- Joonas Kokkonen
Joonas Kokkonen (Audio|Fi-Joonas_Kokkonen.ogg|pronunciation) (
November 21 ,1921 –October 1 or 2, 1996) was a Finnish composer. He was one of the most internationally famous Finnish composers of the 20th century after Sibelius; hisopera "The Last Temptations " has received over 500 performances worldwide, and is considered by many to be Finland's most distinguished national opera.Life
He was born in
Iisalmi , Finland, but spent most of his life inJärvenpää at his home, which was known as "Villa Kokkonen". He served in the Finnish army during World War II with great distinction. He received his education at theUniversity of Helsinki , and later at theSibelius Academy , where he afterwards taught composition; his students there includedAulis Sallinen . In addition to his activities as a composer, he made a significant and powerful impact on Finnish cultural life, serving as a chairman and organizer, heading organizations such as Society of Finnish Composers, the Board of the Concert Centre, and others. His purpose was always to improve music education, as well as the status and appreciation of classical music as well as Finnish music. In the 1960s and early 1970s he won numerous prizes for his work. He was appointed to the prestigious Finnish Academy upon the death ofUuno Klami . His composition activity slowed down greatly after the death of his wife and increased alcohol consumption. He had long planned a Fifth Symphony but it died with him.The date of his death has been variously reported as
October 1 1996 ("New Grove Dictionary", and various internet sources);October 2 1996 (many internet sources, including the Finnish Music Center); andOctober 20 1996 ("New Grove Dictionary of Opera").Music and influence
Even though he studied at the Sibelius Academy, he was mainly self-learned in composition. Usually his compositions are divided into three style periods: a neo-classical early style from 1948 to 1958, a relatively short middle period
twelve-tone style from 1959 to 1966, and a late "neo-Romantic" style of freetonality which also used aspects of his earlier style periods, which began in 1967 and lasted for the rest of his life.Most of his early music is
chamber music , and includes aPiano Trio and aPiano Quintet ; the style is contrapuntal and influenced by Bartók, but looks back to Renaissance and Baroque models as well. In the second style period he wrote the first two of his four symphonies. Although he used twelve-tone technique, he avoided orthodoxy by occasionally using triads and octaves; he also liked to use the row melodically, giving the successive pitches in the sametone color (many other composers of 12-tone music split the row between different voices).In the third style period Kokkonen wrote the music that made him internationally famous: the last two symphonies, the "...durch einen Spiegel" for twelve solo strings, the
Requiem , and the opera "The Last Temptations " (1975) ("Viimeiset kiusaukset"), based on the life and death of the Finnish Revivalist preacherPaavo Ruotsalainen . The opera is punctuated with chorales which refer back toJohann Sebastian Bach , and which are also reminiscent of theAfrican-American spirituals used for a similar purpose inMichael Tippett 's oratorio "A Child of Our Time ". The opera was staged at theMetropolitan Opera in New York in 1983.LIST OF COMPOSITIONS
*Impromptu for piano (1938)
*Pielavesi Suite for piano (1939)
*Two Small Preludes for piano (1943)
*Three Songs to Poems by Einari Vuorela (1947)
*Piano Trio (1948)
*Piano Quintet (1951-53)
*Sonatina for piano (1953)
*Duo for violin & piano (1955)
*Illat Song Cycle (1955)
*Religioso for piano (1956)
*Music for String Orchestra (1957)
*Three Children's Christmas Songs (1956-58)
*Hades of the Birds Song Cycle for Soprano & Orchestra (1959)
*String Quartet No. 1 (1959)
*Symphony No. 1 [1960)
*Symphony No. 2 (1960-61)
*Sinfonia da camera (1961-62)
*Missa a capella (1963)
*Opus sonorum (1964)
*String Quartet No. 2(1966)
*Laudatio Domini (1966)
*Symphony No. 3 (1967)
*Symphonic Sketches (1968)
*Bagatelles for piano (1969)
*Concerto for Cello & Orchestra (1969)
*Erekhteion Academic Cantata (1970)
*Inauguratio (1971)
*Symphony No. 4 (1971)
*Wind Quintet (1973)
*The Last Temptations (1972-1975)
*Lux aeterna for organ (1974)
*Two Monologues from "The Last Temptations" for bass & orchestra (1975)
*Sonata for Cello & Piano (1975-76)
*String Quartet No. 3 (1976)
*"...durch einem Spiegel" (1977)
*Requiem (1979-81)
*Improvvisazione for violin & piano (1982)
*Symphony No. 5, unfinished (1982-96?)
*"With his fingers Vainamoinen played" for male chorus (1985)
*Il passagio (1987)
*Ukko-Paavon Virsi for chorus
*Haasoitto for organ
*Luxta Crucem for organ
*Surusoitto (Funeral Music) for organReferences and further reading
* Erkki Arni: "Joonas Kokkonen", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed
February 27 2005 ) [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]
* "The Last Temptations: opera by Joonas Kokkonen" (trans.Keith Bosley , 1977)
*Hako, Pekka: "Voiko varjo olla kirkas" The Life of Joonas Kokkonen, Ajatus Kirjat 2001
*Jurkowski, Edward: "The Music of Joonas Kokkonen" Ashgate Publishing Co.,Burlington VT 2004External links
* [http://www.classical-composers.org/cgi-bin/ccd.cgi?comp=kokkonen Short biography with some description of his works]
* [http://www.fimic.fi/fimic/fimic.nsf?open Finnish Music Information Centre biography]
* [http://www.bis.se/frcompos.htm Swedish record company BIS website]
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