Founding and musical identity Icebreaker was formed in 1989 to play at the new
Dutch music festival in
York. The group consists of 12 musicians, with an instrumentation that includes
panpipes,
saxophones, electric
violin and
cello,
guitars,
percussion,
drums,
accordion and
keyboards as well as a sound engineer and production manager.
Richard Witts who is consultant to the ensemble. Their repertoire encompasses music by a variety of well-known composers, including
Louis Andriessen,
Julia Wolfe,
Brian Eno,
Philip Glass,
Michael Gordon,
Yannis Kyriakides,
David Lang,
Steve Martland,
Michael Nyman,
Steve Reich,
Donnacha Dennehy, and
Diderik Wagenaar. Icebreaker's unusual instrumentation gives the band's music a distinctive sound and allows the blending of contemporary classical, rock and alternative music. The instrumentation evolved from the line up of the Dutch group
Hoketus, who had operated between 1977 and 1987, and served as an inspiration and model for the formation of the group. The presence of pairs of panpipes and saxophones derives from Icebreaker's performances of several works from the by now defunct Hoketus's repertoire, including the eponymous work by Louis Andriessen. the Baltic Gaida Festival and the NYYD Festival in
Estonia, as well as a dedicated Icebreaker festival with the Wiener Musik Galerie in
Vienna. In London they have appeared at
Meltdown, the
ICA, the
Place Theatre, the
South Bank, the
Barbican, the Warehouse, Ocean and the
Almeida, among other venues. They have appeared on two
Arts Council Contemporary Music Network tours of England. United States appearances include New York City's
Bang on a Can Festival, the
Lincoln Center Festival, and a performance at
Carnegie Hall with the
American Composers' Orchestra in
Stewart Wallace's
The Book of Five.
Recordings Since 2005 most of Icebreaker's albums have been released on the New York-based label
Cantaloupe Music. 2005 saw the release of
Cranial Pavement, including music by John Godfrey, Richard Craig, Yannis Kyriakides and
Conlon Nancarrow, as well as the worldwide release of the new version of Michael Gordon's
Trance. This 52-minute work was originally released on
Argo in 1996 and has been completely re-worked and re-mixed for the Cantaloupe version. Icebreaker's first album
Terminal Velocity (music by Andriessen, Gordon, Lang,
Gavin Bryars and Damian LeGassick), also originally on Argo, has also been produced in a remastered version for Cantaloupe. In 2007 Icebreaker's version of
Philip Glass's
Music with Changing Parts was released on Glass's own label Orange Mountain Music. and
Extraction (between the lines), containing music by LeGassick and
Gordon McPherson plus a remix by
Mel. Contributions to compilation albums include works by
Graham Fitkin (Argo), Steve Martland and John Godfrey (Century XXI A – M / NewTone). Icebreaker's recording of
Apollo, their recent project based on the Brian Eno album
Apollo: Atmospheres & Soundtracks, was released in June 2012 on the Cantaloupe. It was re-released on the Firebrand label on 18 July 2019, to coincide with Icebreaker's performance of the work at
Matera European City of Culture, where
Roger Eno made a guest appearance on piano. In late 2020, Icebreaker announced a project to release a digital track every month for the whole of 2021, marking their first new releases since 2012. The project started with re-releases of the three tracks previously on compilation albums, by Fitkin, Martland and Godfrey, followed by releases of newer material recorded in recent live performances, culminating in a release of
Philip Glass's
Rubric in December 2021.
Work with dance Tanzwerk Nürnberg,
West Australian Ballet and the
Pacific Northwest Ballet of Seattle have used Icebreaker's recordings for performances. In June 1998,
Ashley Page created
Cheating, Lying, Stealing, featuring Icebreaker as guest performers, for
The Royal Ballet at
Sadler's Wells, a programme which was revived in September/October 2003 and again in April 2009 for
Scottish Ballet.
AtaXia, a collaboration with
Wayne McGregor's company
Random Dance, based on
Trance, premiered in Sadler's Wells, London in June 2004 with further performances in Amsterdam and New York.
Multimedia work The 2003/4 season saw a major multimedia collaboration with the renowned Dutch ensemble
Orkest de Volharding, and singer
Cristina Zavalloni, entitled
Big Noise. The project, consisting of four new commissions from leading composers from Britain and the Netherlands (
Yannis Kyriakides,
Diderik Wagenaar,
Joe Cutler and
Cornelis de Bondt, each working in conjunction with a video artist (
HC Gilje,
Hexstatic,
Jaap Drupsteen and Thomas Hadley respectively), toured major venues in the UK and the Netherlands. Other projects have included a further performance of
The Book of Five with the Bochum Symphony Orchestra in Germany, recording the music to the independent American film
Book of Love, and further work with film.
Educational work They have been resident ensemble at the
Dartington International Summer School for the advanced composition course led by Louis Andriessen, and have held composition workshops for the
SPNM in
Bangor and Belfast as well as additional workshops in New York and London. In June 2005 they took part in the Popular Music course at
Goldsmiths College in association with
John Paul Jones. In April 2009 they performed four new student commissions for the
Royal Conservatoire of Scotland (RSAMD) in Glasgow.
Internet radio show Since 2006 Icebreaker have had a monthly show on
Brighton-based totallyradio.com, including interviews with composers and playing a wide range of music in mixed and contrasting genres. ==Recent work==