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Pierre
Boulez (b.
March 26, 1925)
is a French
composer of
contemporary
classical music
and conductor
.
Early
years
Boulez was born
in Montbrison,
France. He
initially
studied
mathematics at
Lyon before
pursuing music
at the Paris
Conservatoire
under Olivier
Messiaen and
the wife of
Arthur
Honegger,
Andrée
Vaurabourg. He
studied
twelve-tone
technique with
René Leibowitz
and went on to
write atonal
music in a
post-Webernian
serial style.
Boulez was
initially part
of a cadre of
early
supporters of
Leibowitz, but
due to an
altercation
with Leibowitz,
their relations
turned
divisive, as
Boulez spent
much of his
career
promoting the
music of
Messiaen
instead. The
first fruits of
this were his
cantatas Le
Visage nuptial
and Le Soleil
des eaux for
female voices
and orchestra,
both composed
in the late
1940s and
revised several
times since, as
well as the
Second Piano
Sonata of 1948,
a well-received
32-minute work
that Boulez
composed at the
age of 23.
Thereafter,
Boulez was
influenced by
Messiaen's
research to
extend
twelve-tone
technique
beyond the
realm of pitch
organization,
serialising
durations,
dynamics, mode
of attack, and
so on. This
technique
became known as
integral
serialism.
Boulez quickly
became one of
the
philosophical
leaders of the
post-war
movement in the
arts towards
greater
abstraction and
experimentation.
Many composers
of Boulez's
generation
taught at the
Internationale
Ferienkurse für
Neue Musik in
Darmstadt,
Germany. The
so-called
Darmstadt
School
composers were
instrumental in
creating a
style that, for
a time, existed
as an antidote
to music of
nationalist
fervor; an
international,
even
cosmopolitan
style, a style
that could not
be 'co-opted'
as propaganda
in the way that
the Nazis used,
for example,
the music of
Ludwig van
Beethoven.
Boulez was in
contact with
many young
composers who
would become
influential,
including John
Cage.
Serialism
"ny musician
who has not
experienced — I
do not say
understood, but
truly
experienced —
the necessity
of dodecaphonic
music is
USELESS. For
his whole work
is irrelevant
to the needs of
his epoch."
Pierre Boulez
("Eventuellement...",
1952,
translated as
"Possibly...")
Boulez's
totally
serialized,
punctual works
consist of
Polyphonie X
(1950–51;
withdrawn) for
18 instruments,
the two
musique-concrète
Études
(1951–52), and
Structures,
book I for two
pianos. The
latter work was
quite
successful, and
seems to sum up
the feelings of
zero hour in
Europe during
the early
1950s.
Structures was
also a turning
point for
Boulez. As one
of the most
visible totally
serialized
works, it
became a
lightning rod
for various
kinds of
criticism.
György Ligeti,
for example,
published an
article that
examined its
patterns of
durations,
dynamics,
pitch, and
attack types in
great detail,
concluding that
its "ascetic
attitude" is
"akin to
compulsion
neurosis", and
that Boulez
"had to break
away from it. .
. . And so he
created the
sensual feline
world of the
'Marteau'".
These
criticisms,
combined with
what Boulez
felt was a lack
of expressive
flexibility in
the language,
as he outlined
in his essay
"At the Limit
of Fertile
Land..." had
already led
Boulez to
refine his
compositional
language. He
loosened the
strictness of
his total
serialism into
a more supple
and strongly
gestural music,
and did not
publicly reveal
much about
these
techniques,
which limited
further
discussion. His
first venture
into this new
kind of
serialism was a
work for 12
solo voices
titled Oubli
signal lapidé
(1952), but it
was withdrawn
after a single
performance.
Its material
was reused in
the 1970
composition
Cummings ist
der
Dichter.
Boulez's
strongest
achievement in
this method is
his masterpiece
Le marteau sans
maître (The
Hammer without
a Master) for
ensemble and
voice, from
1953 to 1957,
one of the few
works of
advanced music
from the 1950s
to remain in
the repertoire.
