An Interview with Elliott Carter

1990 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan W. Bernard ◽  
Elliott Carter
Keyword(s):  
Tempo ◽  
1988 ◽  
pp. 2-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Schiff

ApproachingHisEightiethBirthday, Elliott Carter has acquired a new fluency, as if composing had suddenly—finally—become easy. In his middle years Carter felt compelled to exhaust a musical vocabulary with each composition. Since the solo piano Night Fantasies of 1980, however, he has based a series of widely different works on similar premises: after years of ploughing through rocky soil it was now time for the harvest. As an overflow of this bounty Carter has produced a new (for him) genre: short occasional pieces of three to six minutes in duration. Along with the five major works composed since Night Fantasies, there are seven new short works for media ranging from solo violin to large orchestra. The inventiveness and high spirits of his recent music may call to mind those other wonders of a secondyouth, Falstaff and Agon.


Author(s):  
Brenda Ravenscroft

Born in 1908 into a wealthy New York City family, Elliott Carter enjoyed a cosmopolitan childhood, spending time in Europe and learning French at an early age. The composer Charles Ives mentored the young Carter, taking him to concerts in New York and encouraging his developing interest in music. Carter’s childhood, characterized by immersion in a culturally enriched environment and exposure to the modern world, provided the elements from which his artistic aesthetic and musical language would later be forged. When Carter entered Harvard College, he focused his studies on English literature, Greek, and philosophy, although musical activities continued in the form of lessons with Walter Piston and Gustav Holst, as well as singing with the Harvard Glee Club. Carter completed a master’s degree in music at Harvard in 1932, after which he moved to Paris to study composition with Nadia Boulanger for three years. He received a doctorate in music from the École Normale de Musique in Paris in 1935.


Tempo ◽  
2001 ◽  
pp. 2-6
Author(s):  
Philippe Albéra

(In Tempo 216 Pierre Boulez, interviewed by Simon Mawhinney, talked about his own recent music. The present interview, conducted in French, in Paris in June 2000 was published under the title ‘…un Compositeur qui m'oblige a avancer…’; it appears here in English for the first time, translated by Sue Rose.)


Tempo ◽  
1979 ◽  
pp. 2-10
Author(s):  
David Schiff

In the last ten years Elliott Carter has completed as many works as he had in the previous two decades combined. The increased rate of composition—A Symphony of Three Orchestras was written in six months—has been matched by even greater formal and poetic daring. Indeed the works from the Third Quartet onward are so adventurous in conception that there is little in the way of traditional musical terminology that can be used to describe their forms, harmonies, or even, as in the case of the most recent work, Syringa, their genre. And while Carter's continued exploration of abstract discourse in the Third Quartet, Duo and Brass Quintet was to be expected, the preoccupation with the voice and poetic subjects in the next three works seemed, at first, a surprising development. Carter turned to song composition in 1975 with A Mirror on Which to Dwell, a cycle of six poems by Elizabeth Bishop dedicated to the artists who gave its first performance 24 February, 1976: Susan Davenny Wyner, soprano, and Speculum Musicae. By the end of 1976 he completed A Symphony of Three Orchestras, a purely instrumental work stemming from the various projects for a choral setting of Hart Crane's ‘The Bridge’ that Carter had planned since the 1930's. A Symphony was premièred by Pierre Boulez and the New York Philharmonic, to whom it is dedicated, on 17 February 1977. On 10 December last, the eve of Carter's 70th birthday, Syringa was given its première by Jan de Gaetani (mezzo-soprano), Thomas Paul (bass) and Speculum Musicae, conducted by Harvey Sollberger. Dedicated to Sir William and Lady Glock, this work superimposes John Ashbery's retelling of the Orpheus legend, ‘Syringa’, sung by the mezzo, upon fragments of classical Greek texts sung by the bass. It might be termed a polytextual motet, a cantata, a chamber opera, or a vocal double concerto.


Tempo ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 57 (226) ◽  
pp. 47-48
Author(s):  
Paul Griffiths
Keyword(s):  

ELLIOTT CARTER: Steep Steps1; Two Diversions2; Oboe Quartet3; Figment No.24; Au Quai5; Of Challenge and of Love6; Figment No.17; Retrouvailles8; Hiyoku9. 1Virgil Blackwell, 2,8Charles Rosen, 3Stephen Taylor, 3Curtis Macomber, 3,5Maureen Gallagher, 3Eric Bartlett, 4,7Fred Sherry, 5Peter Kolkay 6Tony Arnold, 6Jacob Greenberg, 9Charles Neidich, 9Ayako Oshima. Bridge 9128CARTER: Oboe Quartet1; Four Lauds2; A 6 Letter Letter3; Figments Nos.1–24. ISANG YUN: Piri5; Oboe Quartet6. 1,3,5,6Heinz Holliger, 1,2,6Thomas Zehetmair, 1,6Ruth Killius, 1,4,6Thomas Demenga. ECM New Series 1848/49


Author(s):  
David Schiff

Anyone writing about Elliott Carter today must deal with the lack of a critical biography and the reticence and occasional inaccuracies of his own biographical statements, and the lack of a consensus about his music as evidenced in particular by the respect his work finds in Europe as opposed to a decline in critical reputation and performances in the USA. Unique qualities in the music become clearer if attention is paid to its opposition of dark and light themes, and to the role played by quasi-mathematical calculations in Carter’s compositional process. A better understanding of his entire career will arise only as the extraordinary output of his last decades becomes more familiar.


Tempo ◽  
2002 ◽  
pp. 54-70

Recent Birtwistle releases Jonathan CrossElliott Carter on Bridge Records John KerseyAdams's El Nio on CD and DVD Julian HaylockSteve Reich's Triple Quartet Malcolm GallowaySteve Mackey, Christopher Rouse, Tan Dun John KerseyTurnage and Martland Peter ChiinnLouis Gruenberg Bret JohnsonGeorge Rochberg and Hugh Wood Calum MacDonaldPiano Music by Konrad Boehmer Mark R. TaylorGeirr Tveitt Bret JohnsonContemporary British Releases Guy RickardsDruckman and Bassett Calum MacDonald


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