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Claude Vivier
Claude Vivier (b. Montreal, April 14, 1948, d. Paris, March 7, 1983)
was a Canadian composer. Born to unknown parents, Vivier was adopted
at the age of two and a half by a poor French-Canadian family. From
the age of thirteen he attended boarding schools run by the Marist
Brothers, a religious order that prepared young boys for a vocation
in the priesthood. The young Vivier's religious inclinations were
supplanted by a love of modern poetry and music. Upon being asked to
leave the noviciat at the age of eighteen, he enrolled the following
year at the Conservatoire de Musique de Montréal, where his main
teacher was the composer Gilles Tremblay. His earliest works date
from this period. In 1971 he began a period of three years' study in
Europe, first at the Institute for Sonology in Utrecht, and then in
Cologne with Karlheinz Stockhausen. Vivier learned much from
Stockhausen, even though his later works bear little audible
resemblance. In 1974 he returned to Montreal and began to establish
his reputation. Early works like Lettura di Dante were performed
with some success at the concerts of the SMCQ. In autumn 1976 he
undertook a long trip to the east, notably to Japan and Bali; the
music he encountered there made a profound effect on him. Subsequent
compositions like Pulau Dewata show the impact quite audibly; but in
later works the influence has been digested and goes much deeper.
Vivier's opera Kopernikus, to his own libretto, was premièred on May
8 1980, at the Théâtre du Monument National in Montreal. By that
time he had begun to compose in a somewhat different manner,
influenced by the techniques of French spectral music, and was
notably influenced by Gérard Grisey and Tristan Murail. The first of
the works in this new manner, Lonely Child (1980) for soprano and
orchestra, has become his best-known work. This and other late
scores of Vivier, including Prologue pour un Marco Polo and Wo bist
du Licht! were intended for inclusion in an unfinished "opéra fleuve"
entitled Rêves d'un Marco Polo. In June 1982, with the help of a
Canada Council grant, Vivier left Montreal for Paris, where he began
work on an opera based on the death of Tchaikovsky. In March the
following year he was murdered by a young Parisian male prostitute.
His last work was the unfinished Glaubst du an die Unsterblichkeit
der Seele, which contains a disturbing premonition of his untimely
death.
Selected Works
Ojikawa for soprano, clarinet and percussion (1968)
Prolifération for ondes Martenot, piano and percussion (1969)
Musik für das Ende for twenty voices and percussion (1971)
Deva et Asura for chamber orchestra (1972)
Chants for seven female voices (1973)
O! Kosmos for soprano and choir (1973)
Désintégration for two pianos, four violins and two violas (1974)
Lettura di Dante for soprano and mixed septet (1974)
Liebesgedichte for voices and ensemble (1975)
Hymnen an die nacht for soprano and piano (1975)
Siddhartha for orchestra (1976)
Learning for four violins and percussion (1976)
Pulau Dewata for any combination of instruments (1977)
Shiraz for piano (1977)
Journal for voices and percussionist (1977)
Paramirabo for flute, violin, cello and piano (1978)
Greeting Music for flute, oboe, percussion, piano and violin (1978)
Kopernikus: Rituel de la Mort opera in two acts (1979)
Orion for orchestra (1979)
Lonely Child for soprano and orchestra (1980)
Zipangu for string orchestra (1980)
Cinq chansons pour percussion (1980)
Bouchara for soprano and chamber orchestra (1981)
Prologue pour un Marco Polo for thirteen instruments, four voices
and narrator (1981)
Samarkand for wind quintet and piano (1981)
Wo bist du Licht! for mezzo-soprano, orchestra and tape (1981)
Et je reverrai cette ville étrange for ensemble (1981)
Trois Airs pour un opéra imaginaire for soprano and ensemble (1982)
Glaubst du an die Unsterblichkeit der Seele for voices and ensemble
(unfinished) (1983) |
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