Today's Composer of the Day! is the enigmatic Giacinto Scelsi! (1905-1988)
Scelsi (pronounced SHELLsi) is a self-taught composer and significant figure in Italian music of the 20th century.
His music is sadly almost never programmed in the United States, apart from Michael Tilson Thomas who has performed many of his orchestral works with San Francisco Symphony.
Once a disciple of Schoenberg (being one of the first Italian dodecaphonists) he is probably most famous for his slow-moving soundscapes and music based around a single pitch, such as his work Quattro Pezzi su una nota sola (Four Pieces on a single note). [Listen to this work here.]
The details of Scelsi's life are not fully known, although in recent years many of the gaps have begun to be filled in (see a photo of a young Scelsi here). He was forced out of Italy in the late 1930s by Mussolini for his performances of Jewish music, from which he would not be able to return until sometime after World War II. It is also around this time that it is thought that Scelsi suffered an extended nervous breakdown, of which he said, "I forgot everything I ever knew about music."
Scelsi has always been a bit of a mystery because of the unique sound worlds his music evokes. I think one can hear the influence of the early orchestral pieces of Ligeti and the work of Parisian composers like Tristan Murail and Claude Vivier whose music seem to occupy similar spaces. However, Scelsi's music still sounds quite original, and he composed many wonderful and beautiful works which are more than worth your time.
Read a few interesting anecdotes about Scelsi in an interview with Alvin Curran. Also read this thoughtful article by Alex Ross, originally printed in The New Yorker.
10/8/09
Composer of the Day!
Posted by Gustav at 10:26 AM
Labels: Alex Ross, Alvin Curran, Composer of the Day, Giacinto Scelsi, Italians
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7 comments:
What is your source for the following?
"He was forced out of Italy in the late 1930s by Mussolini for his performances of Jewish music, from which he would not be able to return until sometime after World War II."
This story was echoed in many of the biographies that I read. From the wikipedia article:
"Due to the enforcement of racial laws under the fascist regime of Benito Mussolini, these concerts were not able to continue for long, preventing the performance of works by Jewish composers. Scelsi refused to comply, causing the composer's gradual removal from Italy."
This information can also be found on the Isabella Scelsi Foundation webpage.
My quick summary may have been a bit inelegant and perhaps not sensitive enough to the political nuance of the situation, but I believe that facts are accurate. If you have information to contrary, I would be fascinating to know them.
For some reason I seemed to have screwed up that link. The Foundation Isabella Scelsi is found at this web address: http://www.scelsi.it/benvenuto/benvenuto.html
Linked here.
I must be really drunk here. I linked the welcome page. The main website is just: http://www.scelsi.it/
Sorry for the endless posts.
Is that a self-portrait?
It is. At least as far I understand the origin of the image.
Cool. I initially thought that the Big-O finally found its nithing peeth.
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