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Reinhard Febel
German composer, music theorist, academic

Reinhard Febel

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German composer, music theorist, academic
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Gender
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Place of birth
Metzingen
Age
72 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Reinhard Febel (born 3 July 1952) is a German composer, notable for his operas. He is also a music theorist and a university professor at the Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover and the Mozarteum.

Career

Febel was born in Metzingen, Baden-Württemberg, and first studied music and piano with Jürgen Uhde at the Musikhochschule Stuttgart. On a recommendation from Helmut Lachenmann he studied composition from 1979, with Klaus Huber at the Hochschule für Musik Freiburg and at the IRCAM in Paris where he attended courses in electronic music in 1982. On a commission of the Bayerische Staatsoper he composed the chamber opera Euridice, premiered in 1983. He described his work "The musical world of Euridice is a hybrid of instrumentation, pastiche, collage, composition, sound-noise, and song-language-speech particles." He worked from 1983 to 1988 as a freelance composer in London, in 1984 in Rome on a scholarship of the Villa Massimo. In 1985 his Symphony, composed for the Youth Orchestra of the European Community, was premiered at the Donaueschinger Musiktage.

In 1989 he took over the Chair of Composition and Music Theory at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hannover. In 1992 his opera in three acts Sekunden und Jahre des Caspar Hauser (Seconds and years of Caspar Hauser) on a libretto by Lukas Hemleb was premiered at the Opernhaus Dortmund. In 1996 WERGO recorded his Variations for Orchestra, Das Unendliche (The Infinite) for mezzo-soprano, baritone and orchestra, and his first string quartet, played by the Arditti Quartet. Joseph Stevenson described Variations for Orchestra as "a highly individual, strikingly mysterious one-movement orchestral piece in a post-modern style that mixes tonality and atonality in a freely chromatic technique." Das Unendliche on a poem by Giacomo Leopardi begins with an instrumental reference to the opera Euridice. The string quartet shows elements of American Minimal music and is written in a notation of eight lines, two for each player. In 2003 Wolkenstein, Lieder und Chöre nach Texten und Melodien des Oswald von Wolkenstein (Wolkenstein, songs and choruses after texts and tunes of Oswald von Wolkenstein) was first performed at the Berliner Philharmonie. Triptychon is a "Kammermusiktheater für zwei Sänger, zwei Schauspieler und Kammerorchester nach drei Gemälden von Frida Kahlo, Edward Hopper und Diego Velázquez" (chamber music theater for two singers, two actors and chamber orchestra on three paintings by Frida Kahlo, Edward Hopper and Diego Velázquez) on a text by the composer. The three parts are entitled "Frida", "Gespensterhaus" (Ghost house) and "Raum 17" (Room 17). The opera was premiered in 2009 at the Opernhaus Kiel.

Over the years he spent periods of study, teaching and composing abroad, including in South America (Chile, Peru, Uruguay, Argentina), New Zealand, South Africa (University of Natal) and Cameroon, and in cities such as Skopje, Edinburgh and Riga. Since 1997 he has been professor of composition at the Mozarteum University of Salzburg.

Stage works

PremiereTitleDescriptionLibretto and source
1983111010 Nov 1983, Munich, Bayerische StaatsoperEuridiceChamber opera, 80'Helmut Danninger, after Ottavio Rinuccini's libretto for Jacopo Peri
1988051515 May 1988, Opernhaus KielNacht mit GästenMusic-theatrethe composer after the eponymous play by Peter Weiss
1992041212 Apr 1992, Opernhaus DortmundSekunden und Jahre des Caspar HauserOpera in three acts and nine scenesLukas Hemleb
199411066 Nov 1994, Staatstheater DarmstadtMorels ErfindungOpera in one actLukas Hemleb, after La invención de Morel by Adolfo Bioy Casares
1996091414 Sep 1996, Theater HagenBeautyMusic-theatreLukas Hemleb, after a newspaper article
2005122020 Dec 2005, WDR KölnDesert InnRadio play
2001051010 May 2001, Oper BonnBesuchszeitMusic-theatre for three actors and music, 60'the composer
2003062222 Mar 2003, Philharmonie BerlinWolkensteinLieder after texts and melodies of Oswald von Wolkensteinadditional texts by the composer
200508011 Aug 2005, Toihaus Salzburg / TRT Taschenopern-FestivalFrida20'. Ein Traumbild after Unos quantos piquetitos by Frida Kahlothe composer
200708011 Aug 2007, Toihaus Salzburg / TRT Taschenopern-FestivalGespensterhausKammermusiktheater, 30'. Ein Horrorbild after Haunted House by Edward Hopperthe composer
2009051616 May 2009, Opernhaus KielRaum 17Music-theatre after the Rokeby Venus by Diego Velasquezthe composer

Frida, Gespensterhaus and Raum 17 were presented as Triptychon, an operatic triptych based on paintings.

Febel's works have been published by Ricordi.

Awards

  • 1980 Beethoven Prize (de) of Bonn
  • 1984 Villa Massimo
  • 1988 Johann-Wenzel-Stamitz-Preis (de)

Publications

  • Reinhard Febel: Musik für zwei Klaviere seit 1950 als Spiegel der Kompositionstechnik. Pfau Verlag, Saarbrücken 1998.
  • Rainer Nonnemann (ed.) and Reinhard Febel: Alles ständig in Bewegung: Texte zur Musik 1976–2003. Pfau Verlag, Saarbrücken 2004.

Literature

  • Günter Katzenberger (editor): Reinhard Febel. Beiträge zu seinem musikalischen Schaffen. Hannoversche Gesellschaft für Neue Musik. Ricordi, Feldkirchen 1994, ISBN 3-9803090-4-5.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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