Philippe Boesmans

born on 17/5/1936 in Tongeren, Flandern, Belgium

Philippe Boesmans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Philippe Boesmans (born 17 May 1936) is a Belgian composer.

Life

Boesmans was born in Tongeren and studied piano at the Conservatory in Liège, where he was also introduced to serial composing techniques by Pierre Froidebise. However, it was only after coming into contact with the "Liège Group" (Henri Pousseur, André Souris, and Célestin Deliège) in 1957 that he began to write music, as a self-taught composer. Starting in 1962 he participated in productions of the Centre de Recherches Musicales de Wallonie, collaborating with Pousseur. He was also active as a pianist with the Ensemble Musique Nouvelle. Also in 1962 he became a producer at the Radio Télévision Belge de la Communauté Française (RTBF), working with the radio orchestra there. From this experience he learned much about composing and orchestrating music. Recognition quickly followed, and in 1971 he won the Prix Italia for his composition Upon La-Mi (Visscher 2001).

He still works as a producer for the RTBF and is composer in residence at the La Monnaie opera house in Brussels.

Selected works

Opera
  • La Passion de Gilles (1983) Libretto by Pierre Mertens.[1]
  • Reigen (1993); based on La Ronde by Arthur Schnitzler[2]
  • Wintermärchen (1999); based on The Winter's Tale by William Shakespeare.[3]
  • Julie (2005); based on Miss Julie by August Strindberg[4][5]
  • Yvonne, princesse de Bourgogne (2009); based on Iwona, ksiniczka Burgunda by Witold Gombrowicz[6]
  • Poppea e Nerone (2012); New orchestration, for a modern chamber orchestra, of Monteverdi's L'Incoronazione di Poppea'.[7]
Other
  • Violin Concerto (1980)
  • String Quartet No.1 (1988)
  • Surfing for viola and orchestra (1990)
  • Love and Dance Tunes for baritone and piano (1993); settings from Shakespeare's sonnets
  • Summer Dreams, String Quartet No.2 (1994)

Sources

  1. A guide to 20th-century composers Mark Morris - 1996 The opera La passion de Gilles (1983) is a dark story of perversion, malice, and child abuse, set in the 15th century and providing a commentary on the present day. Its colours are dark, intense, and sparse, in keeping with the subject,
  2. Recording Cypres Review Le Monde "the greatest opera of the last 75 years."
  3. Recording DG . Sung in German, in scene four the language changes from German to English and Boesmans introduces AKA Moon, a jazz/funk group.
  4. Recording Julie Garry Magee, Malena Ernman, Monnaie Chamber Orchestra, Ono. Label: Cypres , DDD, 2005 (CYP4626)
  5. DVD Garry Magee, Malena Ernman, Kerstin Avemo, Monnaie Chamber Orchestra, Kazushi Ono Label: BelAir , 2005
  6. Recording Opéra National de Paris Mireille Delunsch and Yann Beuron. Cypres 2011 Klangforum Wien, Sylvain Cambreling
  7. First performed at Teatro Real in Madrid, conducted by Sylvain Cambreling and directed by Krzysztof Warlikowski.
  • (French) A biography of Philippe Boesmans, from IRCAM's website.
  • Deliège, Célestin, Bernard Foccroule, and Claude Ledoux. 1983. Philippe Boesmans. Paris and Brussels: Opéra national de Belgique & Éditions BEBA.
  • Visscher, Eric de. 2001. "Boesmans, Philippe". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.
This page was last modified 14.01.2014 08:02:18

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