Nigel Keay (born 1955) is a New Zealand composer. He has been a freelance musician since 1983 working as a composer, violist, and violin teacher. Nigel Keay has held the following composer residencies:
Mozart Fellowship,
University of Otago 1986 and 1987, Nelson School of Music 1988 and 89,
Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra 1995.
Keay was born in
Palmerston North. Between 1983 and 1995, he received several grants from the Arts Council of New Zealand for various commissions, one of them being a one-act opera At the Hawk’s Well1. His music, which ranges from solo and
chamber music combinations to full
symphony orchestra, has sometimes been driven by literary and philosophical ideas. Throughout his career he has wherever possible played in or directed his own works. He became an Associate-Violist with the
Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra in 1994.
Nigel Keay moved to France in 1998 (he acquired French nationality in 2000)[citation needed] and lives now in Paris where he continues to work as a freelance composer and violist. In 2001, his
Viola Concerto2 was performed at the 29th International Viola Congress in
Wellington by the Chamber Orchestra of the
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra conducted by
Marc Taddei with
Franck Chevalier as
viola soloist. In 2002 he was commissioned by
Radio France to compose a work for multiple broadcasts on its France Musiques and France Culture stations (Tango Suite
3). The pianist
Jeffrey Grice performed his work for solo piano, the dancer leads the procession4, at the
Salle Gaveau, Paris in February 2007. Between 2003 and 2005 he gave multiple performances of his String Quartet No.2 in Paris and
Bavaria with his own group, Quatuor Aphanès.