Bernardo Kuczer

Bernardo Mario Kuczer
Kuczer's publishing logo

Bernardo Mario Kuczer (born 30 April 1955) is an Argentinian composer, music theoretician and architect.

Biography

Argentina

Bernardo Mario Kuczer[1] was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 30 April 1955. Until his early twenties, he was involved in rock music as composer and guitarist, writing also music for the theatre. Simultaneously, he studied architecture and graduated in 1978.

Through the study of the classical guitar with Hector Rocha and then with Jorge Panitsch he came into classical music. He studied harmony and musical analysis with Nestor Zadoff and then with Sergio Hualpa and later Renaissance counterpoint with Nestor Zadoff. He became a member of an interdisciplinary music investigation group, collaborating with psychologists, biologists, doctors and musicologists.

In 1979 he presented a thesis under the supervision of Sergio Hualpa with own ideas about "the Basic Components of Music, their multiple interrelations and a special kind of "energy" generated by their uni- and multidimensional dynamic interactions, an energy which determines and enables the micro and macro Articulation of the Music-stream". The thesis was first named: "La forma natural de la música"[2] ("The natural ways of music"), then "The New Connections"[3] and later "Música sin el Factor Humano"[4] ("Music without the Human Factor").

Europe

In 1980, Kuczer went to London to study the viola da gamba, abandoning it shortly after for starting composition.

His first ensemble piece ("Even ... the loudest sky") (1981) for saxophone quartet, was selected by the British SPNM (Society for the Promotion of New Music) for the "composers' week-end", London 1981.[5]

Kuczer arrived in Freiburg in 1983 to study composition with Brian Ferneyhough. He felt however very soon the need to continue his way in music alone.

In 1984 he was invited to participate of the "International Summer Courses for New Music" at Darmstadt,[Notes 1] where several pieces of his tape-cycle Civilización o Barbarie received a first performance and where he was awarded, as first Latin American composer,[6] the "Kranichsteiner Musikpreis" (Kranichstein Music Prize).

In 1986, for the next edition of the Darmstadt Courses, he was invited to perform a second concert with works of his tape-cycle.[Notes 2]

Civilización o Barbarie[Notes 3] was later selected, as personal choice of the jury, by Klaus Huber (one of the three jurors),[7] for the "World Music Days" of the ISCM (International Society for Contemporary Music) held in 1987 in Cologne.[8]

During 1990 he was a stipendiary of the "Heinrich-Strobel-Stiftung" (Heinrich Strobel Foundation) of the broadcasting service Südwestrundfunk.

After 1999 he remained apart and distant to the active music and concert scene.

Since 2000, he has been working extensively with computers, designing, writing and developing his own computer programs. These programs, which are based on and are used to further research his personal hypotheses, models and theoretical ideas about harmony, rhythm, sound, musical form and "Music-Stream", have also been used to generate his latest digital works.

At times and complementary to his main musical activities, Kuczer has been active in other fields of art. He has produced more than 800 paintings, sculptures, as well as designed his own furniture. As a writer he has written some 250 poems and two (still unpublished) books, the title of the first one being: "Salvas de Guerra" (contra La Música)"[9] ["War Salvos" (against Music)]. He also produced and musicalised an own documentary film: "Vida ?" (por un Espacio Poético o una Poesía del Espacio-Tiempo), una documentación"[10] ["Life ?" for a Poetic Space or a Space-Time Poetry, a documentation].

Work and performances

Kuczer's musical oeuvre comprises more than 81 (principal) works (with some 110 individual "named" pieces) covering different areas of music (e.g. instrumental music, tape music, electroacoustic music, computer music, algorithmic compositions and digital music).

More than 60 of his works have remained unperformed (and mostly unrevealed). Several of his instrumental pieces were and/or are still considered unplayable. His Saxophone Quartet (1981) was first regarded as unplayable until 1994, when it was given its first performance.[Notes 4][Notes 5] Some of his works have been played and broadcast in various European cities and elsewhere.

