Josef Tal

born on 18/9/1910 in Posen, Poland

died on 25/8/2008 in Jerusalem, Israel

Josef Tal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Josef Tal (Hebrew: ; September 18, 1910  August 25, 2008) was an Israeli composer. He wrote three Hebrew operas; four German operas; dramatic scenes; six symphonies; thirteen concerti; chamber music, including three string quartets; instrumental works; and electronic compositions.[1] He is considered one of the founding fathers of Israeli art music.[2]

Biography

Josef Tal was born Josef Grünthal in the town of Pinne (now Pniewy), near Pozna, German Empire (present-day Poland). Soon after his birth his family (parents Ottilie and Rabbi Julius Grünthal,[3] and his elder sister Grete), moved to Berlin, where the family managed a private orphanage.[4] Rabbi Julius Grünthal was a docent in the Higher Institute for Jewish Studies (Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums), specializing in the philology of ancient languages.[5]

Tal's first encounter with music was at the synagogue, where there was a choir and his grandfather served as a non-professional cantor. After attending his first concert, he began to take piano lessons.[6] Tal was admitted to the Staatliche Akademische Hochschule für Musik[7] in Berlin and studied with Max Trapp (piano and composition), Heinz Tiessen (theory), Max Saal (harp), Curt Sachs (instrumentation), Fritz Flemming (oboe), Georg Schünemann (history of music), Charlotte Pfeffer and Siegfried Borris (ear training), Siegfried Ochs (choir singing), Leonid Kreutzer (piano methodology), and Julius Prüwer (conducting). Paul Hindemith his composition and theory teacher introduced him to Friedrich Trautwein, who directed the electronic music studio in the building cellar.[8] Tal completed his studies in the academy in 1931, and married dancer Rosie Löwenthal one year later. He worked giving piano lessons and accompanying dancers, singers, and silent movies.

Nazi anti-Jewish labour laws rendered Tal jobless and he turned to studying photography with Schule Reimann with the intention of acquiring a profession that would make him eligible for an "immigration certificate" to Palestine.[9]

In 1934, the family immigrated to Palestine with their young son Re'uven.[10] Tal worked as a photographer in Haifa[9] and Hadera for a short time. The family moved then to Kibbutz Beit Alpha and later to Kibbutz Gesher, where Tal intended to dedicate his time to his music. Finding it hard to adjust to the new social reality in the kibbutz, the family settled in Jerusalem where Tal established professional and social connections. He performed as a pianist, gave piano lessons and occasionally played harp with the newly founded Palestine Orchestra. In 1937, the couple divorced.

Tal accepted an invitation from Emil Hauser to teach piano, theory, and composition at the Palestine Conservatory, and in 1948 he was appointed director of the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance in Jerusalem, a post he held until 1952. In 1940 Tal married the sculptress Pola Pfeffer.[11]

In 1951 Tal was appointed lecturer at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem where in 1961 he established the Centre for Electronic Music in Israel.[12] He published academic articles, and wrote many music entries in the Encyclopaedia Hebraica. In 1965 he was appointed senior professor and later chairman of the Musicology Department at the Hebrew University, a post he held until 1971. Among his many pupils are the composers Ben-Zion Orgad, Robert Starer,[13] Naomi Shemer, Jacob Gilboa, and Yehuda Sharett, conductor Eliahu Inbal, musicologist Michal Smoira-Cohn, cellist Uzi Wiesel, pianists Walter Hautzig, Bracha Eden, and Jonathan Zak, and soprano Hilde Zadek.

Tal represented Israel at the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM) conferences and in other musical events and attended many professional conferences around the world. He was a member of the Berlin Academy of the Arts (Akademie der Künste), and a fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin).

Until his sixties Tal appeared as a pianist[14][15] and conductor with various orchestras, but his major contribution to the music world lies in his challenging compositions and his novel use of sonority. In the 1990s Tal conducted, together with Dr Shlomo Markel,[16][17][18] a research project (Talmark) aimed at the development of a novel musical notation system in cooperation with the Technion Israel Institute of Technology, and VolkswagenStiftung. During these years his eyesight deteriorated due to macular degeneration and it became increasingly difficult for him to continue composing. Using a computer screen to enlarge the music score, he managed to compose short musical works for few instruments, write his third autobiography, and complete his visionary analysis of future music.[19] The complete cycle of his symphonies conducted by Israel Yinon was released on the German label CPO.[20]

