programmes - Consulate General of Estonia
Transcription
programmes - Consulate General of Estonia
ERKKI-SVEN TÜÜR (1959) – Requiem for chamber choir, two soloists, piano and strings (1994) ARVO PÄRT (1935) – Da pacem Domine (2004) ERKKI-SVEN TÜÜR – Action. Passion. Illusion for strings (1993) TÕNU KÕRVITS (1969) – Kreegi vihik / Kreek’s Notebook (2007) I Nüüd ole, Jeesus, kiidetud / May Jesus, Thee Be Praised II Oh võta, armas Jeesus, vastu mult / Dear Jesus, Do Receive III Ma vaatan üles mäele / I Gaze At The Mountain Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir Tallinn Chamber Orchestra Conductor Tõnu Kaljuste This concert is produced by the Consulate General of Estonia. The concert tour in the United States is organised by New World Classics and supported by Estonian Ministry of Culture, Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Tallinn City Government. 1 Photo by Peeter Langovits ERKKI-SVEN TÜÜR (1959) is one of Estonia’s most highly acclaimed contemporary composers. He began his career as a ‘chamber rock’ musician and founded the intellectual rock group In Spe in Tallinn at the age of seventeen. In 1980—1984 he studied at the Tallinn Conservatoire with Jaan Rääts. Tüür seeks to write music that combines technical know-how with emotional power to develop a musical reality where the two sides — intellectual and emotional — can live together side by side. As a student Tüür was interested both in American minimalism and also the post-serial textures of Ligeti and Xenakis. Both traditions find an echo in his works. His musical architecture is often influenced by visual ideas and he is interested in a combination of opposites: tonality versus atonality, regular repetitive rhythms versus irregular complex ones, tranquil meditativeness versus explosive theatricality. Tüür’s output ranges from chamber music to symphonies, concertos and large scale choral works, among them for instance the oratorio Ante finem saeculi (1985), an opera Wallenberg (2001), Architectonics etc. Requiem for chamber choir, two soloists, piano and strings (1994) is dedicated to the memory of the composer’s friend conductor Peeter Lilje. Tüür has shortened the liturgical text of the catholic mass and it could not be regarded as a cycle but as an integral whole. This composition became the recommended work at the Paris Rostrum and has been broadcasted in radios in many countries all over the world. Action, Passion, Illusion were first performed by Tallinn Chamber Orchestra and Tõnu Kaljuste in 1993. The individual works are constructions in which the higher the musical building blocks go, the more they are joined together to form a building. This is the principle behind the string series Action-Passion-Illusion. Passion and Illusion are recorded on the CD “Crystallisatio”. 2 Photo by Kaupo Kikkas ARVO PÄRT (1935) attracts large audiences in the world with the beauty and balance of his musical style. He is the most remarkable and distinctive musical figure of Estonian origin. He was born in Paide and grew up in Rakvere and Tallinn, in 1980 he emigrated and now lives in Berlin. Arvo Pärt’s first orchestral work Nekroloog (Necrology) of 1960 was the first Estonian work to employ serial technique. He continued with serialism through to the mid 1960s, but ultimately tired of its rigours and moved on to experiment with collage techniques. At the very beginning of the 1970s, he wrote a few compositions in the spirit of early European polyphony, like his Symphony No 3 from 1971. Thereafter he turned to self-imposed silence, but re-emerged in 1976 after a transformation so radical as to make his previous music almost unrecognisable as that of the same composer. The technique he invented, or discovered, and to which he has remained loyal, practically without exception, he calls “tintinnabuli” (from the Latin, little bells). Since leaving Estonia, Pärt has concentrated on setting religious texts, which have proved popular with choirs and ensembles around the world. His long time collaborators have been The Hilliard Ensemble, the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir with its conductors Tõnu Kaljuste and Paul Hillier, the conductor Neeme Järvi, and Manfred Eicher of ECM Records. Da pacem Domine for mixed choir a cappella (2004) is