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Kevin Volans
Kevin Volans is a composer associated with the post-minimalist
movement in contemporary composition. He was born in
Pietermaritzburg, South Africa on July 6, 1949, and even though he
has spent most of his life outside his native country, is the best
known South African composer active today.
In 1972, he graduated from the University of Witwatersrand in
Johannesburg with a Bachelors of Music degree, followed by
post-graduate education at the University of Aberdeen. From 1973 to
1981 he lived in Cologne, where he studied with Karlheinz
Stockhausen at the Musikhochshule. He later became Stockhausen's
teaching assistant.
During this period of time, along with his contemporaries Walter
Zimmermann and Clarence Barlow, he became associated with the
musical movement called the "New Simplicity" that would later
influence post-minimalist composition. This was a reaction against
the complexities and hyperbole of the new music scene in Germany in
the mid-1970s, and it proved to be highly influential.
After conducting several field recording trips in 1979, Volans began
writing pieces based upon African compositional techniques. This
characteristic made him one of the most distinctive composers on the
European new music circuit at the time. Some of his works such as
Matepe and the first version of White Man Sleeps utilize early music
instruments including harpsichord (tuned in African tuning) and
viola da gamba.
The first of his compositions to reach a wide audience was a new
version of White Man Sleeps, made at the suggestion of the Kronos
Quartet in 1985. This version reorders the movements of the original
version, and uses conventional western tuning. The Kronos Quartet's
album of that name (which however features only two of Volans's five
movements) became a best-seller, and White Man Sleeps has been taken
up by many choreographers, notably Siobhan Davies. Volans followed
it up with Hunting: Gathering, his second quartet, written for
Kronos in 1987.
Volans was Composer-in Residence at Queen's University Belfast from
1986-89. Thereafter he has made his home in the Republic of Ireland
and in 1994 became an Irish citizen.
The works of the late 1980s and early 1990s show a move away from
the direct influence of African music towards a highly personal sort
of minimalism. Part of this may have been the influence of the
American composer Morton Feldman, who was a close friend; but the
language of the compositions this era, including the orchestral work
One Hundred Frames (1990), the striking two-piano work Cicada
(1994), or the Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments (1995) are
indentifiably his own. Central among them is an opera, The Man with
Footsoles of Wind, premiered in London in 1993, and based on an idea
by his friend, the English novelist Bruce Chatwin. The work of
visual artists such as Philip Guston, Jasper Johns and James Turrell
figure among Volans's influences in these years.
A close working relationship with the London-based Duke Quartet led
Volans to write more for the string quartet medium, including the
fifth quartet, Dancers on a Plane (1994) and the sixth quartet
(2000). For much of the late 1990s he concentrated on dance
collaborations with such choreographers as Jonathan Burrows and
Siobhan Davies. Since 2000, however, he has devoted most of his
energy to orchestral works; since his fine Cello Concerto of 1997 he
has written a Concerto for Double Orchestra, a Trio Concerto, and a
second Piano Concerto, the latter to be premiered in November 2006.
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