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André Casanova

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

André Marcel Charles Casanova (12 October 1919 – 7 March 2009) was a French composer. He was an early disciple of René Leibowitz, a teacher and composer who maintained a strict adherence to the dodecaphonic musical theories of Arnold Schoenberg. Casanova later abandoned most of them in favour of a more classical style of composition. His published works, composed between 1944 and 1993, include orchestral, chamber and choral music, operas and songs.

Life and career

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Casanova was born in Paris, and studied law there, while at the same time studying music with Georges Dandelot at the École Normale de Musique de Paris.[1] In 1944 he became the first French pupil of René Leibowitz,[2] with whom he studied theory and composition.[1] Leibowitz introduced him to dodecaphonic and serial composition. Together with other Leibowitz pupils, Serge Nigg, Antoine Duhamel and Jean Prodromidès, he gave the first performance of Leibowitz's Explications des Metaphors, Op. 15, in Paris in 1948.[1][3]

Thereafter, according to the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Casanova's concern was "to ally a romantic spirit with modernity of style".[2] in the mid-1950s he abandoned dodecaphony, although he retained some of its chromatic elements for harmonic purposes. After his avant-garde period, Casanova returned to what Grove calls "a more classical conception of both style and form".[2] In 1959 his Concertino, for piano and chamber orchestra, was performed as a French contribution at the 33rd annual music festival of the International Society for Contemporary Music. In 1960 he received an award from the Queen Marie José Music Foundation for his Cavalier seul, a chamber cantata for baritone and string quartet (later revised for voice and string orchestra),[1] dedicated to Hans Werner Henze.[4]

In the late 1940s there had been some hostility between adherents of Leibowitz and those of the teacher and composer Olivier Messiaen,[5] but so far as Casanova was concerned any breach had healed sufficiently during the 1950s for Messiaen's partner Yvonne Loriod to play the solo part at the premiere of Casanova's piano concertino in 1959.[6] He developed an interest in German Romantic literature and with Nietzsche's philosophy, which is reflected in his work.[2] His Third Symphony (Dithyrambes, 1964) has a vocal part, with words by Nietzsche, taken from Dionysos-Dithyramben set in the original German.[7]

In his later years Casanova lived at Louveciennes on the fringe of Paris, where he died on 7 March 2009, at the age of 89.[8]

Works

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Orchestral works

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Chamber

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Choral and song

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Stage works

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  • La clé d'argent, conte lyrique, in one act. Text by Jean Moal after Villiers de l'Isle-Adam, 1965
  • Le livre de la foi juree, geste lyrique, 1965
  • Le bonheur dans le crime, opera in a prologue and three acts. Text by Bernard George after the novel by Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, 1969
  • La coupe d'or, opera in one act. Text by Jean Moal after Ludwig Tieck, 1970
  • Notturno, ballet, 1972

Notes and sources

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d Martini, p. 443
  2. ^ a b c d Bosseur, Jean-Yves "Casanova, André", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001, retrieved 10 May 2018 (subscription required)
  3. ^ Maguire, Jan. Rene Leibowitz (II): The Music, Tempo, New Series, No. 132 (March 1980), pp. 2-10 (subscription required)
  4. ^ " Cavalier seul, Op. 15", Bibliothèque nationale de France, retrieved 10 May 2018
  5. ^ Fallon, Robert. "Birds, Beasts, and Bombs in Messiaen's Cold War Mass", The Journal of Musicology, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Spring 2009), p. 185 (subscription required)
  6. ^ "Concertino – Piano, orchestre de chambre, Op. 8" Bibliothèque nationale de France, retrieved 10 May 2018
  7. ^ "Symphonies: Ténor, orchestre, No 3: André Casanova (1919–2009)", Bibliothèque nationale de France, retrieved 10 May 2018
  8. ^ "André Casanova", Musicalics, retrieved 10 May 2018
  9. ^ Tobias Broeker. "20th Century Violin concerto - Signed Scores". A Gerd Albrecht, en toute cordialite

Sources

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  • Martini, Fritz (1972). Forschungsbericht zur deutschen Literatur in der Zeit des Realismus. Stuttgart: Metzler. OCLC 708527701.