Le marteau was
a surprising
and
revolutionary
synthesis of
many different
streams in
modern music,
as well as
seeming to
encompass the
sound worlds of
modern jazz,
the Balinese
Gamelan,
traditional
African musics,
and traditional
Japanese
musics. Fluent
and expressive,
even sensuous,
in a way that
Boulez's
earlier serial
works had not
been, it was
hailed by
diverse
musicians,
including Igor
Stravinsky.
Boulez
described one
of the work's
innovations,
called "pitch
multiplication",
in several
articles, most
importantly in
the chapter
"Musical
Technique" in
Boulez 1971. It
was Lev
Koblyakov,
however, who
first described
its presence in
the three
"L'Artisanat
furieux"
movements of Le
Marteau sans
maître, and in
his 1981
doctoral
thesis.
However, an
explanation of
the processes
themselves was
not made until
1993. Other
techniques used
in the
"Bourreaux de
solitude" cycle
were first
described by
Ulrich Mosch,
and later fully
elaborated by
him.
Experimentation
After Le
marteau sans
maître, Boulez
began to
strengthen the
position of the
music post-WWI
modern
composers
through
conducting and
advocacy. He
also began to
consider new
avenues in his
own work. With
Pli selon pli
for orchestra
with solo
soprano, he
began to work
with an idea of
improvisation
and
open-endedness.
He considered
how the
conductor might
be able to
'improvise' on
vague
notations, such
as the fermata,
and how the
players might
'improvise' on
irrational
durations, such
as grace notes.
In addition, he
worked with the
idea of leaving
the specific
ordering of
movements or
sections of
music open to
be chosen for a
particular
night of a
performance, an
idea related to
the polyvalent
form of
Karlheinz
Stockhausen.
Interestingly,
though the two
works sound
similar today,
and certainly
represent the
same impeccable
craft, Pli
selon pli was
not received as
well as Le
marteau. This
is perhaps more
of a cultural
barometer than
a reflection on
the work
itself. During
the time that
Boulez was
testing these
new ideas,
those
colleagues who
had never been
entirely
comfortable
with the
prominence of a
rigorous
musical
language, such
as György
Ligeti, had
brought a
convincing
musical counter
argument to
Boulez's
musical ideals.
In a poetic
twist, Boulez
had moved from
peerless
respect for Le
marteau sans
maître to
seeming defeat
with Pli selon
pli (Fold upon
fold), which
sets a Stéphane
Mallarmé poem
about the
tripping
impotence of a
swan, unable to
take flight
from a frozen
lake.
Controlled
chance
"Why compose
works that have
to be
re-created
every time they
are performed?
Because
definitive,
once-and-for-all
developments
seem no longer
appropriate to
musical thought
as it is today,
or to the
actual state
that we have
reached in the
evolution of
musical
technique,
which is
increasingly
concerned with
the
investigation
of a relative
world, a
permanent
'discovering'
rather like the
state of
'permanent
revolution'."
Pierre Boulez
("Sonate, que
me veux-tu?",
1960)
From the 1950s,
beginning with
the Third Piano
Sonata
(1955–57/63),
Boulez
experimented
with what he
called
"controlled
chance" and he
developed his
views on
aleatoric music
in the articles
"Aléa" and
"Sonate, que me
veux-tu?". His
use of chance,
which he would
later employ in
compositions
like Eclat
(1965),
Domaines
(1961–68) and
Rituel in
Memoriam Bruno
Maderna
(1974–75), is
very different
from that in
the works of,
for example,
John Cage.
While in Cage's
music the
performers are
often given the
freedom to
improvise and
create
completely
unforeseen
sounds, with
the object of
removing the
composer's
intention from
the music, in
works by Boulez
they only get
to choose
between
possibilities
that have been
written out in
detail by the
composer—a
method that,
when applied to
the
successional
order of
sections, is
often described
as "mobile
form".
