
In 2010 the Atlas Ensemble premiered Bons' Cadenzas and in 2011 the Vancouver InterCultural Orchestra commissioned Green Dragon, which was performed in Vancouver, Shanghai, Taiwan and Amsterdam. In 2012 the Nieuw Ensemble performed a programme of his works (Tour, Bref, First Edition among others) entitled The Ark of Joël, which received excellent reviews (5 stars in the daily Volkskrant, 4 stars in NRC and Het Parool). In February 2013 the Atlas Ensemble was ensemble in residence at the Musica Nova Festival in Helsinki, presenting two of Bons’ compositions.
Early 2014 Summer Dance for clarinet and piano was premiered at the Muziekgebouw aan ‘t IJ in Amsterdam; in the autumn of the same year followed Revolutions at the Cello Biennale. In the fall of 2016 the premiere of the large scale Nomaden was a highlight at three festivals – Cello Biennale Amsterdam, November Music and Soundsofmusic. The work was written for and performed by world renowned cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras and the Atlas Ensemble conducted by Ed Spanjaard and received the highest critical acclaim. In 2017 Spring for Orchestra was premiered at the ASEAN Music Week in Nanning, China. In March 2018 a new large scale work, Thirty Situations for the Nieuw Ensemble, soprano, trombone, jazz drums, electric guitar and electronics was met with great success. New commissions include a work for Score Collective to be premiered in January 2019.
Nieuw Ensemble and Atlas Ensemble
In 1980, Joël Bons was co-founder and guitarist of the Nieuw Ensemble. As artistic director he has since then been responsible for all programming. In 1988 he visited China where he met a young generation of composers (including Tan Dun) and introduced them in Europe with the Nieuw Ensemble. For their ‘markedly lively and adventurous programming’ Bons and the ensemble were awarded the Prince Bernhard Fund Music Prize in 1998.
In 2002 he went on to found the Atlas Ensemble, for which he received the prestigious Amsterdam Prize for the Arts 2005. In that same year he became a lecturer and later professor of composition at the Conservatory of Amsterdam. In 2009 Joël Bons initiated the Atlas Academy/Lab, about which the documentary Imagine Utopia was released in 2012. Bons gives lectures, masterclasses and composition workshops throughout the world.
Index: 4.1
Type: Person Male
Period: 1952.12.24 - ..
Age: 71 years
Area :Netherlands
Occupation :Composer
Periods :Modernist Music