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Peter Wilson, music composer and sound designer for theatre, film, and concert hall.

WORKS

You have arrived at the listening room. Welcome.

Here you will find a limited selection of pieces that hold a special place in my heart. Scroll to the bottom for a broader selection, including older concert music and more excerpts from my film/theatre work.

A full list of works can be found in the submenu.

ORCHESTRAL

Seven Days (2025)

Music for the choreography by Steph Lake (after J.S. Bach)

"The score is ridiculously gorgeous." - The Conversation

"Goldberg Variations is expertly reimagined by Peter Brikmanis... comforting in moments of familiarity, and entirely unpredictable"  - ArtsHub

CHAMBER/SOLO

Wonderland (2023)

Commissioned by The Australian Ballet

A children's ballet for piano, flute, clarinet, and cello.

Curious and curiouser: this 30-minute score was recorded by the magnificent musicians of Orchestra Victoria.

String Trio (2019)

for violin, viola, and cello

Commissioned for Borough New Music Festival

Three instruments are muffled with heavy mutes, suppressing their performative nature. The audience is forced to listen closely - like voyeurs eavesdropping on forest birdsong. It is a birdsong that is deeply melancholic in nature. A mournful series of cadences take the listener on a journey, as short bursts of melody are threaded together by ‘silence'. In one memorable performance, String Trio was (coincidentally) accompanied by live birdsong from outside the window. The silences are never empty, so listen in. This piece is a meditation, with each short melody acting like a bright pin stuck on a map. Look here, be present.

Three Preludes (2020)

for solo piano

Romantic music holds a special, nostalgic place in my heart. I love its harmonic lushness, its rhapsodic gestures and soaring melodies. I love the way in which the piano can be transformed into a beast of an instrument: one of intense orchestral colour and formidable strength.

 

‘Three Preludes’ was written in 2020, during the first Coronavirus Lockdown. It’s stylistically at odds with many of my other works, tracing its line back to the Romantic lyricism of Schubert, Chopin, and Scriabin that I adore.

Perhaps it’s appropriate that I felt the urge to write these pieces at such a sentimental time, when the UK was locked down and my family remained in Australia. But ultimately, these pieces were written in joy, as homage to an era of music that sparked my musical imagination.

Catch.Up. ​and Scratched Up  (2024)

for solo piano/solo electric keyboard

Two sister pieces made in collaboration with choreographer Jill Ogai.

First came Catch.Up. - a very pretty piece for solo piano that explores the rhythmic and emotional juxtaposition of music and choreography.

Next came Scratched Up - a weird explosion of creativity written for sampler and microtonal piano (performed live on an electric keyboard).

Piano Quintet (2020)

for piano and string quartet

Commissioned by the Royal Philharmonic Society

‘Piano Quintet’ began life as a deep-sea dive into nostalgia. Musical themes circle round and round like an old memory, always shifting but never developing.

Movement One is like the warped recollection of a Schubert song - its details smudged into a warm, happy mess. The piano takes a concerto role here, almost oblivious to the uncoordinated crooning of the four strings players. Movement Two takes the idea of repetition more literally. It is built from a series of short phrases that echo and decay, as though performed in a cavernous space. In Movement Three, an old folk melody itches to sing out, but can’t quite find the right rhythm. All three movements end somewhat abruptly, like the edge of a fading memory.

I like to think that listening to ‘Piano Quintet’ is like taking a short drive down a long country lane.

It is sunrise. Your car is humming gently: a lone traveller at this time of day. A picket fence gallops into the horizon, animated into dots and dashes. Beyond: endless variations on grey and green. Here, a herd of cows graze peacefully. There, a row of majestic oaks stand strong and tall. Are they the same oaks you saw earlier? Is it possible you are driving in circles? As the road veers leftward, the sun catches anew on the picket fence, casting an oblique shadow across your path. More cows, more oaks. But the sun is a little brighter and you can see their colours more clearly. Where were you going anyway?

ELECTRONIC

JUMP - OST (2021)

Directed by Rosa Crompton

A writhing and densely-packed electronic score. Prepare yourself with sound good speakers/headphones.

Tarantella! (2021)

Commissioned by Geoffrey Watson for The Australian Ballet

A musical dance to cure all that which ails ye. Imagine it is being performed by a monkey on an organ grinder.

EVERYTHING ELSE

Tasting Platter - Film/Theatre

Tasting Platter - Concert Music

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