Sarah Recital Programme.Pages

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Sarah Recital Programme.Pages SARAH HILL (VIOLIN) MASTERS RECITAL ! TRINITY LABAN CONSERVATOIRE ! 11 SEP 2014 – 11.30am ! PROGRAMME Giuseppe Tartini Sonata for solo violin in D minor 1692-1770 (from 26 ‘Sonate Piccole’) mid 18th century Kaija Saariaho Nocturne for solo violin 1952- 1994 Igor Stravinsky Duo Concertant * 1882-1971 1932 (Hannah Ely, piano) Tom Coult Sparking and Slipping 1988- 2014 (world premiere) (Tom Coult, cond.; Anne Denholm, harp; ! Hannah Ely, piano; Henry Fynn, percussion) ! ———— Four striking pieces, spanning over 250 years of music, make up this fascinating and diverse programme, though there are as many similarities !between them as there are differences. We begin with two unaccompanied pieces – Tartini’s Sonata and Saariaho’s Nocturne. Both of these composers developed highly novel approaches to violin writing for their respective periods, informed by the !very latest investigations into the nature of sound itself. Stravinsky’s similarly idiosyncratic approach to the violin came during a period of his career where he was looking to 18th-century music for inspiration. Just as in Tartini’s Sonata, Duo Concertant combines a strange !lyricism with dance forms. Also taking stimulus from 18th-century music is Tom Coult’s Sparking and Slipping, an extended and virtuosic dance for violin and a baroque-esque accompagnato ensemble (albeit on rather more modern instruments!). Giuseppe Tartini Sonata for solo violin in D minor (from 26 ‘Sonate Piccole’) ! Siciliano – Allegro – Adagio affetuoso Giuseppe Tartini was one of the most influential violinists, teachers and theorists of music in eighteenth-century Italy and beyond. As head of the Basillica di Sant’Antonio in Padua for four decades, his renowned tuition in harmony, counterpoint, composition and performance attracted students from all over the world – so much so that the his class !became known as the ‘School of Nations’.1 As well as his central commandment ‘per be suonare, bisgona be cantare’ (‘to play well, you must sing well), Tartini also became fascinated by the physics of sound itself, publishing Tratto di musica secondo la vera scienza dell’armonia in 1754. This treatise explored psychoacoustic phenomena such as ‘difference tones’, a phenomenon whereby two notes played together produce a third tone in the listener’s ear. These ‘Tartini’ tones were little explored by subsequent composers until composers working at Paris’ IRCAM studios in the 1970s and 1980s, such as Gérard Grisey, Tristan Murail and indeed !Kaija Saariaho. These explorations, which became something of a quasi-religious obsession,2 informed Tartini’s extraordinary set of 26 sonatas for solo violin, written in the last twenty years of his life. Despite being one of the most thoroughgoing and extended collections of violin music of the period, the Sonatas are rarely played, partly because they have never been published in a critical edition (I am today playing from my own !transcription of the manuscript facsimile). 1 Sheppard-Skaerved, Peter, ‘Giuseppe Tartini and his Sonate Piccole’, liner notes, Toccata TOCC0146, 2. 2 Aresi, Stefano, liner notes to Chiara Bianchini, ‘Tartini: Sonate a violino solo’, Zig Zag ZZT080502. The D minor sonata’s opening Siciliana makes use of Tartini’s theories about ‘symmetrical harmony’.3 Fanning symmetrically outwards from the note A gives the movement its distinctive, chromatically inflected harmonic language, carrying to modern ears flavours of eastern European or gypsy music. The symmetry culminates in highly dissonant semitone !crushes from both directions towards A. The second movement, an Allegro, carries a sense of two voices competing against one another – the bottom one invoking the repeated strokes of a drum. Like the first, this movement places great importance on the interval of an open 5th – sonically pure but also hollow, the acoustic properties of this interval will have fascinated Tartini. The sonata ends with the alluring Adagio affetuoso, whose serpentine melody is inflected with !expressive chromaticism. ! Kaija Saariaho Nocturne for solo violin Kaija Saariaho, like Tartini, begun as a violinist, studying at the Sibelius Academy in her native Finland. Also like Tartini, she has developed a highly personal and idiosyncratic style of writing for solo string instruments, as can be heard in a number of pieces for cellist Anssi Karttunen including Spins & Spells (1996) and Sept Papillons (2000), and in 1994’s Nocturne !for solo violin. While working on her violin concerto, Graal Theatre, Saariaho heard of the death of the great Polish composer Witold Lutosławski. She wrote Nocturne very quickly, dedicating it to his memory, and subsequently using its material as the basis for the violin !concerto.4 3 Sheppard-Skaerved,‘Giuseppe Tartini', 5. 