Artist's albums
Anthems, Vol. 1
2023 · album
MacMillan: Ave Maris Stella
2023 · single
O Give Thanks Unto the Lord
2023 · single
James MacMillan: Os Mutorum
2023 · single
A Child's Prayer
2022 · single
O Radiant Dawn
2022 · single
James MacMilllan: Christmas Oratorio (Live)
2022 · album
Seraph (2010): I.
2022 · single
Knockroon Waltz for Harp Solo
2022 · single
James MacMillan: Christus vincit
2022 · single
The Present
2022 · single
MacMillan: Consecration
2021 · album
James MacMillan: Organ Works
2020 · album
Factus Est Repente
2020 · single
Cantos Sagrados: I. Identity
2020 · single
Macmillan: One Equal Music
2019 · album
Lassie, Wad ye Loe Me?
2019 · single
Ave maris stella
2019 · single
Kyrie - Missa Brevis
2019 · single
MacMillan: Data Est Mihi
2017 · single
James MacMillan: Stabat Mater
2017 · album
The Lost Songs Of St Kilda
2016 · album
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Biography
James MacMillan is among the leading Scottish composers of modern times, with performances of his work often occurring around the U.K. and beyond. He is also active as a conductor. MacMillan was born in Kilwinning, in Scotland's North Ayrshire region, on July 16, 1959, but most of his childhood was spent in Cumnock, East Ayrshire. His family was working-class and was devoted to the Catholic church. MacMillan attended the University of Edinburgh, studying composition with Rita McAllister and Kenneth Leighton, then moved to Durham University for studies with John Casken. He earned an undergraduate degree at Durham and then a PhD in 1987. By that time, he had already begun teaching as a lecturer at Victoria University in Manchester, England. In 1988, his music theater piece Búsqueda was performed at the Edinburgh International Festival. MacMillan scored a major breakthrough in 1990 when his orchestral work The Confession of Isobel Gowdie, a tone poem about a woman accused of witchcraft and eventually executed, was played by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra at the BBC Proms summer concerts. The success of those works led to more commissions for MacMillan, some of them from major soloists. His percussion concerto Veni, Veni, Emmanuel (1992) was composed for percussionist Evelyn Glennie and has since been performed by many other musicians. Mstislav Rostropovich premiered MacMillan's cello concerto in 1997. MacMillan has written several operas and a large amount of sacred music, including a Magnificat (1999), the Mass for 2000 (commissioned by Westminster Cathedral and including passages for congregational singers), the Strathclyde Motets (2008), and a widely praised Stabat mater (2016); Catholicism has continued to exert a strong influence on his work. Another strand of MacMillan's style comes from Scottish traditional music, which may be combined with modernist dissonance. MacMillan has remained active as a conductor, leading the BBC Philharmonic from 2000 to 2009 and appearing as a guest with other major orchestras in Britain, the U.S., and other countries, including the NHK Symphony Orchestra in Japan and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. MacMillan was made Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2004. MacMillan has remained possibly more prolific than ever in late middle age, issuing a Christmas Oratorio and the 40-part motet Vidi aquam in 2019. ~ James Manheim, Rovi