scholarly journals Serge Garant à Paris : parcours d’un crucial apprentissage

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 29-41
Author(s):  
Jean Boivin

D’octobre 1951 à mai 1952, Serge Garant séjourne à Paris en compagnie de ses amis Wilfrid Lemoyne et Suzanne Gagnon. Tout en découvrant les trésors culturels de la capitale française, il assiste aux célèbres cours d’analyse donnés par Olivier Messiaen au Conservatoire national supérieur de musique de Paris. Il prend également des leçons d’écriture auprès d’Andrée Vaurabourg-Honegger, l’une des pédagogues les plus respectées de la capitale française. Cette période d’apprentissage sera marquante dans le développement du compositeur, comme en font foi plusieurs lettres et témoignages de Garant, de même que les oeuvres composées durant cette période. Cet article vise à mettre en lumière les points saillants du séjour de Garant à Paris, par exemple la découverte des oeuvres de Messiaen et de Pierre Boulez, et l’impact de cette expérience sur les activités subséquentes du compositeur québécois.

Author(s):  
Stephen Broad

Olivier Messiaen was one of the foremost composers of the twentieth century, with a distinctive compositional style of great emotional intensity. This style drew on a diverse array of rhythmic, harmonic, timbral, and formal influences that included the songs of birds, and expressed a deeply held Catholic faith. Messiaen was influential as a teacher and foresaw the concept of total serialism taken forward by his pupils Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen. There are major works throughout his sixty-year career, including La Nativité du Seigneur (1935), the Quatuor pour la fin du temps (Quartet for the End of Time, completed 1941), Catalogue d’oiseaux (completed 1958), Couleurs de la Cité Céleste (1963), Des canyons aux étoiles (completed 1974) and St François d’Assise (completed 1983). In his treatises Technique de mon langage musical (1944) and Traité de rythme, de couleur, et d’ornithologie (1994–2002), he set out his musical inspirations and processes in considerable detail.


Tempo ◽  
2000 ◽  
pp. 22-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Rae

Until recently, the music of Henri Dutilleux and Maurice Ohana was largely overlooked in Britain, despite both composers having achieved widespread recognition beyond our shores. In France they have ranked among the leading composers of their generation since at least the 1960s and have received many of the highest official accolades. In Britain, the view of French music since 1945 has often been synonymous with the music of Olivier Messiaen and Pierre Boulez, to the virtual exclusion of others whose work has long been honoured not only in France and elsewhere in Europe but in the wider international arena. These ‘others’ include Dutilleux and Ohana. Developing an innovative and forward-looking approach, independent from the preoccupations of their contemporaries who congregated at Darmstadt, both Dutilleux and Ohana were excluded from representation at the concerts of the Domaine musical. As a result, their music was neglected in Britain throughout the years when the programming policies of Boulez and Sir William Glock were at their most influential. Undoubtedly, Boulez is one of the most phenomenal figures in music of the last 50 or so years and the position of his erstwhile teacher Messiaen is secure as one of the giants of the 20th century. Yet, however significant their respective contribution, Boulez and Messiaen represent only one facet of French music since 1945.


Author(s):  
Marie-Thérèse Lefebvre

Composer and musical pedagogue Gilles Tremblay made significant contributions to the development of musical composition in Quebec in the second half of the twentieth century. After studying at the Montreal Conservatory (Conservatoire de Musique du Québec à Montréal), he attended workshops at the Marlboro School of Music (Vermont) in the summers of 1950, 1951, and 1953. He lived in Paris from 1954 to 1961, where he enrolled in the piano studio of Yvonne Loriod, took analysis courses with Olivier Messiaen, attended workshops on Ondes Martenot, and received counterpoint lessons with Andrée Vaurabourg-Honegger. Tremblay attended the Darmstadt International Summer Courses in 1957 and 1960, and worked at the GRM (Groupe de Recherches Musicales) led by Pierre Schaeffer. Involved at this time with the networks of French new music, he frequently met with Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Iannis Xénakis. In 1961 Tremblay returned to Quebec and was appointed professor of analysis and composition at the Montreal Conservatory, a position he occupied until his retirement in 1997. His courses at the Conservatory were inspired by Messiaen’s famous analysis class in Paris. Tremblay found connections between master works of Western music that linked the past to the present, from Gregorian chants to the polyphony of Guillaume de Machaut, Monteverdi, and Mozart, through to the twentieth century. His courses were extremely influential to two or three generations of composers in Quebec.