Josef Tal died in Jerusalem. He is buried in Kibbutz Ma'ale HaHamisha, near Jerusalem. Part of his archival legacy is kept[21] in the National Library of Israel in Jerusalem.[22] Almost all of Tal's works are published by the Israel Music Institute (IMI).[23]

Musical style

The characteristic features of Tal's music are broad dramatic gestures and driving bursts of energy generated, by various types of ostinato or sustained textural accumulations. Complex rhythmic patterning is typical of the widely performed Second Symphony and of a number of notable dance scores. But Tal's marked dramatic and philosophical propensities find total expression only in opera, particularly in the large-scale, 12-note opera Ashmedai...[24]

Tal's early compositional style was a point of some controversy, due to his departure from and criticism of the so-called 'Mediterranean school' favoured by many Israeli composers at the time. This was an approach pioneered by Paul Ben-Haim and other composers, who set traditional Middle Eastern Jewish melodies within a European, often Impressionist, harmonic vocabulary.[8][25] He was the most distinctive among the first generation of composers who principally opposed the use of folklorism and orientalism.[26]

On the one hand, like other members of the pioneer generation of composers who emigrated to Palestine in the 1930s, Tal sought to create a new national style distinct from European (and particularly German) modernism. On the other hand, to distance himself from Ben-Haim's "Mediterranean" school he adopted a distinctly modernist style.[27] Tal's music is not monolithic. Despite its dominant atonality, Tal's music has undergone changes and modifications over the years. These changes reflect what occurred over time in Israeli music. Most of the works which Tal wrote around 1950 are characterized by traditional components and frameworks, written in traditional techniques such as variations, and atonal musical language. In the late 'forties and early 'fifties, when the Mediterranean style was at its peak, Tal was a frequent borrower of Oriental-Jewish source material as the basis for his compositions. If we take Ben-Zion Orgad's definition as the most pertinent it would surely follow that Tal's Piano Sonata,[28] 1st symphony, 2nd Piano Concerto and other works based on Oriental-Jewish melodies are definitely not Mediterranean.[29][30][31][32][33]

Reflections (1950) is neither tonal nor serial, and inhabits a world not unlike Bartok of the third and fourth string quartets, tempered somewhat by a decidedly Stravinskian acidity, along with a Hindemithian contrapuntal propensity. This, however, should not be taken literally. Cast in three movements, and having a performance time of approximately fifteen minutes, its procedures relate it more to the general neo-classic aesthetic of the late 1930s and 1940s. The use of solo strings played off against the ripieni of the string body points to the Baroque concerto grosso. As if to trump its neo-classical models, the final movement is a "fugue" in which Tal obliquely pays his respects to Hindemith without reverting explicitly to Hindemith's vocabulary.[34]

Tal's numerous works for traditional media defy classification as part of any "school". No doubt Schoenberg had an early influence on the Berlin composition student. But neither his widely played First Symphony (1952) nor his exceedingly well-wrought String Quartet in one movement, nor, for that matter, his subsequent Cello Concerto is in any structural sense dodecaphonically conceived. While row materials are freely used, the method of composing with twelve tones is nowhere strictly applied, not even in as recent and completely atonal a piece as the Structure for solo harp. Similarly, oriental materials are employed sparingly and with the greatest caution. Whereas the Symphony is actually based on a Persian-Jewish lament as notated by A. Z. Idelsohn, the Quartet no longer goes beyond the use of a few characteristic motifs. And if the Symphony still features a dance section in accordance with the then prevailing tenets of the Mediterranean School, such sacrifices to popular taste, however subtle, have been conspicuously missing in recent years.[35]

A comprehensive examination of Tal's work suggests the following analysis:[36]

(A) First period (works written up to 1959): These have a three-part structure; the micro-structural idea is based on the relationship between notes; the beat and the melodic line occupy an important place among the musical components.

(B) Second period (1959-1967): Characterized by the use of dodecaphonic technique.

(C) Third period (from 1967 on): Characterized by all (instrumental) works being written in one condensed movement. The single note, with its potential implications, is the micro-structural idea. Time, the sound in its various aspects, the rhythmic figure, the color and the texture are the dominant components... The influence of electronic music is in evidence. Transition from one period to the next is gradual, the language in all of them being atonal and the compositions developing from one basic idea.

(D) All Tal's works contain a recapitulation, which he terms "closing the cycle"... Tal sees his compositions as a metaphor for geometric circle, a perfect form, the life cycle. Life begins with the note C (doh) a "center of gravity"... Tal employs innovative instrumental and orchestral techniques while retaining a predisposition for tradition, especially the Baroque... He divides the orchestra into sound and color group, sometimes also attaching a special texture to each group. This technique is personal and could be called "a special language". The whole orchestra is used sparingly, only at strategic points...

