Dame Evelyn Elizabeth Ann Glennie,[1]CH, DBE (born 19 July 1965) is a Scottish percussionist. She was selected as one of the two laureates for the Polar Music Prize of 2015.
She was a member of the National Youth Orchestra of Scotland[3] and the Cults Percussion Ensemble which was formed in 1976 by her school percussion peripatetic teacher Ron Forbes. They toured and recorded one album, which was re-released on Trunk Records in 2012.[4]
Glennie tours all over the world performing as a soloist with a wide variety of orchestras and electric musicians. She conducts master classes, consultations and engages in motivational speaking.[5] She is a leading commissioner of new works for solo percussion.[citation needed][6]
Glennie performed at the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games in London 2012, leading a thousand drummers in the opening piece of music And I Will Kiss, and also playing the Glennie Concert Aluphone in Caliban's Dream during the ceremony for lighting the Olympic cauldron.[8][9]
Glennie is a patron of the music charity Sound World.
Glennie has been profoundly deaf since childhood, having started to lose her hearing at the age of 8.[11] This does not inhibit her ability to perform. She regularly plays barefoot during live performances and studio recordings to feel the music.[11]
Glennie contends that deafness is largely misunderstood by the public. She explains that her teacher Ron Forbes taught her to hear with parts of her body other than her ears. Ron Forbes helped her in feeling the music other way from her body parts. She felt the upper drum from the waist up and the lower drum from waist down. On her website Glennie published "Hearing Essay" in which she discusses her condition.[12] Glennie also discusses how she feels music in different parts of her body in her TED talk "How To Truly Listen", published in 2003, and a collection of her speeches and writings are published in her book Listen World!.[13]
In 2018, Glennie worked with Gregory Doran and the Royal Shakespeare Company composing the music for a production of Troilus and Cressida.[15] In the same year she began a collaboration with experimental jazz musicians Trio HLK, touring with them [16] and appearing on their debut album Standard Time.[17]
In 2020, Glennie collaborated with the music charity Sound World, composing a new piece "The Grace of Silence" for their Coronavirus Fund for Freelance Musicians. It was recorded by members of the Bristol Ensemble and released by Sound World in January 2021.[18] It is the opening track on the album Reflections.[19] Glennie also composed some of the music for the film Sound of Metal directed by Darius Marder. She is a prolific composer for the library music company Audio Network. Her works are published by Faber Music.
On 21 November 2007, the UK government announced an infusion of £332 million for music education. This resulted from successful lobbying spearheaded by Glennie, Sir James Galway, Julian Lloyd Webber, and the late Michael Kamen who (in 2002–03) together formed the Music in Education Consortium.[20]
Touch the Sound (2004). Directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer, featuring a collaboration with Fred Frith. The farm where she grew up burned down during the production of the film, but her brother and the animals were unhurt.[31]
ZingZillas (2010). Appeared in episode 19 ("Hide and Seek") playing tubular bells on the BBC channel CBeebies.[35] and in episode 50 ("Where's the Bug?") playing the waterphone.[36]