Examples:

Press reviews

... the real revelation of this disc is Argentinian Bernardo Maria Kuczer, whose "even ... The loudest sky!!" is one of the wildest things I've heard for some time. Brilliantly written (fiendishly difficult) and played with utter conviction, it makes you wonder what Kuczer's been up to since he wrote this back in 1981. Anything new by either Kuczer or [the saxophone ensemble] Xasax is welcome here.[11]

On the 2 May 1996, Fara C. wrote in the world music magazine World:

..., and " Even … The loudest sky!!! ", composed by the Argentine Bernardo Kuczer in 1981. This work reaches a summit of complexity such as it had never been played before the world creation of Xasax in 1994 ! Six months of hard work were necessary to the group to triumph over these supernatural seven minutes. A musical intensity which the quartet will make us share with crazy pleasure.[12]

The Belgian musicologist Harry Halbreich wrote a review about the Darmstadt International Summer Courses of New Music 1984, published in the monthly magazine Le Monde de la musique:

However, the end of the evening had to be spent... in the company of the Argentinian Bernardo Kuczer living in Germany and some of his apocalyptic electroacoustic pieces grouped into an immense cycle under the title Civilización o Barbarie. I admit that I fled. But two days later I was able to hear again, at a somewhat more bearable volume level, these extraordinary pieces of music of a visionary madman, skinned alive, bleeding shreds of flesh of a prodigious expressive power, produced, paradoxically, with a simple cassette tape recorder![13]

Work list

Notes

  1. The invitation was made on behalf of Brian Ferneyhough, who had the chance to hear some of the pieces beforehand. In a letter to the organizers he wrote: "In my opinion these pieces... are partly of very great interest". And later: "... I consider him to be a major composer in this area". (Original German: "... Ich halte ihn für einen bedeutenden Komponisten in diesem Bereich...") Taken from a letter from Ferneyhough to the organizers of the Darmstädter Ferienkurse from 9 May 1984. While the (German) original stays at the IMD archive, a copy of this letter can be found at http://bernardomariokuczer.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoid=186151395.
  2. During these summer courses, his piece A-gent's Arguum for solo viola, from 1982, was premiered. For this performance, mainly, the soloist, Barbara Maurer, received the Kranichsteiner Musikpreis for interpreters.
  3. The title "Civilización o Barbarie" is a paraphrase of the title of a book by the Argentine author and statesman Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, published in 1845.
  4. This live performance by the XASAX Saxophone quartet, which occurred on 23 April 1994 and which is billed as the work's premiere in the CD's leaflet, was included in the "CD-Dokumentation Nº 2", from the Wittener Tage für Neue Kammermusik 1994, WDR Köln (wd 05/2). The same ensemble made a second studio recording of the work, for the record label hat[now]art, which is included in Xasax "Ars subtilior", Label Code: LC 6048.
  5. More recently, in January 2014, the Fukio Ensemble played the piece at the Berlin University of the Arts, at the finals of the Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdi competition, where they were awarded the 1st prize in the category New Chamber Music.

References

  1. A short biography of the artist is included in the "Handbuch der Musik im 20. Jahrhundert" ("Handbook of the Music in the 20th Century"), by Frieder Reininghaus, Florian Lutz and Detlef Brandenburg, Band 13, 4, page 330, Laaber-Verlag, 2007.
  2. The musical examples to this version are registered as GEMA-Werk-Nr:13769793-001.
  3. The musical examples to this version are registered as GEMA-Werk-Nr:13769792-001.
  4. The musical examples to this version are registered as GEMA-Werk-Nr:13769790-001.
  5. SPNM, Report of the Executive Committee for the period 1/4/81-31/3/82, page 2.
  6. Chronology of the Kranichsteiner Musikpreis
  7. IGNM Weltmusiktage 1987, General Program book, page 13, Druck- und Verlagshaus Vienand Köln
  8. IGNM Weltmusiktage 1987, General Program book, page 15, Druck- und Verlagshaus Vienand Köln
  9. The musical examples for the book are registered as GEMA-Werk-Nr:13769794-001
  10. The music for the film is registered under the same name as GEMA-Werk-Nr:13769787-001
  11. Best of Paris Transatlantic
  12. Concerts Critics, Maison de la Culture of Amiens 1996
  13. Halbreich, Harry (November 1984). "Darmstadt International Summer Courses of New Music". Le Monde de la musique.
  14. The wind quintet was commissioned by the "Kultusministerium Baden-Württemberg" for the ensemble "Aventure" in 1986. The work (including the making of the score and parts, as well as the preparation of the theoretical material that accompanies it) took the full next five years to be completed. It has also remained unperformed up to this day (August 2013).
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