Max Murray
As a composer Max Murray has collaborated with musicians and ensembles including Christopher Otto [New York], ELISION Ensemble [Melbourne], Noa Frenkel [Den Haag], RAGE THORMBONES [New York/L.A.], Léa Trommenschlager [Paris], Kevin McFarland [Colorado], Annie Gårlid+Matthew Conley+Nathan Plante [Berlin], and Madison Greenstone [San Diego], among others, with works appearing in contexts such as the Gare du Nord «Dialog» [Basel], Klangwerkstatt [Berlin], and HaTeiva [Tel-Aviv]. Current projects include an evening-length music theatre piece for performers Samuel Stoll [Berlin], Noëlle-Anne Darbellay [Bern], and Richard Craig [Bangor], and a new work for Paul Hübner. Rike Huy, and Samuel Stoll to be premiered at the Philharmonie Luxembourg’s 2020 rainy days festival.
Together with Liam Hockley, he co-directs Arbour Concerts based in Victoria and Vancouver, British Columbia Canada. From 2016 to 2020 he directed and managed Harvard University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences' Symphony Orchestra, alongside a Bach cantata series in collaboration with the Harvard Art Museums.
As a composer Max Murray has collaborated with musicians and ensembles including Christopher Otto [New York], ELISION Ensemble [Melbourne], Noa Frenkel [Den Haag], RAGE THORMBONES [New York/L.A.], Léa Trommenschlager [Paris], Kevin McFarland [Colorado], Annie Gårlid+Matthew Conley+Nathan Plante [Berlin], and Madison Greenstone [San Diego], among others, with works appearing in contexts such as the Gare du Nord «Dialog» [Basel], Klangwerkstatt [Berlin], and HaTeiva [Tel-Aviv]. Current projects include an evening-length music theatre piece for performers Samuel Stoll [Berlin], Noëlle-Anne Darbellay [Bern], and Richard Craig [Bangor], and a new work for Paul Hübner. Rike Huy, and Samuel Stoll to be premiered at the Philharmonie Luxembourg’s 2020 rainy days festival.
Together with Liam Hockley, he co-directs Arbour Concerts based in Victoria and Vancouver, British Columbia Canada. From 2016 to 2020 he directed and managed Harvard University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences' Symphony Orchestra, alongside a Bach cantata series in collaboration with the Harvard Art Museums.