4 Korhonen, Kimmo, ’The many world of Kaija Saariaho’s music for strings’, liner notes to Ondine, ODE 1222-2, 5. The piece is striking for its fragility and vulnerability – there is a haptic quality here, with musical gestures chosen as much for the grain of their sound as for their harmonic or melodic implications. The range of sound qualities coaxed out of the violin is large – the crunched ‘scratch’ tones and brittle half-fingered pitches are contrasted with the more resonant qualities of open strings and resonant harmonics. These latter sounds tend !to glisten like beams of light against the nocturnal atmosphere. The harmony is generally static – there is throughout a sense of a musical landscape unfolding or unspooling, rather than coming from any direct statement. This lends the whole piece an air of stillness, even in the central section where the music starts to move with greater purpose. This stillness, challenging to maintain given the awkwardness of many of the physical actions the violinist is required to perform, makes the piece a fitting and !quietly moving tribute to Lutosławski. ! Igor Stravinsky Duo Concertant Cantilène – Eglogue I – Eglogue II – Gigue – Dithyramb ! (Hannah Ely, piano) Stravinsky’s Duo Concertant is an example of something that I value a lot – the close collaboration between a performer and a composer. Previously, Stravinsky had not been creatively excited by the violins, finding strings ‘much too evocative and representative of the human voice’, unlike the winds which were ‘drier, cleaner, less prone to facile expressiveness’.5 This was because of his neo- classical, anti-Romantic sentiments – he disliked anything that was over-emotional, and strings with their vibrato seemed not precise !enough for him. 5 Walsh, Stephen, Stravinsky: A Creative Spring, London, 2000, 208. This changed, however, when he begun working with violinist Samuel Dushkin on 1931’s Violin Concerto. Stravinsky said that ‘a deeper knowledge of the violin and close collaboration with a technician like Dushkin had revealed possibilities I longed to explore’,6 and the early thirties are almost a ‘violin period’ in his output – as well as the concerto and the Duo Concertant, he arranged lots of his previous music for violin !and piano, so that he and Dushkin could tour playing recitals. What’s very striking about the piece is how lyrical it is – there is real sweetness and melody – but also how these melodies never quite work the way one expects. Stravinsky approvingly quoted a recent book by Cingria on the Greek poet Petrarch (coincidentally, also a great influence on Tartini’s Sonatas): Lyricism cannot exist without rules, and it is essential that they should be strict. Otherwise there is only a faculty for lyricism, and that exists everywhere. What does not exist everywhere is lyrical expression and composition.7 Despite these rules, Paul Griffiths says that the Duo ‘sublimely makes up its rules as it goes along’.8 There are plenty of strange choices in the piece, !not least in the movement titles. The first movement, is on the whole hardly lyrical in the way that its title, Cantilène might subject, while most mischievous is the final movement, entitled Dithyramb, a Greek term meaning a wild and ecstatic dance. Stravinsky’s Dithyramb, by contrast, is an initially cool and reserved slow !movement – ‘far more Bachian than Bacchanalian’.9 However unreliable his titles, the music is charming, inventive and sometimes intensely moving. There is real wit and vivacity in the bouncing romp of the Gigue or the quickly forgotten bagpipe tune of Eglogue I, and Stravinsky often uses harmonics, open strings and left hand pizzicato to achieve striking sonorities (they also serve to eradicate some of the vibrato that might seem to him too romantic). Stravinsky’s piece is sometimes strange, sometimes joyful, sometimes sweet but always totally personal. 6 Stravinsky, Igor, An Autobiography, New York, 1936, 170. 7 ibid. 8 Griffiths, Paul, Stravinsky: The Master Musicians, London, 1992, 108. 9 ibid. Tom Coult Sparking and Slipping (Tom Coult, cond.; Anne Denholm, harp; ! Hannah Ely, piano; Henry Fynn, percussion) I wanted to commission a piece from Tom Coult as I have previously played his Études 1 & 2 for solo violin, and he, like Saariaho and Tartini, originally started as a violinist. I also knew that we could do some of the same close collaboration as Stravinsky did with Samuel Dushkin. I asked him for a piece that would feel theatrical in some way, and with an unusual accompanying ensemble. This is what !Tom says about the piece: ‘It was great to be asked to write a piece for Sarah to go alongside these fascinating pieces. Because of Sarah’s choice of Tartini, I wanted to capture some of the spirit (though not the sound) of baroque music. I like the white-knuckle virtuosity of a lot of Vivaldi for instance, and the idea of an accompagnato ensemble that supports and provides a backdrop to the pyrotechnics of the soloist like in !baroque opera, rather than contributing much material of its own.’ The piece opens with a fast dance, obsessively circling around the same notes, before variations of the same material. At the centre of the work is a long, slow passage of genuine lyricism, with the ensemble acting like a resonating chamber for the violin.
