There is no disputing the fact that Nitin Sawhney is widely regarded as one of the most influential and versatile creative talents alive today. Firmly established as a world-class producer, songwriter, DJ, multi-instrumentalist, orchestral composer, and cultural pioneer, Sawhney has become a latter-day Renaissance man in the worlds of music, dance, theatre, and film.
Sawhney has released 7 studio albums - each one garnering critical acclaim. London’s Outcaste Records released the breakthrough Gold selling Beyond Skin in ’99, which took a prestigious Technics Mercury Music Prize nomination and won Sawhney the coveted South Bank Show Award. Subsequently, Sawhney signed a 6-album deal to Richard Branson’s V2 Records , and released the millennial epic and Silver certified Prophesy in 2001, winning a MOBO Award as well as the BBC Radio 3 Music Award. Sawhney’s seventh studio album, Philtre, was released in May 2005, and he is currently recording his eighth album, London Undersound, which features performances from Paul McCartney, Anoushka Shankar, and Imogen Heap amongst others. Clubland has seen three international album releases by Sawhney: All Mixed Up – the definitive remix collection, FabricLive.15, and In the Mind Of Nitin Sawhney . He has toured each of his albums extensively and has sold-out many of the world’s most prestigious venues both as a band and DJ. Sawhney has worked with a host of artists including Sting, Sinead O’Connor, A R Rahman, Jeff Beck, Brian Eno, Fink, and Will Young. This year Sawhney co-produced the sophomore album for Atlantic Records artist Get Cape.Wear Cape.Fly.
To date, Sawhney has scored over forty films, as well as having scored TV ads for the likes of Nike and Sephora. His music for Channel Four’s Second Generation saw him nominated for the prestigious Ivor Novello Award for Film and TV Composition (2004), and his scores have accompanied everything from dark, high-tension drama to light-hearted animatronics. Known for his incredible degree of versatility Sawhney has established himself as one of the world’s leading scorers for film, and has acted as a judge for BAFTA and The Ivor Novello Awards. Recent works include orchestral scores for Mira Nair’s The Namesake (Fox Searchlight 2007), Sony Playstation 3’s Heavenly Sword, and Franz Osten’s silent film classic, A Throw of Dice, which he wrote for the London Symphony Orchestra. In 2008, amidst touring with his band and orchestras around the world, Sawhney will be scoring: Jean Charles, on the life of Jean-Charles de Menezes, The Fifth Beatle, on the life of Beatles manager, Brian Epstein, and the directorial debut of actor Andy Serkis, Dark Blue Rising.
An acclaimed flamenco guitarist and classical/jazz pianist, Sawhney’s musical ability to transcend cultural barriers has gained him much recognition within the Classical community. In 2006 Sawhney composed a 1hr 20-minute symphony to accompany A Throw of Dice , which premiered with the London Symphony Orchestra at the Barbican, London. He has also worked with the BBC Concert Orchestra on Natural World Symphony, and the Philharmonia on The Namesake. In 2004, Sawhney was commissioned by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and the Britten Sinfonia to compose several new performance works. Other past commissions include 2000’s Urban Prophecies for BBC Proms, 2001’s Neural Circuits for the Britten Sinfonia and leading British pianist, Joanna MacGregor, and a commissioned concert for 2006 Electric Proms. 2007’s BBC Proms featured a retrospective of Nitin Sawhney’s works by way of a sold-out groundbreaking orchestral performance at the Royal Albert Hall.
In 2000 Sawhney produced the Varekai album for Cirque du Soleil, taking his unique sound to an even-wider audience. In 2002 he worked with Akram Khan and Anish Kapoor, scoring the music to Khan’s critically acclaimed choreographed work Kaash, and also wrote the music for Khan’s Zero Degrees (nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award, and designed by Anthony Gormley). Sawhney is also scoring Khan’s latest work, Bahok, for the Royal Ballet of China. Recent works in theatre include the Mahabharata adaptation by Olivier-award winning writer Stephen Clarke, Simon McBurney’s A Disappearing Number for Complicite, and Jonathan Holmes’ Fallujah.
Much of Sawhney’s attention remains focused on the areas of education and community building, accepting the role of Artist in Residence for no less than 5 separate performing arts organisations around the world. Sawhney joined Sir George Martin as a patron for the British Government’s Access-to-Music program and is also patron of the Raindance East Film Festival and the British Independent Film Awards. Sawhney appears regularly as an arts and current affairs commentator on topical discussion and news programs such as the BBC’s Newsnight, Newsnight Review, and HardTalk. He has also written for UK national broadsheets: The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph, The Independent, and The Observer. In 2006 Sawhney was awarded an Honorary Graduate Degree from London’s South Bank University and in late 2007 was awarded an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Music from the University of Kent.
For further information please visit www.nitinsawhney.com