Ryan Garvey, composer

Ryan Garvey playing guitar

Composer and Performer, Ryan Garvey (b. 1993, West Warwick, RI), uses Improvisation, transcription, electronics, and rhythmic grids to create music focused on release.  

Ryan is interested in the phenomenon of listening. He finds opportunities to surprise and confuse the listener, asking them to expect the unexpected. Their music has been described by listeners saying it has caused “my baby to kick in the womb” and “a fire that never dies frightened me”. His research takes form by way of extended techniques, exploration of color through the medium of electronics, and the phenomenology of perception.  

Recent projects include Our systems were built to fail — Written for Ensemble Dal Niente at the Depaul Summer Residency for New Music using varieties of extended techniques. a fire that never dies —-commissioned in collaboration with Devon Osamu Tipp incorporates traditional Shakuhachi techniques into contemporary classical music, focusing heavily on electronics, they create dense harmonies triggered by pitch tracking and live electronics which all accumulate into a never-ending feedback loop.

His music has been performed in venues across the world including Leveld Knusnartun, SWT-Kulturwerk, Harvard University’s Studio 2, Scholes Street Studios, Holtschneider Performance center, MAYDAY, among others. His work has been pioneered by Ensemble Dal Niente, Loadbang, Harvard Radcliffe Modern Dance Company, the Horszowski Trio, Hypercube, and others.

He is pursuing his Ph.D. in Composition at the University of Chicago, he also holds degrees in Composition and Modern American Music at the Longy School of Music (G.D., M.M.) and Cell and Molecular Biology at the University of Rhode Island (B.S.). His teachers have included Augusta Read Thomas, Aaron Helgeson, Wang Lu, Osnat Netzer, and Kirsten Volness, among others. He currently resides in Chicago.

Ryan Garvey's piece everything and always: in memoriam Carla Bowen premiered on January 7, 2023 at the University of Chicago. 

 

Program notes:

everything and always: in memoriam Carla Bowen for Organ and spatialized electronics is dedicated to Carla, my beloved aunt whom we lost to domestic abuse. everything and always explores the existential nature of life, death, and the hopelessness and grief these states of existence give to us; the piece laments the tragedy of its subject. From its moments of glimmering joy to its fall into nothingness, it stands as a reminder that all things end yet are alsoinfinite in their possibilities. Albert Camus wrote, “In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.” Through this piece, we remember Carla’s life and the resilience of the human spirit, even in the face of tragedy. Her light brought joy and love to many — the world is a darker place without her.