Georgs Pelēcis


Georgs Pelēcis is a Latvian composer and musicologist. He is currently a professor at the Latvian Academy of Music.

Academic and compositional career

Pelēcis was born in Riga. He studied under Aram Khachaturian at the Moscow Conservatory, and post-graduate music theory studies with Vladimir Protopopov. At the Latvian State Conservatory he became a lecturer, then professor of counterpoint and fugue. He has worked in a creative capacity at Oxford University and Cambridge University.
His style has been described as post-avant-garde, or as "new consonant music", with an "amazingly clear positive spirit". The Concertina Bianca for piano and strings, for instance, is described as "in the key of C major" and restricted to the white keys only, with no accidentals. This approach has its critics. Gramophone called the piece as "so mild in its manner that it seems to be aspiring to the status of a backing track to an entry for the Eurovision Song Contest".
His 45 minute orchestral score for Roald Dahl's Jack and the Beanstalk was premiered at the Royal Albert Hall in December 1996 with Simon Callow, Danny DeVito and Joanna Lumley as co-narrators. More recently, recordings and live performances by pianists Tamara-Anna Cislowska, Alexei Lubimov and Polina Osetinskaya, and by violinist Gidon Kremer, have helped establish his popularity.

Selected works

All in the Past/Remembering Oskar Strock, tango for violin and strings

Musicology

Pelēcis' musicological work focuses on musical form in work from the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Baroque eras. He has written theses focusing on the work of Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and Johannes Ockeghem.
Pelēcis teaches the history of theory and counterpoint at the Latvian Academy of Music, and was the first president of the Riga Center for Early Music.