John Borstlap


John Borstlap is a Dutch composer and author on cultural subjects related to music and the visual arts. His work is rooted in German musical traditions and he is a proponent of a revival of tonal and classical traditions.

Education

John Borstlap studied from 1968 through 1973 at the conservatory in Rotterdam, composition with Otto Ketting and Theo Loevendie, and piano with Elly Salomé. He took a Masters Degree at the University of Cambridge

Early career

After moving to Delft in 1976, Borstlap made a living by private piano teaching and accompanying ballet classes, while carrying out extensive musical studies, as well as studies in art history and Jungian psychology. The American pianist Christopher Czaja Sager, who had shortly before settled in the Netherlands, discovered some of his piano pieces which he performed many times, including radio recordings. In 1981 Sager premiered Borstlap's Variations for piano and string orchestra with the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra under Antoni Ros-Marbà with performances in Amsterdam and The Hague.

Cambridge and beyond

On the basis of two prizes he had meanwhile won with his Violin Concerto, Borstlap successfully competed in 1984 for a year postgraduate study at Cambridge University on a full British Council Scholarship, where he obtained his Degree of Master of Philosophy in 1986. At the music faculty he studied with Alexander Goehr. As Borstlap wrote in his book, The Classical Revolution, "understanding the Schönbergian heritage would mean understanding of the origin of musical modernism".
In 1990 the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra under Hartmut Haenchen performed Borstlap's first symphony, Sinfonia.
In the nineties Borstlap was involved in various projects, such as an extensive national concert tour of the Ludwig Trio for which he wrote a string trio, and the production of a CD with his chamber music Hyperion’s Dream. In 1998 he organized a classical chamber music festival in Haarlem. While working on his music, his writings on musical and wider cultural subjects began to be published.
The beginning of the new millennium saw various performances of his elaboration of a Wagner sketch, Psyche, in Manchester, the Netherlands and Romania, and the publication of a long essay: Recreating the Classical Tradition in the tome Reviving the Muse in which Borstlap formulated his latest ideas about the possibilities of a revival of the tonal tradition.
In 2002–2005 Borstlap campaigned, together with two colleagues, for a reform of the national subsidy system for new music. A court case in 2012 against the national funding body for new music, which Borstlap won, ended a period of public contestation.
Psyche received a successful performance by the Orchestre National de Montpellier in 2008. Since then, interest in Germany and Austria has grown, resulting among other things in a commission by the Kammersymphonie Berlin for a classical symphony. In 2013 his book The Classical Revolution was published by the Scarecrow Press, followed by a second edition in 2017 by Dover.
In 2016 his Feierliche Abendmusik received successful performances by the Dallas Symphony and the Hong Kong Philharmonic under conductor Jaap van Zweden.

Works

Orchestral / operatic music

  • Invocazione for orchestra
  • Violin Concerto for violin and orchestra
  • Violin Concerto no. 2, Dreamscape Voyage
  • Variations for pianoforte and strings
  • Psyche for orchestra
  • Capriccio, orchestral version
  • Flucht nach Kythera, opera/monodrama for soprano, choir and chamber orchestra
  • Four Tagore Poems for soprano and chamber orchestra
  • ''Feierliche Abendmusik''

    Symphonies

  • Symphony No. 1, Sinfonia for chamber orchestra
  • Symphony No. 2
  • Symphony No. 3 Classical Symphony for orchestra

    Chamber music (selection)

  • 1969: Three Preludes for solo piano
  • 1975: Sonata for solo piano
  • 1980: Avatâra for pianoforte solo
  • Six Chinese Poems for soprano and piano
  • Fantasia for solo piano
  • Paraphrase for an ensemble of flute, clarinet, violin, violoncello and soprano
  • Hyperion’s Dream for violoncello and pianoforte
  • Night Music for viola and piano
  • Capriccio for violin, horn and piano
  • Trio for violin, viola and violoncello
  • Traum, Lenz, Verwandlung for string quartet
  • Three Duets for violin and piano
  • Rajanigandha, Seven poems by Rabindranath Tagore for soprano, flute and pianoforte
  • Serenade for flute, violin, violoncello and piano

    Selected writings

  • "Postmodernism and New Music", in Maatstaf, cultural magazine in the Netherlands, 1988/4.
  • "Towards a Dynamic Classicism", in Mens & Melodie, February 1995.
  • "Recreating the Classical Tradition", essay in Reviving the Muse, published by the Claridge Press UK, 2001.
  • "Cultural Identity", in Art and Science, 2005/3.
  • "Will the Concertgebouw Become One Big Brother?" in Trouw, March 2006.
  • "Renewal in Music: A Wide-spread Misunderstanding?" in Mens & Melodie, 2007/6.
  • "Tagore: Language as the Music of Interiority", in Mens & Melodie, 2008/5.
  • The Classical Revolution, published by the Scarecrow Press, New York, in 2013.
  • "Zurück ins Blickfeld der gesellschaftlichen Aufmerksamkeit", essay in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, 2014/2.