- Stephen Warbeck
- Peter Pan
Stephen Warbeck Composer
- This interview was originally featured in Issue 20 of Northern Ballet Theatre's exclusive Friends Magazine, Northern Exposure. Click here for more information on and how to join our Friends Organisation..
- When and how did you discover music?
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Music has always been part of my life. My mother played piano, my father played the drums, and my brother and I had music lessons from a very early age and were constantly creating things and playing together.
- The score for Peter Pan will be your first ballet composition though you have a long association with theatre and film. How does the creative process differ for dance and does this present any new challenges for you?
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As I'm still in the middle of composing the score for Peter Pan, I can't give a definitive answer but I think it's true to say that in all these media (theatre, dance, film) the visual, textual and music elements have a different relationship. As I'm writing I'm attempting to visualise the danced scenes using the scenario as a starting point, but of course the real choreography is created after the music, a process which is clearly distinct from the other fields I work in.
- Where do you find your inspiration when tackling a new project? Do you have any set routine to your day?
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I often start a piece of work in the middle, usually with a scene that has some emotional resonance for me. I work at home and as we have a big family and quite a few animals, I work at odd times (very odd) – whenever I can.
- Which part of the process do you find most satisfying?
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It's all satisfying if it's flowing well and frustrating when it's not.
- Which pieces of your work have given you the greatest pleasure?
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Shakespeare in Love, Captain Corelli's Mandolin, Machinal and my band the hKippers [sic]
- What do you listen to in your spare time?
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All sorts.
- Is there a project that you've always hoped to be involved in?
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Touring with my own ensemble and taking the hKippers to the sea.











