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Sospeso celebrates
Pierre Boulez's eightieth birthday in the presence of the composer
at Zankel Hall on May 10, 2005, with works by him and tribute works
by a host of other composers.
Pierre Boulez studied
with Messiaen at the Paris Conservatoire
(1942-5) and privately with Andrée Vaurabourg and René Leibowitz,
inheriting Messiaen's concern with rhythm, non-developing forms and
extra-European music along with the Schönberg
tradition of Leibowitz. The clash of the two influences lies behind
such intense, disruptive works as his first two piano sonatas (1946,
1948) and Livre pour quatuor for string quartet (1949). The
violence of his early music also suited that of
René Char's poetry in the cantatas Le visage nuptial (1946)
and Le soleil des eaux (1948), though through this highly
charged style he was working towards an objective serial control of
rhythm, loudness and tone colour that was achieved in the Structures
for two pianos (1952). At this time he came to know Stockhausen,
with whom he became a leader of the European avant garde, teaching
at Darmstadt (1955-67) and elsewhere, and creating one of the key
postwar works in his Le marteau
sans maître (1954). Once more to poems by Char,
the work is for contralto with alto flute, viola, guitar and percussion:
a typical ensemble of middle-range instruments with an emphasis on
struck and plucked sounds. The filtering of Boulez's earlier manner
through his 'tonal serialism' produces a work of feverish speed, unrest
and elegance.
In the mid-1950s Boulez
extended his activities to conducting. He had been Barrault's musical
director since 1946 and in 1954 under Barrault's aegis he set up a
concert series, the Domaine Musical, to provide a platform for new
music. By the mid-1960s he was appearing widely as a conductor, becoming
chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra (1971-4) and the New
York Philharmonic Orchestra (1971-8). Meanwhile his creative output
declined. Under the influence of Mallarmé
he had embarked on three big aleatory works after
Le marteau, but of these the Third Piano Sonata (1957)
remains a fragment and Pli selon pli for soprano and orchestra
(1962) has been repeatedly revised; only a second book of Structures
for two pianos (1961) has been definitively finished. Other works,
notably Eclat/Multiples
for tuned percussion ensemble and orchestra, also remain in progress,
as if the openendedness of Boulez's proliferating musical world had
committed him to incompleteness. Only the severe Rituel for
orchestra (1975), a memorial for the conductor Bruno Maderna, has
escaped that fate.
Since the mid-1970s Boulez has concentrated on his work as director of the
Institut de Recherche et Coordination
Acoustique/Musique, a computer studio in Paris where
his main work has been Répons for orchestra and digital equipment.
Read the Ensemble Sospeso's
interview with Pierre Boulez here.
Biography from The
Grove Concise Dictionary of
Music and The
Classical Music Pages.
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