Of Hungarian-Jewish origin, Ligeti made his career in Hungary until 1956, when
he escaped to Vienna, there to be influenced by contact with more experimental
Western techniques of composition, notably with work at the electronic studios
in Cologne. His music now achieved a wider international reputation, incorporating
contemporary techniques and experiment in a musical idiom that has proved both
influential and palatable.
Opera
Ligeti’s 1977 opera
Le grand macabre, set in a land derived from the paintings of Breughel, is an allusive work, drawing on a variety of sources, from Monteverdi to Beethoven and opening with a motor-horn prelude
Orchestral Music
It was with compositions such as
Apparitions in 1959 and
Atmosphères in 1961, the latter a 48-part mirror canon, that Ligeti began to win a wider reputation. Other orchestral works that aroused interest included a
Chamber Concerto for thirteen instruments, the
Cello Concerto and the
Concerto for flute, oboe and strings.
Lontano, written in 1967, has a place in contemporary repertoire, with
Ramifications, for twelve strings and
San Francisco Polyphony. He also wrote concertos for piano, for violin and for French horn.
Chamber Music
In the second of his string quartets, Ligeti made a strong impression, while his
Ten Pieces for wind quintet allow a degree of individual virtuosity to the players.
Keyboard Music
Ligeti’s piano
Etudes increased in number over the years, a product, he modestly explained, of the inadequacy of his own piano technique, works that he described as neither avant-garde nor traditional, drawing allusively on a wide variety of sources. Some of the
Etudes make extreme technical demands on the performer.
Vocal Music
Aventures in 1962 and
Nouvelles Aventures four years later, for three voices and a small ensemble, are examples of Ligeti’s blend of humour and seriousness.
His
Requiem, completed in 1965, makes considerable use of counterpoint and is a moving and colourful work. It was followed by
Lux aeterna, a setting of the last part of the Requiem Mass, for sixteen solo voices, in which he again makes considerable use of the technique of canon. His
Nonsense Madrigals include settings of words from Lewis Carroll.
(Keith Anderson)