Composerlistener relationship

Tal did not underestimate the importance of relationship between composer and listener, and was aware of the difficulties posed by "modern music":

Electronic music

The founding figure of the field in Israel, Josef Tal, was first exposed to electronic music in the late 1920s in Germany. The founding of the Israel Center for Electronic Music was the result of a six-month UNESCO research fellowship on which Tal toured major international electronic music studios, in 1958. It was a meeting with Milton Babbitt at The Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center that pointed Josef Tal to the technology he needed to found the first electronic music studio in Israel.[38] He learned from Vladimir Ussachevsky, about a new invention by Canadian inventor Hugh Le Caine, called the Multi-track. First built in 1955, this device could replay six independent magnetic tapes, with the speed and direction of each tape separately controllable. Le Caine's idea was to design an instrument to facilitate composition in the Parisian musique concrète tradition of Pierre Schaeffer. Following a successful fund-raising by Shalheveth Freier the Multi-track which was built for Tal's studio was completed and delivered to Jerusalem in 1961. It required a trip by Le Caine to set it up correctly.[8][39]

Tal produced some of the earlier examples of electrico-acoustical music, and in this is joined by such as Edgard Varèse, Mario Davidovsky, and Luciano Berio.[34]

As might be expected from a man of his candor, Tal is completely undoctrinaire about electronic music and broaches its problems with the same healthy skepticism that has marked his approach to the twelve-tone method or the issue of a "national" Israeli style. Thus, he declared:

Imbued with the kind of realism found only in the true idealist, Tal is indeed a liberal in a realm of artistic endeavor where extremism often goes on a rampage. Combining a good deal of modesty with a strong sense of personal value, he impresses even those who find his music rather forbidding and exerts a far more powerful influence on the younger generation than some of his more "successful" colleagues who intoxicate a gullible public with their facile "Mediterranean" orientalism.[35]

Tal was a strong believer in the value of electronic instruments and their potential to transcend the limitations of acoustical means of sound production.[40] Tal regarded electronic music as a new music language, which he describes as unstable and lacking a crystallized definition. He viewed the computer as an instrument which compels the composer to disciplined thinking. In return, it stores the data it was fed with absolute faithfulness. Nevertheless, when the computer is ill-used, the composer's incompetence will be revealed, as he is unable to unite computer with the realm of music. But according to Tal, composing electronic music has another aspect too: when the composer chooses the computer's music-notation as his tool for creating, he concomitantly annuls the performer's role as an interpreter. From that point on, it is only the composer's mental capacity that counts, and the performance is independent of the interpreter's virtuosity.

Tal integrated electronic music in many of his works for "conventional" instruments, and was actually one of the world's pioneers in doing so. His pieces for electronic music and harp, piano or harpsichord, and operas like Massada or Ashmedai are typical examples. Following Concerto No.4 for Piano & Electronics premiere (27/8/1962), Herzl Rosenblum the daily Yediot Ahronot's editor and critic, used the terms "Terror!", "Cacophony" and "Minority dictatorship"...

Tal taught electronic music and composed, for nearly two decades. Upon his retirement in 1980, Menachem Zur became director and remained in this role until the University closed the studio, for a variety of reasons, in the 1990s.[8]

Published works

Music

Autobiographies

  • Der Sohn des Rabbiners. Ein Weg von Berlin nach Jerusalem (The Son of the Rabbis: A Way from Berlin to Jerusalem). An autobiography, 1985, ISBN 3-88679-123-8.
  • Reminiscences, Reflections, Summaries Retold in Hebrew by Ada Brodsky, Published by Carmel (1997), ISBN 965-407-162-2.
  • Tonspur Auf der Suche nach dem Klang des Lebens (On Search for the Sound of Life), an autobiography, Henschel publishing house Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-89487-503-8.

