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David TUDOR
dans le cadre de la carte blanche à Gelbe Musik Berlin - création
sonore
Biographie


David Tudor was born in Philadelphia, PA, in 1926. He studied with H. William
Hawke (organ, theory), Irma Wolpe Rademacher (piano) and Stephan Wolpe (composition
and analysis).His first professional activity was as an organist, and he subsequently
became known as one of the leading avante-garde pianists of our time. Tudor gave
highly acclaimed first or early performances of worksby contemporary composers
Earle Brown, Sylvano Bussotti, Morton Feldman, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Christian
Wolff, Stephan Wolpe, and La Monte Young, among others.
Tudor began working with John Cage in the early fifties, as a member of the Merce
Cunningham Dance Company and with Cage's Project of Music for Electronic Tape.
Tudor gradually ended his active career as a pianist, turning exclusively to the
composition of live electronic music.
As a composer, Tudor chose specific electronic components and their interconnections
to define both composition and performance drawing upon resources that were both
flexible and complex. Tudor was one of four Core Artists who collaborated on the
design of the Pepsi Pavilion for Expo '70, Osaka, Japan, a project of Experiments
in Art and Technology, Inc. Many of Tudor's compositions have involved collaborative
visual forces: light systems, laser projections, dance, theater, television, film.
Tudor's last project, Toneburst: Maps and Fragments, was a collaboration with
visual artist Sophia Ogielska. Tudor's several collaborations with visual artist
Jacqueline Monnier included the development of a kite environment installed at
the Whitney Museum (Philip Morris, NYC) in 1986, at the exhibition "Klangraume"
in Dusseldorf in 1988, and at the Jack Tilton Gallery in New York City in 1990.
Other collaborators have included Lowell Cross, Molly Davies, Viola Farber, Anthony
Martin, and Robert Rauschenberg.
Tudor had been affiliated with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company (MCDC) since
its inception in the summer of 1953. In 1992, after CageÕs death, Tudor
took over as Music Director of MCDC. Merce Cunningham has commissioned numerous
works from Tudor, including Rainforest I (1968); Toneburst (1974); Weatherings
(1978); Phonemes (1981); Sextet for Seven (1982); Fragments (1984); Webwork (1987),
Five Stone Wind (1988), Virtual Focus (1990); Neural Network Plus (1992); and
most recently Soundings: Ocean Diary (1994) for what was John Cage's last conception,
Ocean.
David Tudor passed away on August 13, 1996 at his home in Tomkins Cove, NY.
More information at the adress: http://www.emf.org/tudor/
Note