1970s
Boulez's
output since
the late 1970s
has been of a
different kind
since the early
works that
brought him to
initial
prominence.
After a rapid
succession of
explosive
works, such as
the three
cantatas on
poetry by René
Char, the first
two piano
sonatas, and
other chamber
music,
compositions
have tended to
be contemplated
and expanded
over a long
period of time,
during which
they were
performed in
various stages
of development.
...explosante-fixe...,
now resembling
a flute
concerto with
electronics,
was first
published in
1971 as a
sketch in the
journal Tempo
as a memorial
tribute to
Stravinsky,
then worked out
in various
versions,
including one
for mixed octet
with
electronics
performed in
1973.
Eclat/Multiples
has remained a
large fragment,
and Dérive II
(1988/2002/2006)
and Répons
(1980/82/84)
have been
performed in
various stages
of development.
The desire to
expand
unrealized
possibilities
has also lead
Boulez to
create related
works in
series. His
early twelve
miniatures for
piano,
Notations
(1945), has,
since the
1970s, been in
the process of
being expanded
as an
orchestral
cycle. To date,
at least seven
movements have
been completed.
The material
contained in
Anthèmes for
solo violin,
itself once
expanded, was
later worked
out as an
extended
composition for
violin and
electronics
Anthèmes 2.
Boulez now
plans to
further realize
the material's
implications as
a violin
concerto.
Incises, a
short work for
solo piano, has
since exploded
into Sur
Incises for
three
percussive
groups (pianos,
harps,
percussion) in
two very
extended
movements.
Electronic
music
After the
1960s, in which
he had produced
little, Boulez
began to turn
back to the
electronic
medium and to
large extended
works. Although
unsatisfied
with the
products of his
work with tape
in the 1950s
(Two Studies,
Poésie pour
pouvoir) he
began to
explore the
possibilities
of live
electronic
sound
manipulation.
His first
attempt was the
1973 version of
...explosant/fixe...
However, at
around this
time president
Georges
Pompidou began
to discuss with
Boulez the
possibility of
creating an
institute for
the exploration
and development
of modern music
where there
would be a
chance to
explore the
medium
seriously. This
was to become
IRCAM. At
IRCAM, Boulez
created an
environment
where composers
would have at
hand the best
performers
available, and
where the most
advanced
technology and
computer
scientists
would be at
their service.
Boulez now
began to
explore the use
of electronic
sound
transformation
in real time.
Previously
electronic
music had to be
recorded to
tape, which
thus 'fixed'
it. The
temporal aspect
of any live
music making in
which it played
a part had to
be coordinated
with the tape
exactly. Boulez
found this
impossibly
restrictive.
Now at IRCAM,
he composed
Répons, for six
instrumental
groups, chamber
orchestra, and
electronics.
With the
assistance of
Andrew Gerzso
Boulez
fashioned a
work in which
the computer
captured the
resonance and
spatialization
of sounds
created by the
ensemble and
processed them
in real
time.
Recent
years
Today, Boulez
was and is one
of the leaders
of the
post-World War
II musical
modernism. His
compositions
have enriched
musical
culture, and
his advocacy of
modern and
postmodern
music has been
decisive for
many. Boulez
continues to
conduct and
compose as of
2006. From 1976
to 1995, Boulez
held the Chair
in "Invention,
technique et
langage en
musique" at the
Collège de
France. In 2002
he was awarded
the Glenn Gould
Prize for his
contributions.
In 2007, Boulez
finished
recording the
Mahler cycle
for Deutsche
Grammophon with
his recording
of Mahler's 8th
Symphony with
the
Staatskapelle
Berlin, the
Berlin State
Opera and Radio
choruses.
Boulez
as a
conductor Boulez
is also a
conductor,
known the
world over
having
directed
most of
the
world's
leading
symphony
orchestras
and
ensembles
since the
late
fifties.
