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Horacio Vaggione

 
Artist: Horacio Vaggione
Horacio Vaggione

  • Active: 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Electronics
  • Representative Albums: "La Maquina de Cantar

Biography

Of Argentinean origin, Horacio Vaggione made a career in Europe in the musique concrète circuit. His compositions, especially those developing multiple time scales, have won him prestigious prizes from academic circles, but they never reached a wider audience. Select works have been released on labels such as Wergo, Fylkingen, ADDA, Le Chant du Monde, and Ampersand, but few albums are devoted solely to his music. He teaches computer-assisted composition at the University of Paris VIII and runs its Centre de Recherche Informatique et Création Musicale (CICM, the Center for Computer Music Research)

Vaggione was born 1943 in Cordoba, Argentina. He studied instrumental composition at the National University in Cordoba. Thanks to a grant from the Fulbright Fund in 1966, he studied at the University of Illinois where he first came in contact with computers. From this point on he would focus most of his energies on musique concrète and computer music, although he never completely abandoned composition for traditional instrumentations. From 1969 to 1973, he was based in Madrid (Spain) where he took part in the electronic group ALEA and co-founded with Luis de Pablo an electronic studio and the Projects Music and Computer at the Autonomous University in Madrid. The next few years saw him visiting every electronic facility in Europe, from Italy to France, Germany, and the Netherlands. During this time he worked with computers and synthesizers on looped music (Cramps released La Maquina de Cantar in 1978, later reissued on CD by Ampersand).

In 1978, Vaggione settled in France to work in the country's main academic studios (GMEB in Bourges, INA-GRM and IRCAM in Paris). His music went through a phase of formalization as he aligned his work to the Parisian and British schools. He won his first Bourges award in 1982 and a NEWCOMP award (in computer-assisted composition) in 1983. Two years later he was appointed Professor of Music at University of Paris VIII where he organized the CICM. The Bourges Electroacoustic Festival gave him the career-crowning distinction Euphone d'Or in 1992. ~ François Couture, All Music Guide
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Horacio Vaggione (born 1943 in Córdoba, Argentina) is an electro-acoustic and musique concrete composer who specializes in micromontage, granular synthesis, and thus microsound and (Landy 1994, p.148) whose pieces often are for performer and computer-generated tape. He studied composition at the National University in Córdoba and the University of Illinois, where he first gained exposure and access to computers.

Vaggione lives in Europe and visited every electronic studio there during the 1970s. From 1969 to 1973 he lived in Madrid, Spain, and was part of ALEA and co-founded an electronic studio and the Projects Music and Computer at the Autonomous University in Madrid with Luis de Pablo. In 1978 he moved to France, where he still resides, and begin work at GMEB in Bourges, INA-GRM and IRCAM in Paris where his music moved from synthesized and sampled loops (as in La Maquina de Cantar, produced on an IBM computer) towards micromontage. Since 1994 he has been Professor of Music University of Paris VIII and organized the CICM [1].

Compositions

  • La Maquina de Cantar (English: "The Singing Machine". 1978, Cramps and reissued 2002, Ampersand 11)
  • Thema for bass saxophone & computer-generated tape (1985, Wergo WER 2026-2)
  • Tar (1987, Le Chant du Monde, LCD 278046/47)
  • Kitab for bass clarinet, piano, contrabass and computer-processed and controlled sounds (1992, Centaur CRC 2255)
  • Schall (1995)
  • Nodal (1997)
  • Agon (1998)
  • Sçir for contrabass flute in G & prerecorded tape (2001)
  • Atem for horn, bass clarinet, piano, double bass and electroacoustic set-up (2002)
  • Gymel Electroacoustic music (2003)
  • Taléas for recorders and electroacoustics (2002/2004)

Source


 
 

 

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