Recommended publications
  • The Shaping of Time in Kaija Saariaho's Emilie
    THE SHAPING OF TIME IN KAIJA SAARIAHO’S ÉMILIE: A PERFORMER’S PERSPECTIVE Maria Mercedes Diaz Garcia A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF MUSICAL ARTS May 2020 Committee: Emily Freeman Brown, Advisor Brent E. Archer Graduate Faculty Representative Elaine J. Colprit Nora Engebretsen-Broman © 2020 Maria Mercedes Diaz Garcia All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT Emily Freeman Brown, Advisor This document examines the ways in which Kaija Saariaho uses texture and timbre to shape time in her 2008 opera, Émilie. Building on ideas about musical time as described by Jonathan Kramer in his book The Time of Music: New Meanings, New Temporalities, New Listening Strategies (1988), such as moment time, linear time, and multiply-directed time, I identify and explain how Saariaho creates linearity and non-linearity in Émilie and address issues about timbral tension/release that are used both structurally and ornamentally. I present a conceptual framework reflecting on my performance choices that can be applied in a general approach to non-tonal music performance. This paper intends to be an aid for performers, in particular conductors, when approaching contemporary compositions where composers use the polarity between tension and release to create the perception of goal-oriented flow in the music. iv To Adeli Sarasola and Denise Zephier, with gratitude. v ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank the many individuals who supported me during my years at BGSU. First, thanks to Dr. Emily Freeman Brown for offering me so many invaluable opportunities to grow musically and for her detailed corrections of this dissertation.
    [Show full text]
  • OTHER WORLDS 2019/20 Concert Season at Southbank Centre’S Royal Festival Hall Highlights 2019/20
    OTHER WORLDS 2019/20 Concert season at Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall Highlights 2019/20 November Acclaimed soprano Diana Damrau is renowned for her interpretations of the music of Richard Strauss, and this November she sings a selection of her favourite Strauss songs. Page 12 September October Principal Conductor and Mark Elder conducts Artistic Advisor Vladimir Elgar’s oratorio Jurowski is joined by The Apostles, arguably Julia Fischer to launch his greatest creative the second part of Isle achievement, which of Noises with Britten’s will be brought to life elegiac Violin Concerto on this occasion with alongside Tchaikovsky’s a stellar cast of soloists Sixth Symphony. and vast choral forces. Page 03 Page 07 December Legendary British pianist Peter Donohoe plays his compatriot John Foulds’s rarely performed Dynamic Triptych – a unique jazz-filled, exotic masterpiece Page 13 February March January Vladimir Jurowski leads We welcome back violinist After winning rave reviews the first concert in our Anne-Sophie Mutter for at its premiere in 2017, 2020 Vision festival, two exceptional concerts we offer another chance presenting the music in which she performs to experience Sukanya, of three remarkable Beethoven’s groundbreaking Ravi Shankar’s works composed Triple Concerto and extraordinary operatic three centuries apart, a selection of chamber fusion of western and by Beethoven, Scriabin works alongside LPO traditional Indian styles. and Eötvös. Principal musicians. A love story brought to Page 19 Pages 26–27 life through myth, music
    [Show full text]
  • A Listening Guide for the Indispensable Composers by Anthony Tommasini
    A Listening Guide for The Indispensable Composers by Anthony Tommasini 1 The Indispensable Composers: A Personal Guide Anthony Tommasini A listening guide INTRODUCTION: The Greatness Complex Bach, Mass in B Minor I: Kyrie I begin the book with my recollection of being about thirteen and putting on a recording of Bach’s Mass in B Minor for the first time. I remember being immediately struck by the austere intensity of the opening choral singing of the word “Kyrie.” But I also remember feeling surprised by a melodic/harmonic shift in the opening moments that didn’t do what I thought it would. I guess I was already a musician wanting to know more, to know why the music was the way it was. Here’s the grave, stirring performance of the Kyrie