2013 ◽  
Vol 32 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 203-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Moore

Following the Second World War Francis Poulenc took a keen interest in the music of the French avant-garde and was compelled to react in both his music and his writings to the aesthetic and technical experiments of the younger generation. Although the music of composers like Olivier Messiaen and Pierre Boulez did not elicit a profound change on the substance of Poulenc’s compositional language, he did grow to the realization that the style he had embraced during the interwar period—one generally described as light-hearted and ironic—had become largely out of sync with new critical trends and concerns. Poulenc’s self-conscious aim to assert a personal form of “seriousness” in his works—one constructed with recourse to religiosity, stylistic homogeneity and the ostensibly concomitant values of sincerity and authenticity—formed the backbone of a new tone and persona that emerged following the war and which inflected his entire body of work up to his death in 1963. Poulenc’s desire to reinvent himself during this period forces us to re-examine his works, writings, and elements of his biography for the way in which they were constructed as a means of facilitating the discursive emergence of this new, more “serious,” persona.


2021 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-59
Author(s):  
Susanne Gärtner

Die Sonatine für Flöte und Klavier (1946) gehört zu den frühesten veröffentlichten Kompositionen von Pierre Boulez. Sie dokumentiert das Bestreben des Zwanzigjährigen, verschiedene Kompositionsverfahren zu einer neuartigen Musiksprache zu verbinden. Beschreibungen des Werks bestaunen den zukunftsweisenden, an Anton Webern orientierten Umgang mit der Zwölftontechnik. Nun sind Dokumente aufgetaucht, die belegen, dass vor der Druckfassung 1949 eine deutliche Überarbeitung stattfand. Wie die Frühfassung zeigt, hielt die Prägung des jungen Boulez durch seinen Lehrer Olivier Messiaen länger an und war stärker wirksam, als man es bisher annahm.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha Berit Belt
Keyword(s):  

2010 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 23-52
Author(s):  
Marc Chenard ◽  
Jean-Jacques Nattiez
Keyword(s):  

Transcription inédite de trois tables rondes ayant eu lieu à Darmstadt en juillet 1963, dont les intervenants étaient Luciano Berio, Pierre Boulez et Henri Pousseur. Chaque compositeur annonce les thèmes qu’il va aborder dans le cadre de ses cours. En débattant entre eux et en répondant aux questions de la salle, ces trois compositeurs abordent des questions fondamentales telles celles du métier, de la technique, du geste, du langage et de la syntaxe, de la forme, et de l’esthétique. Au-delà des réponses provisoires qu’ils avancent, cette transcription offre une vue sur le fonctionnement ordinaire du débat esthétique et technique à Darmstadt vers la fin de la période qu’on pourrait nommer « héroïque » — avec ses enjeux idéologiques, ses rivalités et avec sa façon toute particulière de déterminer les problèmes de la création musicale contemporaine.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Schmidt
Keyword(s):  

<P>Felix Schmidt ist vielen Musikern, Dirigenten und Komponisten so nahe gekommen wie kaum ein anderer Journalist. Er trank Wodka mit Mstislaw Rostropowitsch, fütterte mit Glenn Gould einen verlassenen Hund in Toronto und führte das letzte Interview mit Paul Sacher vor dessen Tod. Schmidts Gespräch mit Pierre Boulez, das 1967 unter dem Titel <EM>Sprengt die Opernhäuser in die Luft</EM> erschien, versetzte die Musikwelt in Aufruhr und wurde 30 Jahre später zum Anlass eines polizeilichen Verhörs.</P> <P>In diesem Buch sind ausgewählte persönliche Interviews und treffende Porträts versammelt, die einmalige Einblicke hinter die Kulissen der Musikwelt geben. Schmidt zeichnet ein Gesamtbild der Neuen Musik in der zweiten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts und macht sichtbar, was dem Konzertbesucher sonst verborgen bleibt. </P>


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