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Boris Blacher

 
Music Encyclopedia: Boris Blacher

(b Niu-chang, 19 Jan 1903; d Berlin, 30 Jan 1975). German composer. He studied in Berlin at the Musikhochschule (1924-6), where he was later (1948-70) professor, and the university (1927-31), working thereafter as a composer and arranger. His works are mostly ironic in style, owing something to Stravinsky, Satie, Milhaud and jazz, the rhythmic life of which was perhaps the source of his ‘variable metres’. Around 1950 he began to use 12-note serialism. His theatre works are particularly important; they include operas (Romeo und Julia, 1943; the wordless Abstrakte Oper no.1, 1953 ; Zweihunderttausend Taler, 1969) and ballets (Hamlet, 1949 ; Tristan, 1965). But his instrumental music is best known, notably the Concertante Musik for orchestra (1937) and the Paganini Variations (1947). In the 1960s he wrote electronic music.



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Columbia Encyclopedia: Boris Blacher
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Blacher, Boris (blä'khər), 1903-75, Estonian-German composer, b. Yingkou, China. Blacher lived for six years in Siberia. He studied in Berlin and in 1953 became the director of the West Berlin Conservatory of Music. Blacher wrote concertos for various instruments, numerous operas, including 200,000 Taler (1969; after Sholem Aleichem), ballets, chamber music, and song cycles. He experimented with variable meters or rhythmic rows, as in Ornaments (1953) for orchestra, sometimes producing a jazzlike effect, and with abstract operas concerned with human situations but without plot.
Artist: Boris Blacher
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  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Country: Germany
  • Born: January 19, 1903 in Niu-chang, China
  • Died: January 30, 1975 in Berlin, Germany

Biography

Boris Blacher was an important twentieth century cosmopolitan composer whose best works linger near the fringes of the standard repertory. The music from the first half of his career was tonal and largely approachable, though in the latter half he adopted serial techniques with less emphasis on atonality. He was quite versatile, composing operas, ballets, symphonies, various instrumental works and choral, chamber, film, and electronic music.

Blacher was born in Niu-chang, China, to parents of German-Baltic descent. His father was a banker who was often transferred to different parts of China and even to Siberia. Blacher, an only child, began taking piano lessons when the family lived in Irkutsk, Siberia, and later (1917) worked as a stagehand for the opera company there. In 1922, he traveled to Berlin and studied mathematics and architecture, but by 1924 decided his musical inclinations must be followed. He enrolled at the Hochschule für Musik there and studied composition with Friedrich E. Koch. In 1925, he began work on his first large composition, the score for Bismarck, a silent film whose music he produced in collaboration with colleague Winfried Wolf. From 1927 to 1931 he took advanced musical studies at Berlin University, supporting himself as an arranger and copyist of commercial music. Meanwhile, he continued to compose, producing such works as his 1929 symphony (which score he later destroyed) and an opera for radio, Habemajaja (1929). In 1935, Blacher's orchestral work Capriccio drew sharp criticism at its public premiere from the Nazis owing to its "un-German" qualities. The following year, he managed to offend them again with another orchestral work, Concertante Musik, which was nevertheless recorded under a pseudonym by conductor Carl Schuricht. Blacher taught composition at the Dresden Conservatory from 1937 until 1939, when he was dismissed because his methods were at odds with Nazi policy. From 1943 until the end of the war, Blacher took refuge in the home of Gottfried von Einem in Ramsau, fearing Nazi reprisal over discovery his grandfather had Jewish ancestry. In 1945, he began teaching composition at the Berlin International Institute of Music. Blacher produced probably his most popular orchestral work in 1947, the Paganini Variations. He left his teaching post in 1948, but took another the following year as professor of composition at the Berlin Hochschule für Musik. It was around this time that he began to use modified serial techniques in his works; later, he also wrote electronic music. In 1953, he became director of the Hochschule and held the post until 1970. He also became a member of the music division of the West Berlin Academy of Arts in 1955. He became its director in 1961 and president in 1968, holding the title for three years until his retirement in 1971. Blacher and his wife Gerty (née Herzog) traveled widely in the decades after the war, including many times to the United States and England, where they acquired a house and spent considerable time in the latter years of Blacher's career. The composer received many commissions in the postwar years, including one from the BBC that accounted for his 1956 Orchester-Fantasie and another from the Cleveland Orchestra, for which he produced Music for Cleveland (1957). Blacher remained busy in his last years, producing several compositions in 1974, including the choral work Vokalisen. ~ Robert Cummings, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Boris Blacher
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Blacher, in a passport photo of 1922

Boris Blacher (19 January [O.S. 6 January] 1903 - 30 January 1975) was a German composer.

Contents

Life

Blacher was born when his parents were living within a Russian-speaking community in the Manchurian town of Niuzhuang (hence the use of the Julian calendar on his birth record). He spent his first years in China and in the Asian parts of Russia, and in 1919, he eventually came to live in Harbin. In 1922, after finishing school, he went to Berlin where he began to study architecture and mathematics. Two years later, he turned to music and studied composition with Friedrich Ernst Toch.

His career was interrupted by National Socialism. He was accused of writing degenerate music and lost his teaching post at the Dresden Conservatory.

His career resumed after 1945, and he later became director of the Music Academy of Berlin, and is today regarded as one of the most influential music figures of his time. His students include Aribert Reimann, Isang Yun, Maki Ishii, Fritz Geißler, Giselher Klebe, Heimo Erbse, Klaus Huber, Francis Burt, Gottfried von Einem, and Richard Wernick.

Blacher was married to the pianist Gerty Blacher-Hertzog. They have four children including the German actress Tatjana Blacher and the international violinist Kolja Blacher.

Works

Works include:

  • Concertante Music for Orchestra (1937)
  • Symphony (1938)
  • String Quartet No. 2 (1940)
  • Orchestral Variations on a Theme by Paganini (1947)
  • Violin Concerto (1948)
  • Hamlet (1949) - Ballet in a Prologue and three scenes after Shakespeare by Tatjana Gsovsky
  • Preußisches Märchen (1949/52) - Ballet-opera in five scenes
  • Lysistrata (1950) - Ballet in three scenes after Aristophanes
  • Piano Concerto No. 2 (in variable metres) (1952)
  • Viola Concerto, Op. 48 (1954)
  • Der Mohr von Venedig (1955) - Ballet in a Prologue, 8 scenes and an Epilogue after Shakespeare by Erika Hanka
  • Cello Concerto (1964), premiered by Siegfried Palm[1]
  • Tristan (1965) - Ballet in seven scenes by Tatjana Gsovsky
  • Anacaona (1969) - Six Poems by Alfred Lord Tennyson about the Indian Queen Anacaona
  • Poem for large orchestra (1974) - dedicated to Tatjana Gsovsky
  • Variationen über ein Thema von Tschaikowsky ("Rokoko-Variationen") (1974), for cello and piano

See also

References

External links


 
 
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