Bruno Maderna


Bruno Maderna was an Italian composer, conductor and academic teacher.

Life

Maderna was born Bruno Grossato in Venice but later decided to take the name of his mother, Caterina Carolina Maderna. At the age of four, he began studying the violin with his grandfather. "My grandfather thought that if you could play the violin you could then do anything, even become the biggest gangster. If you play the violin you are always sure of a place in heaven." As a child, he played several instruments in his father's small variety band. A child prodigy, in the early thirties, he was not only performing violin concertos, he was already conducting orchestral concerts: first with the orchestra of La Scala in Milan, then in Trieste, Venice, Padua and Verona. He was originally Jewish.
Orphaned at the age of four, Maderna was adopted by a wealthy woman from Verona, Irma Manfredi, who saw to it that he received a solid musical education. He took private lessons in harmony and musical composition from Arrigo Pedrollo from 1935 until 1937 and studied composition with Alessandro Bustini at the Rome Conservatory from 1937 until 1940.
After Rome, he returned to Venice, where he attended the advanced course for composers organised by Gian Francesco Malipiero at the Benedetto Marcello Conservatory. He also studied conducting with Antonio Guarnieri at the Accademia Chigiana in Siena and Hermann Scherchen in Venice. Through Scherchen Maderna discovered twelve-tone technique and the music of the Second Viennese School.
During the Second World War, he took part in the partisan resistance. From 1948 to 1952, he taught music theory at the Venice Conservatory. During this period, he collaborated with Malipiero on critical editions of Italian early music. Fellow composers he met at this time included Luigi Dallapiccola and, at the Internationale Ferienkurse für Neue Musik, Boulez, Messiaen, Cage, Pousseur, Nono and Stockhausen.

Conductor/teacher

In 1950, Maderna started an international career as a conductor, first in Paris and Munich, then across Europe. In 1955, he founded the Studio di fonologia musicale di Radio Milano with Luciano Berio and Incontri musicali, a series of concerts disseminating contemporary music in Italy.
With his later wife Beate Christina Koepnick, a young actress from Darmstadt, Maderna had three children.
In 1957–58, at the invitation of Giorgio Federico Ghedini, he taught at the Milan Conservatory, and between 1960 and 1962 he lectured at Dartington International Summer School in England. From 1961 to 1966, Maderna and Pierre Boulez were the main directors of the International Kranichsteiner Kammerensemble in Darmstadt. Despite this heavy workload throughout these years Maderna found time to compose.
During the 1960s and '70s, he spent much time in the United States, teaching and conducting. In 1971–72, he was appointed director of new music at Tanglewood. In 1972–73, he became the principal conductor of the Orchestra Sinfonica of RAI in Milan.
Maderna died of lung cancer in Darmstadt in 1973, at the age of 53. A number of composers wrote pieces in Maderna's memory, including Pierre Boulez and Luciano Berio. Earle Brown's Centering, dedicated to the memory of Maderna, ends with a short quotation from Maderna's First Oboe Concerto.

Work

Maderna composed much music in all genres: instrumental, chamber, concertos and electronic, as well as large amounts of incidental music and transcriptions and editions of early music.
At the heart of Maderna's output are a number of concertos, including one for violin, one for two pianos, two for solo piano and several for flute and orchestra. He was particularly drawn to the oboe, composing three concertos in all: the first in 1962–63, followed by two more in 1967 and 1973.
Other major orchestral works include Aura and Biogramma and Quadrivium, for four percussionists and four orchestral groups. Giuseppe Sinopoli recorded all three of these pieces with the North German Radio Symphony Orchestra in 1979. Maderna's Requiem, composed between 1944 and 1946, was rediscovered and performed in 2009; the American composer Virgil Thomson saw an unfinished version of the score in 1946 and praised it as a masterpiece.
Bruno Maderna also produced scores for eight films and two documentaries. The last of these was for Giulio Questi's thriller La morte ha fatto l'uovo in 1968.
His opera, Satyricon, was premiered in 1973.
Maderna was certainly also a prominent composer in genres such as electronic music, experimental music and avant-garde music. His work Musica su due dimensioni for flute, cymbals, and tape, which premiered at the Darmstadt Summer Courses for New Music in 1952, is one of the earliest examples of a composer combining acoustic and electronic sounds.

Recordings (as a conductor)

  • Luna Alcalay: Una strofa di Dante
  • Béla Bartók: Piano Concerto No. 1
  • Alban Berg:
  • * Orchesterlieder nach Ansichtskartentexten von Peter Altenberg, Op. 4
  • * Drei Orchesterstücke, Op. 6
  • * Wozzeck
  • * Lulu
  • * Lulu Suite
  • Konrad Boehmer: Position
  • Pierre Boulez:
  • * Le marteau sans maître
  • * Figures—Doubles—Prismes
  • * Polyphonie X
  • Johannes Brahms: Double concerto
  • Earle Brown: Available Forms I on Panorama della musica nuova
  • : In nuce, Op. 7
  • : Plejaden No. 2
  • Włodzimierz Kotoński: Canto
  • György Ligeti: Aventures/''Nouvelles Aventures
  • Franz Liszt: Tasso: lamento e trionfo
  • Witold Lutosławski: Jeux Vénitiens
  • Gustav Mahler:
  • * Symphonie No. 7
  • * Symphonie No. 9
  • Gian Francesco Malipiero: Sinfonia della Zodiaco
  • Felix Mendelssohn: Symphonie No. 3
  • Claudio Monteverdi: L'Orfeo
  • Mozart: Symphonie No. 18, KV 130
  • Bo Nilsson: Szene No. 3, 1961
  • Luigi Nono: Il canto sospeso
  • Krzysztof Penderecki: Tren Ofiarom Hiroszimy
  • Goffredo Petrassi: Noche Oscura
  • Henri Pousseur: Rimes pour différentes sources sonores on Panorama della musica nuova RCA MLDS 61005, 1964
  • Maurice Ravel: L'heure espagnole
  • Arnold Schoenberg:
  • * Verklärte Nacht, Op. 4
  • * Pelleas und Melisande, Op. 5
  • * 5 Orchesterstücke, Op. 16
  • * Serenade, Op. 24/Suite, Op. 29
  • * Variations for Orchestra, Op.31
  • * Violin Concerto, Op. 36
  • * Chamber Symphony No. 2, Op. 38
  • * Piano Concerto, Op. 42
  • * Genesis, Op. 44
  • * A Survivor from Warsaw, Op. 46
  • Robert Schollum: Symphonie No. 4, Op. 74
  • Karlheinz Stockhausen:
  • * Gruppen für drei Orchester
  • * Kontra-Punkte on Panorama della musica nuova
  • Igor Stravinsky: Le Sacre du Printemps
  • Edgard Varèse:
  • * Déserts
  • * Ionisation
  • Richard Wagner: Siegfried Idyll
  • Anton Webern:
  • * Sechs Stücke für Orchester, Op. 6
  • * Vier Lieder, Op. 13
  • * Sechs Lieder, Op. 14
  • * Concerto'', Op. 24