an eloquent example of Pärt at his most characteristic — a simple texture (four parts throughout), a slow straightforward pattern with almost no rhythmic variation, and near harmonic stasis in which each pitch is carefully placed in position like stones in a Zen garden. There are two basic elements in the work: the first is a manner of composition that immediately calls to mind the organ piece “Pari intervallo” (1976), and the second comprises passages of faburden (a short succession of parallel chords with the root note either in the top voice or in the middle), resolving with a Landini cadence. The text is a prayer for peace and has been set by numerous composers over the age. The original version is scored for choir and full orchestra. The work is recorded by the EPCC and Paul Hillier (Harmonia Mundi) and the CD of the same title received a Grammy award in 2007. 3 Photo by Harri Rospu TÕNU KÕRVITS (1969) graduated from Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre (1994, composition with Raimo Kangro). His work spans both chamber and symphonic genres, contains incidental music for puppet animations and cartoons, plus arrangements and orchestrations of popular music. Music of Tõnu Kõrvits is filled with highly poetical imagery. It varies from gentle and fragile sound paintings to dramatic orchestral textures, full of vivacity and passion. Composer’s heedful treatment of melodic lines is combined with well-considered timbre choice. Last years Oriental melodic styles and Estonian folk song are reflected in his work. Tõnu Kõrvits is Laureate of Heino Eller Music Award (2001). In 2003 his orchestra piece Eldorado won III Prize at International Lepo Sumera Composition Contest for Young Composers. In 2002, Tõnu Kõrvits received the Young Cultural Figure Award of the President of the Republic’s Cultural Foundation, and in 2004 the Annual Prize of the Endowment for Music of the Cultural Endowment of Estonia. In 2007 he was awarded the Annual Music Prize of the Estonian Music Council for his contribution to Estonian orchestral music. “Kreek’s Notebook” (“Kreegi vihik”) for choir and strings was first performed in 2007 by the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, Tallinn Chamber Orchestra and conductor Tõnu Kaljuste. The work is based on Estonian spiritual folk tunes that the Estonian composer Cyrillus Kreek (1989—1962) used and collected. He was the first to thoroughly and systematically delve into the world of popular versions of church hymns. Kreek wrote them down and arranged them to three- or four-voice choral casts. “Kreek’s Notebook” by Tõnu Kõrvits thus presents a new, modern look at these hymns, yet it sounds as homage to Cyrillus Kreek. The movements of the work are written for different casts. Tonight there are performed three parts of the eightmovement work, all created for choir and string instruments: I May Jesus, Thee Be Praised (Estonian folk hymn from Kihnu island), IV Dear Jesus, Do Receive (Estonian folk hymn from Kolga-Jaani) and VIII I Gaze At The Mountain (Estonian folk hymn from Saaremaa). 4 Photo by Kaupo Kikkas THE ESTONIAN PHILHARMONIC CHAMBER CHOIR (EPCC) is the Estonia’s best-known professional music group abroad. The EPCC was founded in 1981 by Tõnu Kaljuste, who was its artistic director and chief conductor for 20 years. In the years 2001— 2007 the artistic director was Paul Hillier. Since the season 2008/2009 the artistic director and chief conductor is Daniel Reuss. The EPCC’s repertoire ranges from Gregorian Chant to the 20th century music. The choir has a close relationship with Estonian composers Veljo Tormis and Arvo Pärt, whose music has hold a very special place in its repertoire for many years. The choir gives 60—70 concerts per season and tours regularly in Europe, the United States, Canada, and Japan. The EPCC has worked with famous conductors and orchestras including Claudio Abbado, Helmuth Rilling, David Willcocks, Eric Ericson, Ivæn Fischer, Ward Swingle, Neeme Järvi, Paavo Järvi, Nikolai Aleksejev, Andrew LawrenceKing, Roland Böer; Norwegian, Australian, Lithuanian Chamber Orchestras, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra, Berlin Rundfunk Orchestra, Concerto Copenhagen, Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, etc. The EPCC has been