Essays

  • article in The Modern Composer and His World, A report from the International Conference of Composers, held at the Stratford Festival (1960), Eds. Beckwith & Kasemets, University of Toronto Press, 1961, pp. 116121
  • National and Contemporary Trends in Israeli Music. Bat Kol, Israel Music 1, pp 6-7 (1961)
  • Rationale und Sensitive Komponenten des "Verstehens", in Musik und Verstehen Aufsätze zur semiotischen Theorie, Ästhetik und Soziologie der musikalischen Rezeption, Arno Volk Verlag (1973), 306313.
  • Music, Hieroglyphics and Technical Lingo in The World of Music, Vol. XIII, No.1/1971 B. Schott's Söhne, Mainz, 1828.
  • Gedanken zur Oper Ashmedai, in Ariel Berichte zur Kunst und Bildung in Israel, No. 15 (1972), 8991.
  • The Contemporary Opera, in Ariel (30), spring 1972, pp 9395
  • Historical Text and Pretext in the Works of an Israeli Composer, in Fontes Artis Musicae, Vol XXII, 1975/1-2 pp 4347 (with Israel Eliraz)
  • Der Weg einer Oper, Wissenschftskolleg Jahrbuch 1982/83, Siedler Verlag, 355356.
  • Wagner und die Folgen in der Musik des 20. Jahrhunderts, in: Wort und Musik (3) pp. 26-43, Verlag Ursula Müller-Speiser, (1990)
  • The Impact of the Era on the Interrelation Between Composer, Performer and Listener. Music in Time A Publication of the Jerusalem Rubin Academy of Music and Dance (1983-1984), pp. 2327.
  • Musik auf Wanderung Querschnitte zwischen Gestern und Morgen in Berliner Lektionen, (1992) Bertelsmann, 7990.
  • Ein Mensch-zu-Mensch-Erlebnis im Wissenschaftskolleg Berlin (1994) in Axel von dem Bussche, Hase&Koehler Verlag, 125131. ISBN 3-7758-1311-X.
  • Musica Nova in the Third Millennium, Israel Music Institute, 2002, ISBN 965-90565-0-8

Photography

Tal made a living as a professional photographer for a short period after immigrating to Palestine (1934-1935). He continued to develop films and enlargements as a hobby in makeshift home darkroom for many years afterwards.

Awards and prizes

  • 1949, 1958, 1977 The City of Tel Aviv Engel Prize
  • 1957/1958 UNESCO grant for the study of electronic music
  • 1969 Member of the (German) Akademie der Künste (Academy of the Arts, Berlin)[41]
  • 1970 The Israel Prize, for music[42]
  • 1975 Berliner Kunstpreis (Art Prize of the City of Berlin) [43]
  • 1981 Foreign Honorary Membership of the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters "in recognition of creative achievement in the arts"
  • 1982/1983 Fellow, Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin)[44]
  • 1982 Wolf Prize in Arts (Israel), "for his novel approach to musical structure and texture and the unfailing dramatic tension of his creations"[45]
  • 1985 (German) Bundesverdienstkreuz I Klasse de:Verdienstorden der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
  • 1985 (French) Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres[46]
  • 1993 Doctor Philosophiae Honoris Causa of Tel Aviv University "In special recognition of his unique operatic works which are evidence of his deep connection with the spirit of Judaism during various periods of history, and his achieving a synthesis between ancient Jewish tradition, and modern-day music"
  • 1995 Johann-Wenzel-Stamitz-Förderungspreis der Künstlergilde (Germany)[47][48]
  • 1995 ACUM prize (Societe D'auteurs, Compositeurs et Editeurs de Musique en Israel)
  • 1995 Yakir Yerushalayim award (given by the City of Jerusalem)[49]
  • 1996 Doctor Philosophiae Honoris Causa of Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg[50]
  • 1998 Doctor Philosophiae Honoris Causa of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem "In tribute to his rich musical legacy and in recognition of his contribution to the development of music education in Israel"