In the world of American experimental music, DAVID TUDOR was something of a legend.
For a number of years following the Second World War, he was the only performer
to devote himself systematically to this music. In doing so, Tudor became a touchstone
for some of the most radical musical activity of the 20th century. The praise
accorded him by the composers whose music he performed attests to Tudor's unique
ability not only to meet the requirements of fully notated scores, but also to
accomplish more than anyone had imagined in music in which some degree of indeterminacy
was a compositional principle.
David Tudor was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1926. He studied with H.
William Hawke (organ, theory), Irma Wolpe Rademacher (piano) and Stefan Wolpe
(composition and analysis). His first professional activity was as an organist.
He established himself as a pioneer in the performance of new music as early as
1950, when on December 17th, in New York, he gave the American premiere (and second
performance anywhere) of Pierre Boulez' Deuxième Sonate pour Piano. From
the early 1950s on, Tudor became John Cage's closest associate. Cage stated that
all of his works until about 1970 were written either directly for Tudor or with
him in mind. Tudor also gave first or early performances of works by Earle Brown,
Sylvano Bussotti, Morton Feldman, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Christian Wolff, Stefan
Wolpe, and La Monte Young, among others. These composers often wrote works expressly
for Tudor and a number of them stated that Tudor's unerring ability to find his
own imaginative and virtuoso solutions to the often puzzling and sometimes deliberately
difficult problems of notation and performance was essential to the actual composition
of their music.
During this period, Mr. Tudor held positions as Instructor and Pianist-in-Residence
at Black Mountain College, North Carolina, and at the Internationale Ferienkurse
fur Neue Musik, Darmstadt, and expanded his performance activity to include Merce
Cunningham Dance Company, and John Cage's "Project of Music for Magnetic
Tape." In the early 1960s he and Cage initiated a trend toward "live"
as distinct from taped, electronic music. Mr. Tudor has conducted seminars in
Electronic Performance at various American Universities and at the National Institute
of Design in Ahmedabad, India.
In the late 1960s, Tudor gradually ended his active career as a pianist. He had
begun to work with the electronic modification of sound sources in the late 1950s,
departing from the then common practice of fixing music on magnetic tape. Instead,
Tudor created electronic sounds directly during performances, thus pioneering
what was later to be called "live electronic music." By the mid-1960s,
Tudor's ideas and performances had inspired a new trend in electronic music. By
the end of the decade, Tudor became fully involved in live electronic music, producing
his own compositions using electronic technology.
As composer, Tudor draws upon technological resources that are both flexible and
complex: he employs, for the most part, custom-built modular electronic devices,
many of his own manufacture. His method employs choices of specific electronic
components and transducers, and their interconnections, that define both composition
and performance. His sound materials unfold through large gestures in time and
space, and many of his compositions are associated with collaborative visual forces:
light systems, dance, television, theater, film or four-color laser projections.
Bandoneon! produced at the "9 Evenings: Theater & Engineering,"
New York, 1966, calls for lighting and audio circuitry, moving loudspeaker sculptures,
and projected video images, all actuated by the bandoneon. Other collaborative
works include Reunion (with John Cage, Lowell Cross, Marcel Duchamp, and Gordon
Mumma 1968) and a number of works for video and/or four-color laser display in
conjunction with Lowell Cross and Carson Jeffries (1969 to 1977).
As one of four Core Artists who collaborated on the design of the Pepsi Pavilion
for Expo '70 in Osaka, Japan (a project of Experiments in Art and Technology),
Tudor conceived and performed several new works of his own, including Microphone
(first version). It was this work that led Tudor to establish important new compositional
procedures which became the basis for most of his music composed in the 1970s.
Many of Tudor's works are associated with collaborative visual forces: light systems,
dance, television, theater, film or laser projections. Tudor's several collaborations
with visual artist Jacqueline Monnier included the development of a kite environment
installed at the Whitney Museum (Philip Morris) in 1986, at the exhibition "Klangraume"
in Dusseldorf in 1988, and at the Jack Tilton Gallery in New York City in 1990.
Other collaborators have included Lowell Cross, Molly Davies, Viola Farber, Anthony
Martin, Sophia Ogielska and Robert Rauschenberg. In 1982 he premiered Likeness
to Voices/Dialects at IRCAM in Paris, commissioned by the Gulbenkian Foundation
and realized at the Metz Centre Européen pour la Recherche Musicale.
He was affiliated with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company since its inception
in the summer of 1953. With the death of John Cage in August 1992, Tudor succeeded
him as Musical Director. The Company has commissioned many works, including RainForest
I (1968), Toneburst (1974), Forest Speech (1976), Weatherings (1978), Phonemes
(1981), Sextex for Seven (1982), Fragments (1984), Webwork (1987), and Virtual
Focus (1990). Neural Synthesis (1992) was created for Cunningham's Dance, Enter;
and most recently, Soundings: Ocean Diary (1994) for John Cage's last conception,
Ocean.
Tudor died Tuesday, August 13, 1996, at his home in Tomkins Cove, New York. He
was 70 years old.
Discography (selected)

Three Works for Live Electronics, Lovely Music, Ltd. CD 1601, 1996
Rainforest, Mode Records, CD 64
Neural Synthesis Nos. 6-9, Lovely Music, Ltd. CD 1602 (2 CDs), 1995
Neural Synthesis No. 2, Ear-Rational ECD 1039, 1993
Dialects (excerpt), on "Imaginary Landscapes," Elektra/Nonesuch 79235-2,
1989
RainForest IV, Edition Block (Berlin), 1985
Pulsers & Untitled, Lovely Music, Ltd. LP 1601,1984
Microphone, Cramps CRSLP116, 1975
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