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Edgard Varése

Edgard VaréseAlthough he wrote just over a dozen works, Edgard Varése’s (1883–1965) experiments in form and texture, his idea of “organized sound,” and his eagerness to experiment with new sound sources, cemented his reputation as one of the most influential composers of the 20th century. Born in Paris in 1883, Varése defied his father’s wish that he study math and engineering, and instead entered the Paris Conservatory. Impressed by Ferruccio Busoni’s Sketch for a New Aesthetic in Music, Varése moved to Berlin in 1907 to meet him. Of works he produced during this period, however, only one survived a massive fire. In 1915, Varése moved to the United States, where he completed Amériques in celebration of his new life. He quickly started to promote the cause of New Music in the country by founding the New Symphony Orchestra (1919) and the International Composers’ Guild (1921).

In the years following, Varése split his time between Europe and America, but the defeat of some of his ventures, as well as difficulties finding work, made it so he only completed two works: Ionisation (1931) and Density 21.5 (1936). In 1953 he was anonymously given a tape recorder, and Varése immediately began work on Déserts, which premiered in Paris in 1959, in the first stereo music broadcast in the country’s history. He also became involved in writing music for documentaries and events, including Poème Électronique, which he composed for the 1958 Brussels Exhibition. It was performed using 400 loudspeakers and was accompanied by visuals by Le Corbusier. Despite the attention he received late in his career, Varése composed relatively little. His final work, Nocturnal, was unfinished, and performed at a tribute concert in 1961. It was later completed by composer Chou Wen-chung.

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