from the 1952 recording I listened to, with Herbert von Karajan conducting the Vienna Philharmonic. Though, as I grew to realize, it’s a very old-school approach to Bach. Herbert von Karajan, conductor; Vienna Philharmonic (12:17) Today I much prefer more vibrant and transparent accounts, like this great performance from Philippe Herreweghe’s 1996 recording with the chorus and orchestra of the Collegium Vocale, which is almost three minutes shorter. Philippe Herreweghe, conductor; Collegium Vocale Gent (9:29) Grieg, “Shepherd Boy” Arthur Rubinstein, piano Album: “Rubinstein Plays Grieg” (3:26) As a child I loved “Rubinstein Plays Grieg,” an album featuring the great pianist Arthur Rubinstein playing piano works by Grieg, including several selections from the composer’s volumes of short, imaginative “Lyrical Pieces.” My favorite was “The Shepherd Boy,” a wistful piece with an intense middle section.
    [Show full text]
  • Seductive Solitary. Julian Anderson Introduces the Work of Kaija Saariaho STOR ® Julian Anderson; Kaija Saariaho
    Seductive Solitary. Julian Anderson Introduces the Work of Kaija Saariaho STOR ® Julian Anderson; Kaija Saariaho The Musical Times, Vol. 133, No. 1798. (Dec., 1992), pp. 616-619. Stable URL: http://links.j stor.org/sici ?sici=0027 -4666%28199212%29133%3A1798%3C616%3ASSJAIT%3E2.0.C0%3B2-F The Musical Times is currently published by Musical Times Publications Ltd.. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR' s Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/about/terms.html. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://www .j stor .org/joumals/mtpl.html. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is an independent not-for-profit organization dedicated to creating and preserving a digital archive of scholarly journals. For more information regarding JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. http://www .j stor.org/ Tue Jul 25 00:15:12 2006 .:..,_- ---:.. Kaija Saariaho in focus - • SEDUCTIVE SOLITARY Julian Anderson surveys the w-ork o£ Kaija Saariaho~ a composer pursuing a ~lonely but seductive search £or music at once directly expressive and genuinely new-~ ogether with her compatriot and near-contemporary Magnus T Lindberg (on whose music I wrote last month), Kaija Saariaho is the only Finnish composer since the death of Sibelius to have achieved widespread international acclaim.
    [Show full text]
  • The Guardian's Best Classical Music Works of the 21St Century
    04/05/2020 The best classical music works of the 21st century | Music | The Guardian The best classical music works of the 1st century Over the coming week, the Guardian will select the greatest culture since 2000, carefully compiled by critics and editors. We begin with a countdown of defining classical music compositions, from Xrated opera to hightech string quartets • Read an interview with our No1 choice by Andrew Clements, Fiona Maddocks. John Lewis, Kate Molleson, Tom Service, Erica Jeal and Tim Ashley Main image: From left: The Tempest, The Minotaur, L’amour de loin, Hamlet Thu 12 Sep 2019 17.20 BST 25 Jennifer Walshe XXX Live Nude Girls 2003 Jennifer Walshe asked girls about how they played with their Barbie dolls, and turned the confessionals into an opera of horrors in which the toys unleash dark sex play and acts of mutilation. Walshe is a whiz for this kind of thing: she yanks off the plastic veneer of commercial culture by parodying then systematically dismembering the archetypes. KM Read our review | watch a production from 2016 BIFEM 24 John Adams City Noir 2009 Adams’s vivid portrait of Los Angeles, as depicted in the film noir of the 1940s and 50s, is a three-movement symphony of sorts, and a concerto for orchestra, too. It’s an in-your-face celebration of orchestral virtuosity that references a host of American idioms without ever getting too specific. It’s not his finest orchestral work by any means (those came last century), but an effective, extrovert showpiece. AC Read our review | Listen on Spotify https://www.theguardian.com/music/2019/sep/12/best-classical-music-works-of-the-21st-century 1/10 04/05/2020 The best classical music works of the 21st century | Music | The Guardian Immediate … the Sixteen and Britten Sinfonia perform Stabat Mater, conducted by Harry Christophers.
