By Freya Parr

Published: Thursday, 09 December 2021 at 12:00 am


The winners of this year’s Ivors Composer Awards have been announced, with Thomas Adès, Anna Thorvaldsdottir and Alex Paxton among the line-up. For the first time in Ivors history, the awards included works premiered on recording or livestream to allow for the works that were given their debut during the Covid-19 lockdowns.

Thomas Adès picked up an Ivor for his vocal composition Gyöker (Root), commissioned by conductor Oliver Zeffman as part of his ‘Eight Songs from Isolation’ project. The text from Adès’s new work comes from the final poems of Miklòs Radnóti during his imprisonment in a forced labour camp at the end of the Second World War. The jury praised the work as ‘gut-wrenchingly beautiful, deeply poetic and strikingly original.’

Icelandic composer Anna Thorvaldsdottir’s CATAMORPHOSIS won the Large Scale Composition Award. The orchestral work was premiered by the Berlin Philharmonic and its chief conductor Kirill Petrenko earlier this year, exploring the ‘fragile relationship between humankind and the planet’.