invited to participate in many famous music festivals all over the world, for instance BBC Proms, Edinburgh International Festival, Cheltenham Music Festival, Salzburg Festival, Abu Gosh Music Festival, Moscow Easter Festival, Bergen International Festival, Gaida Festival etc. Besides the concerts the recordings for companies ECM, Virgin Classics, Carus, Harmonia Mundi hold an important place in the choir’s activity. The recordings have won several prizes, from which the Grammy award for Arvo Pärt’s „Da Pacem” recorded by the EPCC and Paul Hillier (2007, Harmonia Mundi) is the most remarkable. Besides, the choir’s recordings with Arvo Pärt’s, Erkki-Sven Tüür’s and Baltic composers’ music have received eight Grammy nominations. 5 TALLINN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA (TCO) was founded in 1993 by the conductor Tõnu Kaljuste. The members of the orchestra are all outstanding musicians, who often perform as soloists and are invited to perform with various other orchestras and ensembles. In cooperation with the company ECM Tallinn Chamber Orchestra has recorded many important CD’s: Arvo Pärt’s “Te Deum”, Erkki-Sven Tüür’s “Crystallisatio”, Arvo Pärt’s “Litany” etc. Tallinn Chamber Orchestra has performed together with Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir in many prestigious music festivals: Bach Cantatas Festival in Milan, Bremen Music Festival, Huddersfield Festival of Contemporary Music etc. Concert tours have taken orchestra and the choir to Canada, USA, Japan and to many European countries. The orchestra’s instrumental programmes have been prepared together with foreign and Estonian conductors, for instance Juha Kangas, John Storgårds, Richard Tognetti, Terje Tonnesen, Valentin Zhuk, Daniel Raiskin, Samuel Wong, Eri Klas, Olari Elts, Paul Mägi, Arvo Volmer, Vello Pähn, Kristjan Järvi, Tarmo Leinatamm. In 1993—1995 and 1996—2001 the Artistic Director and General Conductor of the orchestra was Tõnu Kaljuste, in the seasons 1995/1996 and 2001—2003 Juha Kangas. At the present the Artistic Director is Eri Klas. 6 Photos by Harri Rospu TÕNU KALJUSTE founded the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir (EPCC) in 1981 and the Tallinn Chamber Orchestra (TCO) in 1993. In 1990s he was also engaged as principal conductor of Swedish Radio Choir and the Netherlands Chamber Choir. Freelance conductor since 2001. In 2004 he initiated the project Nargen Opera which summerly productions’ list includes three operas by Joseph Haydn, and in cooperation with Von Krahl Theatre Estonian Ballads, Songs of Estonian Women and Songs of Estonian Men by Veljo Tormis; chamber operas Firegarden and My Swans, My Thoughts by Tõnu Kõrvits, and Fidelio by Beethoven. Mr Kaljuste has dedicated a significant part of his work to Estonian composers (Heino Eller, Arvo Pärt, Veljo Tormis, Erkki-Sven Tüür), whose music he has recorded for ECM. He has also recorded vespers and litanies by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, as well as church music by Antonio Vivaldi (Carus). He has collaborated with composers Arvo Pärt, Alfred Schnittke, György Kurtag, Krzysztof Penderecki, Erik Bergman, Giya Kancheli, Sven-David Sandström, Knut Nystedt, Einojuhani Rautavaara, Brett Dean, Lera Auerbach and many others. In 2006 he initiated yet another project, a yearly Nargen Festival. He is a Grammy nominee and the winner of several prizes for his recordings (Diapason d’Or de l’Annee 2000, Cannes Classical Award, Edison Prize). 7 ESTONIAN PHILHARMONIC CHAMBER CHOIR TALLINN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA SOPRANO Kaia Urb Vilve Hepner Tui Hirv Hele-Mai Poobus Karoliina Kriis Maarja Kukk Kati Jaanimäe I VIOLIN Harry Traksmann Olga Voronova Katrin Matveus Marge Uus Kristjan Hallik II VIOLIN Kaido Välja Pille Prans Mai Rosenroth Kadi Vilu Kristel Arund ALTO Marianne Pärna Helis Naeris Merili Kristal Ave Hännikäinen Juta Roopalu-Malk Evelin Ester VIOLA Martti Mägi Kristiina Olev Laur Eensalu Arvo Haasma TENOR Tiit Kogerman Martin Lume Kaido Janke Toomas Tohert Raul Mikson Vladislav Horuþenko CELLO Leho Karin Kaido Kelder Margus Uus BASS Kalev Keeroja Aarne Talvik Märt Krell Tõnu Tormis Rainer Vilu Hideyuki Nishimura Ott Indermitte CONTRABASS Jüri Lepp Janel Altroff PIANO Marrit Gerretz-Traksmann 8