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Igor Markevitch (Ukrainian: Ігор Маркевич) (August 9, 1912 – March 7, 1983) was a Ukrainian, Italian, and French composer and conductor.

Contents

Biography

Born in Kiev, son of the pianist Boris Markevitch and Zoya Pokitonov, Markevitch moved with his family to Paris in 1914 and Switzerland in 1916. Alfred Cortot discovered his musical ability and took him to Paris in 1926 for training as a composer and pianist at the Ecole Normale , where he studied under Cortot and Nadia Boulanger. He gained recognition in 1929 when he was discovered by Serge Diaghilev, who commissioned a Piano Concerto from Markevitch and desired him to collaborate on a ballet with Boris Kochno. In a letter to the London Times Diaghilev hailed Markevitch as the man who would put an end to 'a scandalous period of music ... of cynical-sentimental simplicity'.[1] The ballet project came to an end with Diaghilev's death on 19 August 1929, but Markevitch's works were accepted by the publisher Schott and he continued to produce at least one major work per year during the 1930s, being rated among the leading contemporary composers. He started being hailed as "the second Igor" — the first Igor being Igor Stravinsky.

Markevitch collaborated on a ballet, Rébus with Leonid Massine (1931) and another, L'envol d'Icare (1932) with Serge Lifar; neither was staged, though both scores were performed as concert works. L'envol d'Icare, based on the legend of the fall of Icarus, which Markevitch himself recorded in 1938 with the Belgian National Orchestra, was especially radical, introducing quarter-tones in both woodwind and strings.[2] (In 1943 he recomposed the work under the title Icare, eliminating these, rescoring and simplifying the rhythms.) Béla Bartók once described Markevitch as "...the most striking personality in contemporary music..." and cited him as an influence on his own composing.[3] An independent version of L'envol d'Icare for two pianos and percussion, which Bartók heard,[4] is believed to have influenced Bartók's own Sonata for 2 Pianos and Percussion.

Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde (1968).ogv
Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde. Igor Markevitch, conductor and the Orchestre National de l'ORTF

Markevitch continued composing as war approached but not long after completing his last original work, the Variations, Fugue and Envoi on a Theme of Handel for piano, in October 1941 he fell seriously ill. After recovering, he decided to give up composition and focus exclusively on conducting. His last compositional activities were the revision of L'envol d'Icare and arrangements of other composer's music, of which the version of The Musical Offering by J. S. Bach is especially notable.

Markevitch made his debut as a conductor at age 18 with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. As a conductor, he was well-respected for his interpretations of the French and Russian repertory and of twentieth-century music. He settled in Italy and became an Italian citizen. During the Second World War he was active with the partisan movement. He relocated again, to London in 1953, and then to Switzerland. Beginning in 1965 he worked for the Spanish RTVE Orchestra.

In 1970, after ignoring his own compositions for nearly 30 years, he conducted a concert of his own music in Brussels and thereafter a slow revival of his original works began. He died suddenly from a heart attack in Antibes on March 7, 1983.

Family

His brother Dimitry Markevitch was a notable musicologist and cellist.

Markevitch's first wife was Kyra Nijinska, a daughter of the ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky. They had one son, Vaslav, before divorcing.

His second wife was Donna Topazia Caetani, the only child of Don Michelangelo Caetani dei Duchi di Sermoneta and his wife, the former Nobile Cora Maria Antinori, who ran the boutique of the Paris decorating firm Jansen. Their son is the conductor Oleg Caetani, who is presently chief conductor and artistic director of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. Markevitch also had two daughters with Topazia, Allegra (born 1949) and Nathalie (born 1951).

After his wife's death, he became the companion of Carlotta Garriga.

Work

Compositions

  • Noces – suite for piano (1925)
  • Sinfonietta in F major (1928-9)
  • Piano Concerto (1929)
  • Cantate for soprano, male chorus & orchestra (1929-30) (text by Jean Cocteau)
  • Concerto Grosso (1930)
  • Partita for piano and small orchestra (1930-31)
  • Serenade for violin, clarinet and bassoon (1931)
  • Rébus – ballet (1931)
  • Cinéma-Ouverture (1931)
  • Galop for 8 (or 9) players (1932)
  • L'envol d'Icare – ballet (1932); recomposed as Icare (1943)
  • Hymnes for orchestra (1932-33) (revised version 1980 with ad lib contralto and extra movement orchestrated from no. 3 of Trois poèmes of 1935)
  • Petite suite d’apres Schumann for small orchestra (1933)
  • Psaume for soprano and small orchestra (1933)
  • Le paradis perdu, oratorio (1934-35) (text by Markevitch after John Milton)
  • Trois poèmes for high voice and piano (1935) (texts by Cocteau, Plato, Goethe); No.3 orchestrated 1936 as Hymne à la mort, incorporated 1980 into Hymnes for orchestra
  • Cantique d’amour for orchestra (1936)
  • Le nouvel âge, sinfonia concertante for orchestra with 2 pianos (1937)
  • La Taille de l’homme – 'concert inachevée' for soprano and 12 instruments (1938-39, unfinished, but Part I complete and performable)
  • Stefan le poète – 'impressions d’enfance' pour piano (1939-40)
  • Lorenzo il magnifico, sinfonia concertante for soprano and orchestra (1940) (texts by Lorenzo de Medici)
  • Variations, Fugue et Envoi on a Theme of Handel for piano (1941)
  • Le Bleu Danube, valse de concert on themes by Johann Strauss (1944)
  • 6 Songs of Mussorgsky arranged for voice and orchestra (1945)
  • The Musical Offering by JS Bach arranged for triple orchestra (1949-50)

Theory

  • Historical, analytical and practical studies of Beethoven symphonies (Die Sinfonien von Ludwig van Beethoven: historische, analytische und praktische Studien; published by Edition Peters, Leipzig, 1982) - popular literature for conductors, although disputed.

Sources

References

  1. ^ 'Igor Markevitch: A Chronology', Tempo 133/4, p. 10.
  2. ^ 'Icare' by Clive Bennett in Tempo No. 133/134 (September 1980), p. 45.
  3. ^ "Igor Markevitch Biography". Naxos Records. http://www.naxos.com/composerinfo/665.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-07. 
  4. ^ Bennett, 1980, p. 4.

External links

Preceded by
Jean Martinon
Principal Conductors, Orchestre Lamoureux
1957–1961
Succeeded by
Jean-Baptiste Mari







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