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Born in Paide, Estonia in 1935, Pärt's musical studies began in 1954 at
the Tallinn Music Middle School, interrupted less than a year later while
he fulfilled his National Service obligation as oboist and side-drummer in
an army band. He returned to Middle School for a year before advancing to
the Tallinn Conservatory in 1957 where his composition teacher was Professor
Heino Eller. Pärt started work as a recording engineer with Estonian
Radio, wrote music for the stage and received numerous commisions for film
scores so that, by the time he graduated from the Conservatory in 1963, he
could already be considered a professional composer. A year before leaving,
he won first prize in the All-Union Young Composers' Competition for a
children's cantata, Our Garden, and an oratorio, Stride of The
World.
Living in the old Soviet Union, Pärt had little access to what was
happening in contemporary Western music but, despite such isolation, the
early 1960s in Estonia saw many new methods of composition being brought
into use and Pärt was at the fore-front; his Nekrolog of 1960
was the first Estonian composition to employ serial technique. He continued
with serialism through to the mid 60s in pieces such as the 1st and
2nd Symphonies and Perpetuum Mobile, but ultimately tired of
its rigours and moved on to experiment, in works such as Collage on
B-A-C-H, with collage techniques.
Official judgement of Pärt's music veered between extremes, with
certain works being praised while others, for example the Credo of
1968, were banned. This would prove to be the last of his collage pieces and
after its composition, Pärt chose to enter the first of several periods
of contemplative silence, also using the time to study French and
Franco-Flemish choral part music from the 14th to 16th centuries - Machaut,
Ockeghem, Obrecht, Josquin. At the very beginning of the '70's, he wrote a
few transitional compositions in the spirit of early European polyphony, the
3rd Symphony of 1971 being an example: "a joyous piece of music" but
not yet "the end of my despair and search."
Pärt turned again to self-imposed silence, during which time he
delved back through the medievalism of his 3rd Symphony and through
plainchant to the very dawn of musical invention. He re-emerged in 1976
after a transformation so radical as to make his previous music almost
unrecognisable as that of same composer. The technique he invented, or
discovered, and to which he has remained loyal, practically without
exception, he calls tintinnabuli (from the Latin, little bells), which he
describes thus: "I have discovered that it is enough when a single note is
beautifully played. This one note, or a silent beat, or a moment of
silence, comforts me. I work with very few elements - with one voice, two
voices. I build with primitive materials - with the triad, with one
specific tonality. The three notes of a triad are like bells and that is
why I call it tintinnabulation."
The basic guiding principle behind tintinnabulation of composing two
simultaneous voices as one line - one voice moving stepwise from and to a
central pitch, first up then down, and the other sounding the notes of the
triad - made its first public appearance in the short piano piece,
Für Alina. While typically in tintinnabuli the melodic voice is
based on an abstract procedure or derived from text, here the melody is
freely composed, but with the two voices irrevocably joined according to the
tintinnabuli principle. The right hand plays notes from the scale of B
minor, while the left hand plays notes from the B minor triad. There is only
one exception, marked by a single flower drawn in the score, where the left
hand plays a new note - a C sharp.
Having found his voice, there was a subsequent rush of new works and
three of the 1977 pieces (Fratres, Cantus In Memoriam Benjamin
Britten and Tabula Rasa) are still amongst his most highly
regarded. As Pärt's music began to be performed in the west and he
continued to struggle against Soviet officialdom, his frustration ultimately
forced him, his wife Nora and their two sons, to emigrate in 1980. They
never made it to their intended destination of Israel but, with the
assistance of his publisher in the West, settled firstly in Vienna, where he
took Austrian citizenship. One year later, with a scholarship from the
German Academic Exchange, he moved to West Berlin where he still lives.
Since leaving Estonia, Pärt has concentrated on setting religious
texts for various forces. Large scale works include St. John Passion
(1982), Te Deum (1984-86, rev. 1993) and Litany (1994). Works
for SATB choir such as Magnificat (1989) and The Beatitudes
(1990) have proved popular with choirs around the world and there is a
growing ouvre of works for string orchestra and various chamber ensembles;
numerous versions of Fratres (1976-date), Cantus In Memoriam
Benjamin Britten (1977/80), Festina Lente (1988) and Siloun's
Song (1991). Among his champions in the West have been Manfred Eicher's
ECM Records who released the first recordings of Pärt's music outside
the Soviet bloc, Paul Hillier's Hilliard Ensemble (and laterly Theatre of
Voices) who have premiered several of the vocal works and Neeme Järvi, a
long time collaborator of Pärt who conducted the premiere of
Credo in Tallinn in 1968 and has, as well as recording the
tintinnabuli pieces, introduced through performances and recordings,
Pärt's earlier compositions.
Pärt's achievements were honoured in his 61st year by his election
to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
For an in-depth study of Pärt's music, refer to Paul Hillier's book "Arvo Pärt" in the Oxford University Press "Oxford Studies of
Composers" series (published May 1997)
Copyright © Doug Maskew, 1997.
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