- Hans-Joachim Hespos
Hans-Joachim Hespos (born 1938) is a German
composer ofavant-garde music .Since "für Cello solo" (written 1964), he has composed in all genres, including many pieces for unaccompanied solo instruments and theatre works. He has always remained outside of the mainstream and has never been associated with any of the many movements in postwar European music, though he did attend summer courses at
Darmstadt in the 1980s. Today, Hespos is still relatively unknown in the United States.Even by the standards of the European avant-garde, Hespos' music usually is quite extreme and unconventional. In his many pieces for solo instruments, Hespos pushes instruments to their timbral limits, employing
extended techniques and other effects to create unusual sounds (For example, "Duma" (1980) foralto flute requires the performer to spit into his or her instrument to create sickly gargling sounds). He frequently writes for less-common instruments, such ascimbalon (1976's "Cang") ormusical saw (used in "Ganifita-Blues", 1984). He even calls for extreme stage techniques in his theatre works -- the famous piece "Seiltanz" ("Tightrope Dance", 1982) requires an actor to break his way out of a metal cage by means of awelding torch .Hespos' scores very frequently employ
graphic notation , verbal instructions, traditionalmusic notation or some combination thereof. Many of his works involveimprovisation . Additionally, Hespos' music must often be performed without a conductor, putting even greater demands on the performers.Hespos has been the recipient of many awards and honors in his career, including the 1967
Gaudeamus International Composers Award and a scholarship to study at theVilla Massimo inRome in 1972. In the year 2005, theAkademie der Künste ,Berlin created an archive of Hespos' music. That same year, "Opera World " magazine selected Hespos' "iOPAL" as the opera premiere of the year.External links
* [http://www.hespos.info/index.php Hespos' website (in German)]
* [http://idrs.colorado.edu/Publications/DR/DR9.2/DR9.2.Post.html Article about a performance of "Seiltanz" at Darmstadt]
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