See also

  • List of Israel Prize recipients
  • List of compositions by Josef Tal

References

  1. Hirshberg, Jehoash; Josef Tal: Past, Present and Future, in IMI news 2008/1-2, pp. 1516 ISSN 0792-6413 http://www.imi.org.il/UploadedFiles/06990f45-2eb8-49d7-a881-d78696f689f6.pdf
  2. Seter, Ronit: Jerusalem and Tel-Aviv: Different News from Israel. In Tempo 59 (233) 4661 Cambridge University Press (2005) doi:10.1017/S0040298205000239
  3. Fled to the Netherlands, arrested in Eindhoven and deported to Sobibor extermination camp, where he was murdered on April 16, 1943.
  4. Eckhardt, Ulrich & Nachama, Andreas: Jüdische Orte in Berlin, 2005, Berlin: Nicolai, p153 ISBN 3-89479-165-9.
  5. http://www.dbc.wroc.pl/dlibra/docmetadata?id=2495&from=&dirids=1&ver_id=80498&lp=1&QI=1C6AF43498B39BF1FF528F80B48E1527-1
  6. Der Sohn des Rabbiners
  7. Today Berlin University of the Arts.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Gluck, Robert J.: Fifty years of electronic music in Israel, Organised Sound 10(2): 163180 Cambridge University Press (2005) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=1&pdftype=1&fid=335698&jid=OSO&volumeId=10&issueId=02&aid=335697
  9. 9.0 9.1 Fleisher, Robert: Twenty Israeli composers: voices of culture. Wayne State University Press (1997) [ISBN 0-8143-2648-X], pp.67-78
  10. Later a member of kibbutz Megiddo, killed in action in the Six-Day War.
  11. Their son Etan Tal was born in 1948.
  12. Shiloah, Amnon and Gerson-Kiwi, Edith: Musicology in Israel, 1960-1980 in Acta Musicologica, Vol. 53, Fasc. 2 (Jul. - Dec., 1981), p. 203
  13. Starer, Robert. (1987) Continuo A Life in Music. Random House, New York. pp. 26-44 ISBN 0-394-55515-5.
  14. Musical Notes from Abroad, The Musical Times, Vol. 79, No. 1144 (Jun., 1938), pp. 466-467
  15. Music in Palestine, The Musical Times, Vol. 80, No. 1153 (Mar., 1939), p. 225
  16. Markel, Shlomo,: On Notation for Electro Acoustic Music and Interactive Environment for Composition, PhD. Thesis submitted to the "Technion", Haifa, January 1993
  17. Shimoni, Uri; Markel, Shlomo; Tal, Josef: Icon Notation for Electroacoustic and Computer Music, in: Proceedings of the 14th International Computer Music Conference, Cologne, Sept 20-25, 1988 pp 430-436
  18. Tal, Josef; Markel, Shlomo; Shimoni, Uri: Talmark notation for electroacoustic and computer music, in: M.I.M Colloque International "Musique et Assistance Informatique", Marseiile, 3-6 Oct 1990, pp169-172
  19. Tal, Josef: Musica Nova in the Third Millennium, Israel Music Institute, 2002, ISBN 965-90565-0-8
  20. http://www.jpc.de/jpcng/cpo/detail/-/lang/en/currency/EUR/hnum/6305013/art_hex/4a6f7365662d54616c2d53796d70686f6e69656e2d4e722d312d33
  21. Hasson, Nir: Saving the Holy of Holies of Jewish texts [1] in Haaretz site
  22. http://web.nli.org.il/sites/NLI/English/music/archives/detailed_archives/Pages/Josef_Tal.aspx
  23. http://www.imi.org.il/site/
  24. Ringer, Alexander L.: Tal, Josef. in: The New Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, (1980) p. 537
  25. Between Two Cultures: A Conversation with Shulamit Ran Author(s): Malcolm Miller and Shulamit Ran, Tempo, Vol. 58, No. 227 (Jan., 2004), pp. 15-32
  26. Seter, Ronit in http://www.jewish-music.huji.ac.il/thesaurus761f.html?cat=9&in=9&id=687&act=view
  27. Malcolm Miller, "Between Two Cultures: A Conversation with Shulamit Ran", Tempo 58, no. 227 (January 2004): 1532; here 15 and 29.
  28. The Sonata for Piano is included in the repertoire of The 13th Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition (2011) [2]
  29. Ron, Yohanan, Expressions of the Twelve-tone Row in the Works of Oedeon Partos and Josef Tal (Orbis Musicae Vol. XI, 1993/4, pp. 81-91)
  30. Ron, Yohanan, Josef Tal: "The Death of Moses" Requiem for Solo, Choir, Orchestra and Magnetic Tape the text and the music (HaArchion le-musica Israelit no. 7, 1995, pp. 14-21)
  31. Ron, Yohanan, The Tone as an Idea and a Subject in the Later Works of Josef Tal (Israel Studies in musicology, Vol. VI, 1996, pp. 71-80)
  32. Ron, Yohanan, The "Where and When" in the Compositions of Josef Tal (HaArchion le-musica Israelit No. 9, 1997, pp. 7-16)
  33. The Cyclic Concept and the Place of the Tone C in the Works of Josef Tal In: Ron, Yohanan, The Music of Josef Tal Selected Writings, The Israeli Music Archive, Tel-Aviv University, 2000
  34. 34.0 34.1 Leichtling, Avrohom: Josef Tal, Reflections. in: Musikproduktion Höflich Repertuar and Opera Explorer (2005)http://www.musikmph.de/musical_scores/vorworte/413.html
  35. 35.0 35.1 Ringer, Alexander L.: Musical Composition in Modern Israel. The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 51, No. 1, Oxford University Press (Jan., 1965), pp. 282-297
  36. Ron, Yohanan: The Instrumental Music of Josef Tal: Style and Artistic Concepts Ph.D. Thesis, Bar-Ilan University (1990)
  37. Bar-Am, Benjamin: Unconventional Music, Jerusalem Post Musical Diary, 29 Aug, 1962.
  38. Gluck, Robert J.: Educating International Composers: The Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, in EMS Proceedings and Other Publications, http://www.ems-network.org/spip.php?article267
  39. Tal, Josef,: An Encounter with Hugh Le caine, Musicworks (83) 2002, pp 50-51
  40. Gluck, Bob: Electronic Music in Israel, http://cec.concordia.ca/econtact/11_4/israel_gluck.html (The original version of this article was published by The EMF Institute, Electronic Music Foundation, Ltd., in 2006)
  41. http://www.adk.de/de/akademie/mitglieder/index.htm?we_objectID=21870]
  42. Israel Prize Official Site Recipients in 1970 (in Hebrew).
  43. http://www.adk.de/de/akademie/preise-stiftungen/Kunstpreis.htm
  44. http://www.wiko-berlin.de/index.php?id=155&L=1#T
  45. http://www.wolffund.org.il/index.php?dir=site&page=winners&cs=471&language=eng
  46. The Jerusalem Post, December 13, 1985
  47. Deutscher Bundestag: Drucksache 13/8096 vom 23. Juni 1997
  48. Siebenbürgische Zeitung vom 30. April 1995
  49. Recipients of Yakir Yerushalayim award (in Hebrew). City of Jerusalem official website
  50. http://www.hfmt-hamburg.de/hochschule/ehrungen/

