Melanie Pappenheim

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Melanie Pappenheim
by Paul Hudson in 2022
Bornc.1959
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)English soprano and composer
Known forsoundtracks including the 2005 revival of Doctor Who

Melanie Pappenheim (born 1959) is an English soprano and composer, notable for her vocal work with various British cross-disciplinary composers, with avant-garde theatre companies and on soundtracks (notably for several films and the 2005 revival of Doctor Who).

Contemporary music

Pappenheim is a frequent collaborator with contemporary composer-performers

Simon Fisher-Turner, Orlando Gough and Jocelyn Pook
, and is also a member of their respective musical projects.

Her first recorded work was as vocalist for the avant garde jazz-pop band Shopping Trolley, which released one eponymous album on Hannibal Records in 1989 (Catalog # HNBL 1349). That album was compared to Manhattan Transfer and received positive reviews, but the band broke up shortly afterward. Since then she has been a long-term member of Pook's 10-piece ensemble, appearing on record and in concert as one of the ensemble's three vocalists. As part of the Ensemble, she has contributed to the soundtracks of Hollywood blockbuster films, Eyes Wide Shut and Gangs of New York.[1] She also does the vocal work on the majority of Pook's music, appearing on the album Deluge (later reissued as Flood) and Untold Things.

Pappenheim's work with

Simon Fisher-Turner has included contributions to the soundtracks of two Derek Jarman films. Turner has compared Pappenheim's work ethic to that of Jarman's, in that there is a great understanding between them without much communicating. (His actual quote was, "She just does what she likes...".[2]
)

Pappenheim has been a member of Gough's 16 piece choir The Shout since 1998.

In 2009, at the invitation of producer Giles Perring, Pappenheim recorded for the album 'Poets and Lighthouses' by Tuvan singer Albert Kuvezin.

She has regularly performed Paul Clark's score 'Here All Night' - a words and music collaboration with Beckett specialists Gare St Lazare - in the UK, Ireland and US.

Doctor Who

Pappenheim has garnered critical and popular acclaim for her work on Doctor Who due to the ethereal vocals she provided for the

Doctor's leitmotif – which the producers described semi-seriously as "President Flavia (from The Five Doctors
) singing out of the time vortex". As a result, many of the show's fans refer to her as "Flavia".

Her vocals on the track "Doomsday" (used in the dénouement of the

The Waters of Mars and the 2009 Christmas Special The End of Time
.

As a contributor to the show's soundtrack, Pappenheim has appeared at two special live concerts to celebrate the music by Murray Gold. The first was played at the Millennium Centre in Cardiff in 2006, and the second as part of the BBC Proms on 27 July 2008 at the Royal Albert Hall in London.

Theatre work

Pappenheim's work in avant-garde theatre has included a memorable appearance as a topless female Christ figure in the 1992 DV8 Physical Theatre production Strange Fish, in which she sang while hanging from a full-size crucifix.[3] She appeared in Clod Ensemble's An Anatomie in Four Quarters at Wales Millennium Centre (2013) and Lowry Salford (2016).

Work as composer

A composer in her own right, Pappenheim frequently writes music for radio and most recently, theatre. In addition, she also teaches voice.[1]

Discography

  • 2006 (2004) (with Manfred Mann's Earth Band)
  • Translucence: a Song Cycle - (with Derek Jarman)
  • The Garden (1999) - (with
    Simon Fisher-Turner
    )
  • Edward II (2003) - (with
    Simon Fisher-Turner)[1]
  • Deluge (1997) - (with Jocelyn Pook)
  • Flood (1999) - (with Jocelyn Pook)
  • Untold Things (2001) - (with Jocelyn Pook)
  • Eyes Wide Shut: Original Soundtrack (1999)
  • Gangs of New York: Original Soundtrack (2003)
  • Doctor Who: Original Soundtrack (2006) - (with Murray Gold)
  • Doctor Who: Original Soundtrack – Series 3 (2007) - (with Murray Gold)
  • Doctor Who: Original Soundtrack – Series 4 (2008) - (with Murray Gold)
  • Poets and Lighthouses (2010) - (with
    Yat Kha
    )

Work on Doctor Who

Vocals on:

  • Composed for
    Doctor Who: Original Television Soundtrack
    )
    • "
      The Doctor
      's Theme"
    • "Doomsday"
    • "Seeking The Doctor"
  • Composed for Series 3 (available on
    Doctor Who: Original Television Soundtrack - Series 3
    )
    • "Martha's Theme"
    • "YANA (Excerpt)"
    • "The Doctor Forever"
  • Composed for the "
    Doctor Who: Original Television Soundtrack - Series 4
    )
    • "Astrid's Theme" *(as part of "Voyage of the Damned Suite")
    • "Turn Left"

References

  1. ^ a b c "Melanie Pappenheim". Sound Scotland. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  2. Lexis-Nexis
    )
  3. ^ Meisner, Nadine. "Interviews: Lloyd Newson". Jul. 1992, Dance & Dancers on DV8, retrieved 19 June 2009

External links