Description
(Text)
Born in Berlin in 1932, Alexander Goehr grew up in England where his father Walter Goehr, a former student in Arnold Schoenbergs master class, conducted a broad repertoire ranging from the Monteverdi Vespers to Messiaens Turangalîla Symphony. Monteverdi and Schoenberg, the old music and the new, were the musical household gods that would guide Alexander Goehr throughout his compositional career.
In 1955, after his studies in Manchester where he formed the New Music Manchester Group with Peter Maxwell Davies and Harrison Birtwistle, Goehr went to study with Olivier Messiaen in Paris becoming good friends with Pierre Boulez and experimenting with the latters bloc sonore technique. But he soon parted from the strict serialism he thought had become a cult of stylistic purity in which reference to any other music was taboo. In Goehrs eyes, a musical avant-garde that was not deeply rooted in tradition seemed not to be worthwhile.
In 1956 Goehrs Fantasia was premiered at the DarmstädterFerienkurse, a year later he had his first big success in England with the cantata The Deluge. Goehrs first opera, Arden Must Die, was premiered at the Hamburg Staatsoper in 1967. A year later he founded the Music Theatre Ensemble for which he wrote the Tryptich that represented a synthesis of European and Japanese musical and theatrical traditions. He also wrote numerous works for various ensembles both vocal and instrumental, ranging from chamber music to orchestral works, from Lieder to music for choir.
Goehr has taught composition in several countries on four continents, including Yale University and the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing. From 1976 to 1999 he was Professor of Music at the University of Cambridge where George Benjamin, Julian Anderson and Thomas Adès were among his students. Goehrs latest works are the opera Promised End after Shakespeares King Lear and Turmmusik for baritone solo and orchestra. Since 2010 his archive has been held at the Akademie der Künste, Berlin.
Contents:
Werner Grünzweig: In Dialogue with the Past
Paul Griffiths: " es ist nicht wie es war ". The Music of Alexander Goehr
Alexander Goehr: Learning to Compose
Catalogue of the Music Manuscripts in the Alexander Goehr Archive
CD-Supplement
Alexander Goehr: Das Gesetz der Quadrille, Op. 41 (1979)
Text: Franz Kafka
Susan Kessler, mezzo soprano; Roger Vignoles, piano
Alexander Goehr: String Quartet No. 3, Op. 37 (1975-76)
The Lindsay Quartet: Peter Cropper, violin; Ronald Birks, violin; Roger Bigley, viola;
Bernard Gregor-Smith, violoncello
In English, with Audio CD