    [Show full text]
  • BEKANNTMACHUNG Die Preisträger Des Polar Music Prize
    BEKANNTMACHUNG Die Preisträger des Polar Music Prize 2014 sind: CHUCK BERRY UND PETER SELLARS Die Begründung für Chuck Berry Der Polarpreis 2014 wird Chuck Berry von St. Louis, USA, verliehen. An jenem Tag im Mai 1955, als Chuck Berry seine Debutsingel "Maybellene" einspielte, wurden die Parameter der Rockmusik definiert. Chuck Berry war der Pionier des Rock'n'Roll, der der E-Gitarre als Hauptinstrument der Rockmusik den Weg bereitete. Alle Riffs und Soli, die Rockgitarristen in den letzten 60 Jahren gespielt haben, enthalten DNA- Spuren, die sich auf Chuck Berry zurückführen lassen. The Rolling Stones, The Beatles und eine Million andere Bands haben ihr Handwerk erlernt, indem sie Stücke von Chuck Berry eingeübten. Daneben ist Chuck Berry ein meisterhafter Songwriter. In drei Minuten kann er Bilder aus dem Alltag eines Jugendlichen und dessen Träume skizzieren, nicht selten mit einem Auto im Zentrum. Chuck Berry, geboren 1926, war der erste, der auf den Highway hinausgefahren ist um zu verkünden: Wir alle sind "born to run". Preisbegründung für Peter Sellars: Der Polarpreis 2014 geht an Peter Sellars aus Pittsburgh, USA. Der Regisseur Peter Sellars ist das beste lebende Beispiel dafür, um was es beim Polarpreis geht: Musik sichtbar zu machen und sie in einem neuen Kontext zu präsentieren. Mit seinen kontroversen Inszenierungen von Opern und Theaterstücken hat Peter Sellars alles, von Krieg und Hunger bis hin zu Religion und Globalisierung, auf die Bühne gebracht. Sellars hat Mozart in den Luxus des Trump Tower und in den Drogenhandel von Spanish Harlem versetzt, eine Oper über Nixons Besuch in China inszeniert und Kafkas Sauberkeitswahn vertont.
    [Show full text]
  • Classical Music
    2020– 21 2020– 2020–21 Music Classical Classical Music 1 2019– 20 2019– Classical Music 21 2020– 2020–21 Welcome to our 2020–21 Contents Classical Music season. Artists in the spotlight 3 We are committed to presenting a season unexpected sounds in unexpected places across Six incredible artists you’ll want to know better that connects audiences with the greatest the Culture Mile. We will also continue to take Deep dives 9 international artists and ensembles, as part steps to address the boundaries of historic Go beneath the surface of the music in these themed of a programme that crosses genres and imbalances in music, such as shining a spotlight days and festivals boundaries to break new ground. on 400 years of female composition in The Ghosts, gold-diggers, sorcerers and lovers 19 This year we will celebrate Thomas Adès’s Future is Female. Travel to mystical worlds and new frontiers in music’s 50th birthday with orchestras including the Together with our resident and associate ultimate dramatic form: opera London Symphony Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia, orchestras and ensembles – the London Los Angeles Philharmonic, The Cleveland Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Awesome orchestras 27 Orchestra and Australian Chamber Orchestra Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia, Academy of Ancient Agile chamber ensembles and powerful symphonic juggernauts and conductors including Sir Simon Rattle, Music, Los Angeles Philharmonic and Australian Choral highlights 35 Gustavo Dudamel, Franz Welser-Möst and the Chamber Orchestra – we are looking forward Epic anthems and moving songs to stir the soul birthday boy himself. Joyce DiDonato will to another year of great music, great artists and return to the Barbican in the company of the great experiences.
