Jacob TV Dutch avant pop composer
JacobTV (aka Jacob Ter Veldhuis, 1951) started as a rock musician
and studied composition and electronic music at the Groningen Conservatoire,
where he was awarded the Dutch Composition Prize in 1980.
During the eighties he made a name for himself with melodious compositions, straight from the heart and with great effect. ‘I pepper my music with sugar,' he says.
Jacob TV is preoccupied with American media and world events and draws raw material from those sources. His work possesses an explosive strength and raw energy combined with extraordinarily intricate architectural design. TV makes superb use of electronics, incorporating sound bytes from political speeches, commercials, interviews, talk shows, TVangelists, and what have you - a colorful mix of high and low culture.
Long queues at the box office for the four-day Jacob TV Festival in Rotterdam in 2001 already attested to the growing popularity of this composer, both in the Netherlands and abroad. His Goldrush Concerto, the Third String Quartet and several of his so-called boombox pieces like Grab It! became hits, and various choreographers have been inspired by his music.
Early in his career, Jacob TV already stood up to
what he called the 'washed-out avant garde', which made him a controversial
figure in certain circles. He strives to liberate new music from
its isolation by employing a direct - at times provocative - idiom
that spurns 'the dissonant', which in TV's view reflects a completely
devalued means of musical expression.
His 'coming-out' as a composer of ultra-tonal, mellifluous music
reached its climax with the video oratorio Paradiso. At
the Holland Festival 2005, the premiere of ...NOW... for
stereophonic orchestra performed by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
received standing ovations.
TV is one of the most performed contemporary Dutch
composers. In May 2007 a three day JacobTV Festival took place at
the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. Recently bastamusic.com
released a box set trilogy containing 11 hours of audio and video.
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