Shiva Feshareki (1987) is a British-Iranian composer, artist and turntablist, described as “the most cutting-edge expression of turntablism” and as “one of the most astonishing acts of musical alchemy of the last decade” (BBC Radio 3). Over the last decade, she has been a pioneer at the leading edge of both contemporary classical and electronic music scenes.
As an innovator, experimenter and a self-described sonic architect, Shiva is fascinated by the materiality of sound. Her intrepid exploration of a 360-degree sound world encompasses compositions for orchestral, solo, choral, chamber, electronic and interdisciplinary installation works. She also composes for ‘note-reading’ ensembles (Ensemble Modern, Manchester Camerata etc), where she re-theorises relationships between performer and audience, dissolving physical, historical, and sonic boundaries.
In her live electronic compositions, Shiva fearlessly warps time and space through the boundless possibility of her turntables. She masterfully contorts samples of her own composition along with peculiarities from her own sample collection. She employs an array of technology from vintage analogue tape echo, vinyl turntables, CDJs, to state-of-the-art ambisonic technology to create experiences that reveal the fluid and infinite interplay between sound and the physics of space.
Her acoustic and electronic compositions are deeply intertwined, often combining fixed and improvised elements responding to one another and intricately influenced by the acoustics and energy of a space. This hybrid approach has placed Shiva at the forefront of electronic, acoustic and spatial composition.
The underlying philosophy of Shiva’s work is equally as profound as the music she produces. Exceedingly aware of the cultural crises, and the self-actualisation she has had to manifest to confront conventions as an ethnic minority female in a largely white and patriarchal music culture, her music is a direct response to the issues many of us currently face as artists and as humans.
She holds a Doctorate of Music in composition from the Royal College of Music (2017), and is a winner of the BBC Young Composer’s Award (2004), The Royal Philharmonic Society Composition Prize (2009) and the Ivor Novello Award for Innovation (2017). Shiva is currently a Visiting Fellow at Oxford University with the Electronic Music Practice Research group (EMPRes) funded by The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH), researching and presenting state-of-the-art spatial and ambisonic electronic composition.
She has performed extensively across the world in concert halls, art galleries, festivals and raves, with notable appearances at BBC Proms (Royal Albert Hall), The Tanks at Tate Modern, Southbank Centre, Barcelona’s Sonar Festival, the Moscow Museum of Modern Art (VAC Foundation), Casa Del Lago (Mexico), Mutek (Montreal), Hyperreality Festival of Club Culture (Vienna), Maerzmusik (Kraftwerk, Berlin) and Hellerau (European Centre for the Arts).
Shiva has also worked alongside the BBC Singers, BBC Concert Orchestra, London Sinfonietta, London Philharmonic Orchestra, London Contemporary Orchestra, Ensemble Modern, Manchester Camerata, Netherlands Chamber Choir, Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, Düsseldorfer Symphoniker, Haroon Mirza, Yoshi Sodeoka and Arlo Parks to name just a few.
In May 2022, Shiva released her critically acclaimed album Turning World, earning the title of The Guardian’s Contemporary Album of the Month. The Observer praised her for her “restless invention” and described the record as “beautiful and bewitching”. BBC Music Magazine described it as “a bold and fascinating Josquin-inspired sonic landscape”, labelling Shiva as “the innovator who doesn’t try to be original”.