- Wladimir Vogel
Wladimir Rudolfowitsch Vogel (b.
17 February /29 February 1896 inMoscow ; d.19 June 1984 inZurich ) was a Swisscomposer of German and Russian extraction.Life
Vogel first studied composition in Moscow with
Scriabin , then between 1918 and 1924 withHeinz Tiessen andFerruccio Busoni inBerlin , where he subsequently taught (1929-33) at theKlindworth-Scharwenka Conservatory . He was close to the expressionist circle aroundHerwarth Walden and was active (together withGeorge Antheil ,Hanns Eisler ,Philipp Jarnach ,Stefan Wolpe , andKurt Weill ) in the music section of the November Group ofMax Butting andHans Heinz Stuckenschmidt .In 1933, branded a “degenerate artist” by the Nazi regime, he left Germany and went to
Strasbourg ,Brussels ,Paris , andLondon . He first turned totwelve-tone technique with his Violin Concerto in 1937. From 1939 he lived in Switzerland, at first inAscona and from 1964 in Zürich. Until he became a Swiss citizen in 1954, he was not allowed to work in Switzerland, and relied on the support of wealthy patrons and his wife, the writer Aline Valangin. During this time, he taught composition privately, was active in the ISCM, participated inHermann Scherchen ’s ‘Sessions d’études musicales et dramatiques’ in Strasbourg, and organized the International Twelve-Tone Music pre-conference in Osilina in 1949. His students includeErik Bergman ,Maurice Karkoff ,Robert Suter ,Einojuhani Rautavaara , andRolf Liebermann .Compositions (selective list)
Vogel composed a
symphony , pieces for orchestra, string orchestra, wind ensemble, a concerto for violin and another for cello, works for choir, soloists and orchestra—the most important of which, called "dramma-oratorios", are based on a synthesis of speech and song—and chamber-music works.
* "Drei Sprechlieder nach August Stramm" for baritone and piano (1922)
* "Sinfonischer Vorgang" for large orchestra (1922-23)
* "Wagadus Untergang durch die Eitelkeit", dramma-oratorio (1930)
* "Sinfonia fugata" for large orchestra (1930-1932)
* "Vier Etüden" for large orchestra (1930-1932)
* "Variétude" for piano (1931)
* "Rallye" for orchestra (1932)
* Violin Concerto (1937)
* "Thyl Claes", Parts I and II, dramma-oratorio (1941-42 and 1943-45)
* "Jona ging doch nach Ninive", dramma-oratorio (1957-58)
* "Meditazione sulla maschera di Modigliani", dramma-oratorio (1960)
* "An die akademische Jugend" (Notker Balbulus ) for mixed choir a cappella (1962)
* "Worte" (Hans Arp) for 2 speaking voices and strings (1962)
* "Flucht", dramma-oratorio (1963-64)
* "Mondträume" (Hans Arp), permutations and paraphrases after verses from «Mondsand » by Hans Arp for speaking choir a cappella (1965)
* "Hörformen I" for orchestra (1967)
* "Hörformen II" for orchestra (1967-69)
* "Gli spaziali" dramma-oratorio (1970-71)
* "Abschied" for string orchestra (1973)
* "Vier Versionen einer Zwölftonfolge" for piano (1973)
* "Meloformen" for string orchestra (1974)
* "Hommage nach einer 6-Tonfolge von Hermann Jöhr" for strings in variable scoring (1975)
* Composition for chamber orchestra, 1976
* "In Signum IM" for large orchestra, 1976
* "Verstrebungen" for chamber orchestra, 1977
* "Reigen" for chamber orchestra, 1981
* "Humoreske, Paraphrasen über 2 Themen von Gottschalk and Tschaikowsky" for large orchestra (1981)
* Trio for three clarinets (1982)
* "Klangexpressionen" (Bulgakov), string quartet (1983)
* "Colori e movimenti" for orchestra (1983)References
German Wikipedia article
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