Darius Milhaud

2013 ◽  
pp. 256-261
Keyword(s):  
1931 ◽  
Vol 72 (1055) ◽  
pp. 28
Author(s):  
Paul Landormy ◽  
Fred Rothwell
Keyword(s):  

Notes ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 397
Author(s):  
Barbara L. Kelly ◽  
Deborah Mawer
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 38-47
Author(s):  
Erich Schwandt

Erik Satie worked on his Messe des pauvres from 1893 to 1895 but never completed it. After Satie's death, Darius Milhaud selected movements from the composer's notebooks and published them in 1929 as the Messe des pauvres for organ and voices. The Mass is missing its Gloria; however, the only contemporary account suggests that the Gloria was in existence in 1895. The object of this article is to propose a new Gloria based on one of Satie's contemporaneous piano préludes. As well, to involve the singers more fully, two very short movements are furnished with Latin texts.


1994 ◽  

During the 1930s several of Europe's most distinguished composers received commissions to arrange Hebrew songs collected from early settlers in Israel and circulated on postcards. In this edition, fifteen songs appear in voice and keyboard arrangements by Aaron Copland, Paul Dessau, Arthur Honegger, Darius Milhaud, Ernst Toch, Stefan Wolpe, and Kurt Weill, making the volume a resource for performer and scholar alike. In addition, ten melodies are presented in facsimiles of the original postcards. An afterword is devoted to the significance of folk-song collecting and to the diverse uses of folk music during the period of nascent Israeli national identity.


Artful Noise ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 5-25
Author(s):  
Thomas Siwe

This opening chapter contains a discussion of two early twentieth-century European art and cultural movements, Dadaism and Futurism, whose adherents rejected established modes of artistic expression and often staged provocative events to gain the public’s attention. In addition, there is a detailed look at the seminal works of three major composers, Igor Stravinsky, Darius Milhaud, and Béla Bartók, whose innovative use of percussion in their compositions gave license to those who followed. Each of the three composers exploited percussion in a unique manner, contributing to the standard literature and presaging what was to come.


Tempo ◽  
1951 ◽  
pp. 23-28
Author(s):  
Claude Rostand

The list of Darius Milhaud's operas, leaving aside Les Saintes Maries de la Mer (a six-hundred-page score composed at the age of fifteen and subsequently burnt) consists of sixteen works, ranging from La Brebis Egarée (1910) to Bolivar (1943).It is difficult—and probably useless—to try and make an a priori synthesis of this output, whose essential features stand out naturally from a panoramic glance even as rapid as this one. Indeed, Milhaud has never created in systematic fashion; his researches into the general domain of musical aesthetics and language have in no way been guided by preconceived ideas, and in particular he has never composed music for the stage (which is one of the most important aspects of his work) except as a result of chance meetings, either with poets or dramatists, or with poetical or dramatic themes and texts.


Music ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis K. Epstein

Germaine Tailleferre (b. 1892–d. 1983) was a prolific composer of symphonic, chamber, film, and radio music who participated actively in French and international musical life for more than six decades. Tailleferre is most commonly remembered as the sole female member of Les Six, but her association with that group was relatively brief in the broader context of her career. Displaying early brilliance as a student at the Paris Conservatoire, Tailleferre won all the major prizes in her disciplines—Premier Prix in Harmony, Counterpoint, and Accompaniment—but never had the opportunity to compete for the Premier Prix in composition due to the suspension of the competition during the First World War. After leaving the Conservatoire, she studied with Charles Koechlin and Maurice Ravel. The latter in particular inspired her early efforts to imbue her music with neo-Baroque and neoclassical qualities. Tailleferre’s devotion to Ravel in the early 1920s, and her independence from the more capricious, experimental aesthetics pursued by Darius Milhaud, Francis Poulenc, and Georges Auric, led her away from the sphere of Jean Cocteau and Erik Satie, who had helped usher Les Six into existence. In her first full-length ballet, Le Marchand d’oiseaux, composed for the Ballets Suédois in 1923, and in her Concerto for Piano commissioned by the Princesse de Polignac in 1924, Tailleferre demonstrated a propensity for pastiche and emulation, combining allusions to J. S. Bach, Chopin, Poulenc, and Stravinsky. From the beginning through the end of her career, many works reveal her attachment to perpetuum mobile rhythms and Bachian counterpoint. Although her music was widely performed in the 1920s and 1930s, and although she continued to earn accolades throughout her life, including one of the first state commissions from the French government (1938), the Prix de l’Académie des Beaux Arts (1973), and the Grand Prix Musical de la Ville de Paris (1978), her writings and her friends’ reminiscences reveal Tailleferre to have been extraordinarily modest. Due in part to her modesty, Tailleferre left behind far less music criticism and autobiographical writing than most other members of Les Six. Indeed, after Louis Durey, who left Les Six in 1921, Tailleferre is the next most meagerly documented member of Les Six, as a comparison between this article and those of her peers will attest. (See the separate Oxford Bibliographies articles “Arthur Honegger”, “Francis Poulenc”, and “Darius Milhaud”.) And those sources that do treat her output focus disproportionately on her interwar works to the exclusion of the many works she produced later in life, including Paris-Magie (1948) and Concerto de la fidelité (1981). But numerous sources touch on her contributions to French music and on her relationships with artists, composers, patrons, impresarios, and others.


Author(s):  
Paul Bazin

Bruce Mather is a Canadian composer. He first studied music at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto (1952–57) and at the University of Toronto (1957–59), where he obtained a music degree in 1959, studying piano with Earle Moss, Alexander Uninsky, and Alberto Guerrero, and composition with Godfrey Ridout, Oskar Morawetz, and John Weinzweig. Early in his career, Mather attended the summer festival of the Aspen Music School (1957–58). The festival became the site of a significant encounter for Mather; it was at the festival that he was introduced to Darius Milhaud, whose composition class he later registered in while studying in Paris. In addition to Milhaud’s class, Mather also enrolled in Olivier Messiaen’s class on music analysis. In 1960, Mather attended the Darmstadt summer courses where he met Pierre Boulez, whose orchestra-conducting classes he attended in Bâle (Switzerland) in 1969. Mather continued to alternate his study periods between France and America, until obtaining a masters degree from Stanford, California, in 1962 and a doctorate from the University of Toronto in 1967. In 1974, the composer’s encounter with the franco-Russian composer Ivan Wyschnegradsky (1893–1979) marked a turning point in his career. A prominent pianist, Mather recorded the composer’s piano music with his wife, pianist Pierrette Lepage (b. 1939) and adopted Wyschnegradsky’s microtonal system of composition, which continues to mark his personal style.


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