    [Show full text]
  • Carnegie Hall Announces 2014–2015 Season Ubuntu
    Date: January 29, 2014 Contact: Synneve Carlino Tel: 212-903-9750 E-mail: [email protected] CARNEGIE HALL ANNOUNCES 2014–2015 SEASON UBUNTU: Music and Arts of South Africa Three-Week Citywide Festival Explores South Africa’s Dynamic and Diverse Culture With Dozens of Concerts and Events Including Music, Film, Visual Art, and More Perspectives: Joyce DiDonato and Anne-Sophie Mutter Renowned Mezzo-Soprano Joyce DiDonato Curates Multi-Event Series with Music Ranging from Baroque to Bel Canto to Premieres of New Works, Plus Participation in a Range of Carnegie Hall Music Education Initiatives Acclaimed Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter Creates Six-Concert Series, Appearing as Orchestra Soloist, Chamber Musician, and Recitalist, Including Collaborations with Young Artists Debs Composer’s Chair: Meredith Monk Works by Visionary Composer Featured in Six-Concert Residency, Including Celebration of Monk’s 50th Anniversary of Creating Work in New York City Before Bach Month-Long Series in April 2015 Features 13 Concerts Showcasing Many of the World’s Most Exciting Early-Music Performers October 2014 Concerts by the Berliner Philharmoniker and Sir Simon Rattle, Including Opening Night Gala Performance with Anne-Sophie Mutter, Herald Start of New Season Featuring World’s Finest Artists and Ensembles Andris Nelsons Leads Inaugural New York City Concerts as Music Director of Boston Symphony Orchestra in April 2015 All-Star Duos Highlight Rich Line-Up of Chamber Music Concerts and Recitals, Including Performances by Leonidas Kavakos & Yuja Wang; Gidon
    [Show full text]
  • Broken-Continuity in Saariaho's Terra Memoria
    Trabzon University State Conservatory © 2017-2020 Volume 4 Issue 2 December 2020 Research Article Musicologist 2020. 4 (2): 227-247 DOI: 10.33906/musicologist.775821 KHENG K. KOAY National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan [email protected] orcid.org/ 0000-0001-7941-6559 Broken-Continuity in Saariaho’s Terra Memoria ABSTRACT Terra Memoria is a musical piece that explores timbre, dynamic and KEYWORDS texture, creating an unconventional formal design. Although discontinuity and interruption are experimented with to create a sense Kaija Saariaho of unexpected development in the music’s progress, there are various Terra Memoria means by which Saariaho unifies the composition. Throughout the piece, she explores different musical styles, new musical expressions, and 21st century music compositional techniques in her own unique way. The music shows threads of stylistic connection to conventional music of the past centuries, minimalist-like repetition, and electronic music. Vocal and operatic writing styles are also experimented with. The composition demonstrates Saariaho’s challenge to traditional notions of form, giving her her own music vocabulary. Received: July 30, 2020; Accepted: December 04, 2020 227 Kaija Saariaho (b. 1952) is a Finnish composer, whose compositions contain a very distinctive musical language and personal voice. Throughout the wide range of her output, she has had ways of organizing, building, and expressing her musical thoughts, carefully designing her music to achieve communication with her listeners. Saariaho’s music is approachable, yet rooted in a modernistic tradition. Her interesting ideas and fundamental desire for musical design and unique voice can be heard in Terra Memoria (2009) for string orchestra.
