‘My father didn’t differentiate 
          between the Beatles and Mozart or whatever." Joe Duddell recalls 
          the path that led him to a BBC commission and a Prom première. 
          ‘I saw a drummer on "Top of the Pops" – Fat Larry? He had 
          an amazing glittering drum kit. Mum took me for a lesson. I was hooked.’ 
          And happy ever after. ‘Drummers never get tired of practising. Drummers 
          and guitarists never complain.’ 
        
        The tones are proudly Mancunian. 
          Influences have included The Smiths, Steve Martland, Tippett, Stravinsky, 
          Steve Reich, Radiohead…’And a lot of Schubert recently.’
        
        Er, yes. If the eclectic approach 
          doesn’t enlighten perhaps the new work’s title will: ‘Ruby’. Who or 
          what is Ruby? Duddell looks haunted. The piece was written for percussionist 
          Colin Currie, the brilliant Scot who was the first percussionist to 
          make the finals of the BBC Young Musician of the Year. Currie – Ruby 
          Murray. ‘Just a joke,’ he says sheepishly. ‘When I told Colin he said, 
          "That’s awful!" One of the rhythmic aspects comes from Indian 
          music so its doubly stupid. A lot of my titles have weird connections 
          that the person playing knows about. Private jokes…’
        
        On Friday the newly invigorated 
          Bournemouth SO under the charismatic American Marin Alsop accompanies 
          the dynamic Currie. Percussion concertos tend to wheel out everything 
          including the kitchen sink as the soloist (usually E Glennie) belts 
          around the platform like une mouche au cul bleu. ‘It’s almost 
          am-dram, all that scurrying around,’ says Duddell disdainfully. ‘I’m 
          anxious to avoid that. I’m trying to reflect the more lyrical side of 
          percussion.’ Even so the score requires ‘three main set-ups. One based 
          on marimba, with bongos, temple blocks, cowbells…Another more metallic 
          set-up with vibraphone, cymbals, tambourine. Then a conventional kit, 
          tom-toms, drums, basically untuned…’ Not forgetting eight tuned gongs. 
          ‘Not that much compared with other concertos,’ says Duddell apologetically. 
          ‘It sounds a lot. And it takes up quite a bit of space.’ The ‘reasonably 
          large’ orchestra throws trumpet, flute, piano and solo double-bass into 
          relief.
        
        Turning 31 this month, Duddell’s 
          fully occupied. Besides teaching at Exeter, his order book’s full. ‘Next 
          year I tackle a string quartet, with a poet, at Chatsworth, for the 
          Derbyshire Literature Festival. There’s another piece for Colin and 
          an LA guitar quartet – getting back to my rock roots.’ For Presteigne 
          (Wales) there’s a festival work for flute, harp and strings. ‘I’m always 
          doing two or three things at the same time.’ He sighs. ‘More jokes about 
          a ruby sizzling on a back burner…’
        
        © Martin Hoyle