Bibliography

  • Brod, Max: Die Musik Israels. Bärenreiter (1976) ISBN 3-7618-0513-6, pp 129132
  • Burns, Jeffrey: Aus einem Gespräch mit Josef Tal. Zeitschrift für Musikpädagogik, Heft 41, September 1987 pp 39
  • Burns, Jeffrey: "With Josef Tal on Kurfürsterdamm", in IMI news 2001/1, pp. 1720 ISSN 0792-6413
  • Espiedra, aviva: Josef Tal, Sonata for Piano, in: A critical study of four piano sonatas by Israeli composers, 1950-1979, Doctor of Musical Arts dissertation in Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University, 1992 pp 1578
  • Flender, Reinhard D.: Auf der Suche nach einer kulturellen Heimat. Stefan Wolpe und Josef Tal Zwei Deutsch-Jüdische Komponisten aus Berlin. Neue Zeitschrift für Musik 1998, nr. 3
  • Hirshberg, Jehoash: Joseph Tal's Homage to Else, in Ariel A Quarterly Review of Arts and Letters in Israel, No. 41 (1976), pp. 8393
  • Hirshberg, Jehoash: (1992) The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, edited by Stanley Sadie. ISBN 0-333-73432-7 and ISBN 1-56159-228-5
  • Keller, Hans: The Jerusalem Diary. Music, Society and Politics, 1977 and 1979. Plumbago Books [ISBN 0-9540123-0-5]
  • Keller, Hans: The Musician as Librettist, Opera XXXV (1984) pp. 1095-1099
  • Markel, Shlomo: On Notation for Electro Acoustic Music and Interactive Environment for Composition, Research Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Science, Technion, Haifa (1993)
  • Seter, Ronit: Yuvalim be-Israel: Nationalism in Jewish-Israeli Art Music, 1940-2000, Ph.D. dissertation, Cornell University, 2004, 553 pp. (on Tal, pp. 145152).
  • Tischler, Alice: A Descriptive Bibliography of Art Music by Israeli Composers. Warren, MI: Harmonie Park Press (1988)

External links

Performances

  • Lamentation, Hora and By the Rivers of Babylon performed by Klara Szarvas (harp) and Joseph Weissgerber (cello). On archive.org.
  • Sonata for Piano performed by Kotaro Fukuma at the Arthur Rubinstein Piano Master Competition, May 2011 in Tel Aviv. On YouTube.
  • Sonata for Piano (partial) performed by Dmitri Levkovich at the Arthur Rubinstein Piano Master Competition, May 2011 in Tel Aviv. On YouTube.

Further reading

This page was last modified 02.04.2014 22:25:55

This article uses material from the article Josef Tal from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.