He served
concurrently
as chief
conductor
of the BBC
Symphony
Orchestra
from 1971
to 1975,
and music
director
of the New
York
Philharmonic
from 1971
to 1977.
He is
currently
the
Conductor
Emeritus
of the
Chicago
Symphony
Orchestra.
Boulez is
particularly
famed for
his
polished
interpretations
of
twentieth
century
classics—Alban
Berg,
Claude
Debussy,
Gustav
Mahler,
Arnold
Schoenberg,
Igor
Stravinsky,
Béla
Bartók,
Anton
Webern and
Edgard
Varèse—as
well as
for
numerous
performances
of
contemporary
music.
Clarity,
precision,
rhythmic
agility
and a
respect
for the
composers'
intentions
as notated
in the
musical
score are
the
hallmarks
of his
conducting
style. In
1984 he
collaborated
with Frank
Zappa and
conducted
the
Ensemble
Intercontemporain,
who
performed
three of
Zappa's
pieces. He
never uses
a baton,
conducting
with his
hands
alone. His
nineteenth
century
repertoire
focuses
upon
Ludwig van
Beethoven,
Hector
Berlioz,
Robert
Schumann
and
especially
Richard
Wagner.
His
recording
of Anton
Bruckner's
Eighth
Symphony
has met
with
considerable
critical
acclaim.
In 1974 he
also
recorded
Maurice
Ravel's
then
little-known
orchestral
version of
"Une
Barque sur
l'océan"
from
Miroirs,
when there
was still
no printed
score. The
score was
published
only in
1983, and
even then
only in
the first
of two
slightly
different
versions
Ravel had
made.
During his
tenure as music
director of the
New York
Philharmonic he
was criticized,
even by members
of the
orchestra, for
his
concentration
on modern
repertoire at
the expense of
works by
earlier
composers.
Nonetheless,
Boulez'
controversial
"Rug" concerts
of contemporary
music with
members of the
New York
Philharmonic
played a
significant
role in
"bridging" the
widening gap
between the New
York downtown
music scene
with concerts
of "uptown"
music, directed
primarily at
Columbia
University by a
former
classmate at
the Paris
Conservatoire
and a pupil of
Leibowitz,
Jacques-Louis
Monod. In his
1981 volume of
compilation of
reviews from
the New York
Times, Facing
the Music,
critic Harold
C. Schonberg
includes a
column in which
he details how
unhappy some
members of the
New York
Philharmonic
orchestra were
with Boulez
during his
tenure.
Boulez has also
conducted opera
productions and
made several
recordings of
opera. He was
the conductor
for the 1976
centenary
production of
Richard
Wagner's Der
Ring des
Nibelungen,
directed by
Patrice
Chéreau,
recordings of
which were
commercially
released in
audio and video
formats. Boulez
reunited with
Chéreau for a
2007 production
in Amsterdam of
Leoš Janáček's
From the House
of the Dead, in
what Boulez
said was the
last opera
production that
he would ever
conduct.
Boulez
as a
writer
Boulez is also
an articulate,
perceptive and
sweeping writer
on music. Some
articles—notably
the notorious
Schoenberg is
Dead—were
deliberately
provocative and
veered towards
polemic. Others
dealt with
questions of
technique and
aesthetics in a
deeply
reflective if
sometimes
elliptical
manner. These
writings have
mostly been
republished
under the
titles
Stocktakings
from an
Apprenticeship,
Orientations:
Collected
Writings, and
Boulez on Music
Today, as well
as in the
journal of the
Darmstadt
composers of
the time, Die
Reihe.
Awards
Sonning
Award (1985)
Denmark
Grawemeyer
Award (2001)
United States
for Sur
Incises
Glenn Gould
Prize (2002)
Canada
Wolf Prize
(2000)Israel
Some of the
information on
this page came
from a
Wikipedia
article and is
licensed under
the GNU
Documentation
License.
©2008
www.geneticmatrix.com.
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