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Berio, Luciano
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Berio, Luciano (1925–2003)

Italian composer. His work, usually involving electronic sound, combines serial techniques with commedia dell'arte and antiphonal practices, as in Alleluiah II (1958) for five instrumental groups. His large output includes 11 Sequenzas/Sequences (1958–85) for various solo instruments or voice, Sinfonia (1968) for voices and orchestra, Formazioni/Formations (1987) for orchestra, and the opera Un re in ascolto/A King Listens (1984).

Although Berio's compositional techniques are severe, the effect is softened by wit and theatricality. He was one of the most active composers of electronic music and worked with Boulez at the Institut de Recherche et de Co-ordination Acoustique/Musique (IRCAM). He also used graphic notation, and many of his works leave the performer with a wide range of choices. He was particularly interested in exploring the possibilities of language as developed in musical performance.

Berio was born in Oneglia, Italy. After studying with Giorgio Ghedini in Milan and with Luigi Dallapiccola in the USA, he met members of the European avant-garde such as Karlheinz Stockhausen, Pierre Boulez, and Bruno Maderna. With Maderna he founded an electronic studio, the Studio di Fonologia Musicale, at Milan Radio in 1953–60. He lived in the USA from 1963 to 1972, teaching at the Juilliard School, New York, in 1965–72. He was married 1950–65 to the US soprano Cathy Berberian, who gave the first performances of many of his works.

Works

Dramatic

Laborintus II (Paris, 1970), Recital I (for Cathy) (Lisbon, 1972), La vera storia/The True Story, opera (Milan, 1982), Un Re in ascolto, opera (Salzburg, 1984).

Orchestral

Chemins I–IV, after Sequenze/Sequences for instruments (1965–75), Concerto for two pianos and orchestra (1973), Points on the curve to find .. for piano and 20 instruments (1974), Concerto II (Echoing Curves) for piano and ensemble (1988).

Vocal

Chamber Music (texts by James Joyce; 1953), Circles for female voice, harp, and two percussion (texts by E E Cummings; 1960), Epifanie for female voice and orchestra (texts by Marcel Proust, James Joyce, Bertolt Brecht, and others; 1961), Sinfonia for eight solo voices and orchestra (1968), Ora (text after Virgil; 1971), Cries of London, for eight solo voices (1973–75), 11 Folk Songs for mezzo and orchestra (1975), Coro for 40 voices and orchestra (1976).

Chamber and instrumental

the important series of Sequenze (I–XI) for solo instruments: flute, harp, voice, piano, trombone, viola, oboe, violin, clarinet, trumpet, and guitar (1958–85), Wasserklavier/Waterpiano for piano (1964), and a second string quartet (1986–90).



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Audiences are not exposed to as much Schoenberg, Berio, and Reich because many lack the understanding to fully appreciate it.
It was at this point, and inspired by Webern's tiny opus (his entire oeuvre is recorded on only four CDs), that the architects of high modernism in the Second World War period (Stockhausen and Kagel in Germany, Boulez in France, Nono and Berio in Italy), expanded the serial idea.
The program includes `Redline Tango' by John Mackey, Octet for Winds by Igor Stravinsky, ``O King'' by Luciano Berio with Brian McWhorter as trumpet soloist and ``The Leaves Are Falling'' by Warren Benson.
 
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