    [Show full text]
  • PRESSRELEASE the Laureates of the Polar Music Prize 2013 Are
    PRESSRELEASE The Laureates of the Polar Music Prize 2013 are: YOUSSOU N’DOUR & KAIJA SAARIAHO Youssou N’Dour Citation: The Polar Music Prize 2013 is awarded to Youssou N’Dour from Senegal. A West African griot is not just a singer, but a storyteller, poet, singer of praise, entertainer and verbal historian. Youssou N’Dour is maintaining the griot tradition and has shown that it can also be changed into a narrative about the entire world. With his exceptionally exuberant band Super Étoile de Dakar (Dakar star) and his musically ground breaking and political solo albums, Youssou N’Dour has worked to reduce animosities between his own religion, Islam, and other religions. His voice encompasses an entire continent's history and future, blood and love, dreams and power. Kaija Saariaho Citation: The Polar Music Prize 2013 is awarded to Kaija Saariaho from Finland. After studying at IRCAM in Paris, an institution for research and study of electro-acoustic music, Kaija Saariaho has developed into a unique composer, a metal worker's daughter who re- examines what music can be. When she was growing up, the music that inspired her came not from the radio but from the pillow; that was where she found the music she dreamt of. Kaija Saariaho combines acoustic instruments with electronics and computers. She has written chamber music, orchestral works and operas. Kaija Saariaho is a modern maestro who opens up our ears and causes their anvils and stirrups to fall in love. On Tuesday 27th of August the Laureates will receive the prize from His Majesty King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden at a gala ceremony at the Stockholm Concert Hall to be followed by a celebratory banquet at Grand Hôtel.
    [Show full text]
  • Juilliard Orchestra John Adams , Conductor
    Monday Evening, December 10, 2018, at 7:30 The Juilliard School presents Juilliard Orchestra John Adams , Conductor KAIJA SAARIAHO (b. 1952) Ciel d’hiver (2013) JOHN ADAMS (b. 1947) Doctor Atomic Symphony (2007) The Laboratory Panic Trinity Intermission JOHANNES BRAHMS (1833 –97) Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98 (1884–85) Allegro non troppo Andante moderato Allegro giocoso Allegro energico e passionate Performance time: approximately 1 hour and 35 minutes, including an intermission The taking of photographs and the use of recording equipment are not permitted in this auditorium. Information regarding gifts to the school may be obtained from the Juilliard School Development Office, 60 Lincoln Center Plaza, New York, NY 10023-6588; (212) 799-5000, ext. 278 (juilliard.edu/giving). Alice Tully Hall Please make certain that all electronic devices are turned off during the performance. Notes on the Program create timbres that subtly mix with those produced by acoustic instruments. by Thomas May This spectralist background, however, is Ciel d’hiver (2013) only one dimension of the unique aesthetic KAIJA SAARIAHO that Saariaho has developed. “Rich timbral Born October 14, 1952, in Helsinki, Finland nuances, focused musical material evolv - Currently resides in Paris ing into unique musical forms as well as works that call for careful listening remain “There was always one wise old guy with her musical fingerprints,” writes musicolo - a bald head, the male authority whose aes - gist Pirkko Moisala. Saariaho’s meticulous thetics or politics ruled … I felt squeezed attention to textures and resonances, to to be something I’m not,” Kaija Saariaho the weight of sound itself, taps into a rich once remarked, referring to the culture of potential that involves a great deal more her native Finland—with the imposing, than “color,” pushing beyond conventional patriarchal figure of (the very bald) Jean musical parameters .
    [Show full text]
  • Kaija Saariaho Biography
    Kaija Saariaho biography Kaija Saariaho is a prominent member of a group of Finnish composers and performers who are now, in mid-career, making a worldwide impact. She studied composition in Helsinki, Freiburg and Paris, where she has lived since 1982. Her studies and research at IRCAM have had a major influence on her music and her characteristically luxuriant and mysterious textures are often created by combining live music and electronics. Although much of her catalogue comprises chamber works, from the mid-nineties she has turned increasingly to larger forces and broader structures, such as the operas L’Amour de Loin , Adriana Mater and Emilie . Around the operas there have been other vocal works, notably the ravishing Château de l’âme (1996), Oltra mar (1999), Quatre instants (2002), True Fire (2014). The oratorio La Passion de Simone , portraying the life and death of the philosopher Simone Weil, formed part of Sellars’s international festival ‘New Crowned Hope’ in 2006/07. The chamber version of the oratorio was premiered by La Chambre aux echos at the Bratislava Melos Ethos Festival in 2013. Saariaho has claimed the major composing awards in The Grawemeyer Award, The Wihuri Prize, The Nemmers Prize,The Sonning Prize, The Polar Music Prize. In 2018 she was honoured with the BBVA Foundation’s Frontiers of Knowledge Award. In 2015 she was the judge of the Toru Takemitsu Composition Award. Always keen on strong educational programmes, Kaija Saariaho was the music mentor of the 2014-15 Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative and was in residence at U.C.
    [Show full text]