| Mario Davidovsky |
Article Index for Mario |
Website Links For Mario |
Information AboutMario Davidovsky |
|
BIOGRAPHY Davidovsky was born in Médanos , Buenos Aires Province , Argentina ; a town nearly 600km southwest of the city of Buenos Aires and close to the seaport of Bahía Blanca . He is a first generation Argentinian, his family having emigrated there from where he eventually graduated. In 1958, He studied with Aaron Copland and Milton Babbitt at the Berkshire Music Center (now the Tanglewood Music Center ) in Lenox, Massachusetts . Through Milton Babbitt, who worked at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center , and others, Davidovsky developed an interest in electro-acoustic music. Copland encouraged Davidovsky to emigrate to the United States , and in 1960, Davidovsky settled in New York City where he was appointed associate director of the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. During the early 1960s, he established himself internationally as a pioneer in electro-acoustic music with his three compositions under the name ''Electronic Study'' and the first few of his ten compositions under the name ''Synchronisms'' for which he is best known. His Synchronisms No. 6 would win him the Pulitzer Prize in 1971. While the ''Electronic Study''s were purely electro-acoustic, each of the ''Synchronisms'' is performed by one or more musicians playing traditional instruments while a tape machine plays back recorded electro-acoustic music previously created in the laboratory. The live performer partially serves to warm the audience to the electro-acoustic side of the composition. The performer also adds a certain vitality to the piece since a purely electro-acoustic piece is never truly performed. Many of the people working in electro-acoustic composition survived by the medium's novelty. Davidovsky did not work this way, and an extended quote from George Crumb adds much to the discussion: :"Perhaps we might now review some of the specific technical accoutrements of our present music and speculate on their potential for future development. The advent of electronically synthesized sound after World War II has unquestionably had enormous influence on music in general. Although I have never been directly involved in electronic music, I am keenly aware that our sense for sound characteristics, articulation, texture, and dynamics has been radically revised and very much affects the way in which we write for instruments. And since I have always been interested in the extension of the possibilities of instrumental idiom, I can only regard the influence of electronics as beneficial. I recently participated in a discussion with Mario Davidovsky, who, in my opinion, is the most elegant of all the electronic composers whose music I know. Davidovsky's view is that the early electronic composers had a truly messianic feeling concerning the promise of this new medium. In those euphoric days of intense experimentation, some composers felt that electronic music, because of its seemingly unlimited possibilities, would eventually replace conventional music. Davidovsky now regards the medium simply as a unique and important language at the disposal of any composer who wants to make use of it, and as a valuable teaching tool for the ear. In any case, it is obvious that the electronic medium in itself solves none of the composer's major problems, which have to do with creating a viable style, inventing distinguished thematic material, and articulating form." (see References) Davidovsky worked to solve the "composer's major problems." The electronic medium gave new means to control the primal elements of sound: attack, sustain, and decay—aspects that had not previously played a major role in music. Working in the lab, Davidovsky would literally cut up recordings with razor blades, and piece them back together in various ways with the aim to control these aspects of the sound. He used his ear as a test of the quality of each new creation, and working in this way, he built a vocabulary to be used in composition. In addition to his own work, Davidovsky worked as Edgard Varèse 's technician who also worked at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. Varèse would describe the sounds that he was looking for, and Davidovsky would help him configure the equipment in the lab to produce those sounds. Varèse and Davidovsky became close friends, and when Varèse died in 1965, Davidovsky dedicated his ''Electronic Study No. 3'' to him. Davidovsky continued to compose electro-acoustic music until the mid 1970s when he turned to writing music to be played solely on traditional instruments including voice. As noted by Crumb, electro-acoustic music has had an effect on the greater tradition, and certainly in Davidovsky's non-electronic music the effects are clear: much attention is given to the quality of attack, sustain, and decay of the instruments, requiring a greater skill by the performer. Most of his published compositions have been non-electronic since his switch in the 1970's. His only published electro-acoustic compositions since that time are ''Synchronisms No. 9'' composed in 1988 and ''Synchronisms No. 10'' composed in 1992. However, Davidovsky has received a commission by a group led by SEAMUS to compose two more electro-acoustic works in the ''Synchronisms'' series. Number 11 is scheduled to premiere in 2006 at the 2006 SEAMUS National Conference. Davidovsky's association with the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center continued, and from 1981 to 1993 he was the lab's director as well as professor of music at Columbia. In 1994, he became professor of music at Harvard. During his career, Davidovsky has also taught at many other institutions: University Of Michigan (1964), the Di Tella Institute of Buenos Aires (1965), the Manhattan School Of Music (1968-69), Yale University (1969-70), City College Of New York (1968-80). In 1982 , Davidovsky was elected a member of the American Academy Of Arts And Letters . Davidovsky has received numerous awards, fellowships, and commissions: AWARDS
FELLOWSHIPS
WORKS
DISCOGRAPHY
NOTABLE STUDENTS
EXTERNAL LINKS
REFERENCES
|
|
|