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Vytautas Bacevičius

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Name
  
Vytautas Bacevicius

Role
  
Composer

Siblings
  
Grazyna Bacewicz


Vytautas Bacevicius staticmicltmediafilerpublic1d3d1d3d71ad50

Died
  
January 15, 1970, New York, United States

Gabrielius alekna quatri me mot op 31 by vytautas bacevi ius


Vytautas Bacevičius (Łódź, Poland (then Russian Empire), 9 September 1905 – New York City, United States, 15 January 1970) was a Lithuanian composer of radical and modernistic leanings. Most of his works are in an atonal idiom of his own devising. He developed a theory of 'cosmic music' and came to regard Schoenberg's 12-note music as out-dated, regarding himself as a successor to Scriabin, André Jolivet and Varèse.

Contents

Bacevičius studied in Łódź with, among others, Kazimierz Sikorski and moved to Kaunas in Lithuania in 1926. In 1927 he went to Paris where he studied composition with Nikolai Tcherepnin. Returning to Lithuania in 1928 he established himself as a pianist and composer and teacher. He became the Chair of the Lithuanian Section of the ISCM. He was on tour in Argentina in 1939 when the Germans invaded Lithuania, rendering him an exile in America. He moved to the United States in 1940 and lived mainly in New York, continuing to give recitals but mainly supporting himself by teaching.

Though born in Poland, he adopted the Lithuanian form of his name (Bacevičius); he was the brother of the Polish composer Grażyna Bacewicz, to whom he dedicated his Second Symphony, della Guerra, in 1940. Bacevičius regarded his orchestral works as the most important part of his output, and composed six symphonies in all as well as four piano concertos, a violin concerto and numerous works for piano solo.

Gabrielius alekna premier mot op 18 by vytautas bacevi ius


Works

Worklist

Recordings

  • Orchestral Music: Graphique, Poème Électrique, Piano Concerto No. 1, Sur les thèmes lituaniens, Symphony No. 2, Della Guerra, Symphony No. 6, Cosmique; Aidas Puodžiukas, piano. Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra dir. Vytautas Lukočius and Martynas Staškus, conductors. Toccata Classics 2007
  • References

    Vytautas Bacevičius Wikipedia