Wilfried Hiller
Wilfried Hiller is a German composer. He became known above all for his stage works for families, children and young people.
Life and work
Hiller was born the son of the teacher August Hiller and his wife Josepha Hiller, née Hauser, in the Swabian town of Weißenhorn near Ulm. In 1944, the year of the war, his father was killed in Russia and Wilfried became a half-orphan at the age of three. Hiller himself described early childhood experiences in connection with his composition Alkor thus:Training
After attending the, he took up piano studies with Wilhelm Heckmann at the Augsburg Leopold Mozart Centre in 1956. From 1958 to 1961, Hiller wrote his first play with music as well as piano compositions and chamber music and worked as an organist and ballet répétiteur.From 1962, he took part in the Darmstädter Ferienkurse for Neue Musik and was a guest student of Pierre Boulez, Bruno Maderna and Karlheinz Stockhausen. During this time he also became acquainted with his later publisher Peter Hanser-Strecker and the composer Karl Amadeus Hartmann. At Hartmann's suggestion, Hiller began studying music at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater München in 1963. Here he studied music composition with Günter Bialas, opera direction with Heinz Arnold, percussion and timpani with Ludwig Porth and Hanns Hölzl, and music theory with Hermann Pfrogner.
As Hiller made known in 2013, he was a victim of sexual abuse at Seminar St. Joseph of the Stephan-Gymnasium.
From 1967 Hiller worked as a percussionist in various orchestras, such as the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Bavarian State Opera and the Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz. In 1968, he founded the concert series "Musik unserer Zeit".
In 1968 he met Carl Orff, who strongly influenced him in the following years. Hiller worked closely with Orff as his student until his death in 1982 and has chaired the Carl Orff Foundation since 2008.
Hiller's works for music theatre were decisively influenced by his collaboration with his wife, the actress Elisabet Woska, from 1971 onwards.
Collaboration with Michael Ende
His meeting with the writer Michael Ende in 1978 marked the beginning of a fruitful artistic partnership and close friendship that lasted until Ende's death in 1995 and led to a whole series of successful stage works such as Tranquilla Trampeltreu, ''Der Goggolori and Das Traumfresserchen.Hiller has a special relationship with compositions for children and young people. In an interview on the occasion of his 60th birthday, he answered the question of how he manages as a composer to appeal equally to children and adults:
Hiller considers young listeners and viewers to be self-confident and intelligent and does not want to bore them with a reduced theme or tonal language – neither the multi-layered and dense, yet easily comprehensible libretti Michael Ende's nor his music are "simple" in this sense.
One hundred percent understanding of the text and a clear message are important when composing for children, according to Hiller. The turtle Tranquilla Trampeltreu in the musical fable of the same name, for example, is rewarded for her stubbornness, perseverance and self-discipline despite her unpunctuality – she arrives a whole generation too late for the royal wedding of the lion Leo XXVIII.
Hiller also thinks that musical theatre works for children should definitely contain passages that can be remembered:
"Earworm melodies should be allowed, even though they are considered taboo and people look crossly at you . But there is something to this sentence by Darius Milhaud: "He who cannot write a melody that one can remember cannot be called a composer."
According to Hiller's and Ende's experience, the performance duration of a should not exceed 80 to 85 minutes.
After Ende's death, Hiller first worked with Herbert Asmodi ,'' then, since 1997, with Rudolf Herfurtner. He also drew on literary models by Theodor Storm , Christian Morgenstern ' and Wilhelm Busch '. In addition to the numerous stage works, there are also a large number of chamber musical works, concertos, choir and orchestral works.
By his own account, Hiller is the most frequently performed living German stage composer. His works for children and young people in particular fill a gap in the repertoire, as musically complex children's operas that are nevertheless popular with children are rare, but are urgently needed by the growing number of children's opera projects in the context of increased youth work in opera houses. His works are therefore performed in numerous productions in German-speaking countries. For example, a production of Traumfresserchen was shown in the children's opera tent on the roof of the Vienna State Opera for several seasons to a consistently sold-out audience.
Hiller's church opera Augustinus – Ein klingendes Mosaik about St Augustine premiered in Munich on 19 March 2005.
From 2009, Hiller took over as the new artistic director of the Internationale Orgelwoche Nürnberg. He continues to be artistic director of the Diabelli-Contest, an international composers' competition.
Music editor and sound engineer
In addition to his work as a freelance composer, Hiller worked as a music editor and sound engineer at the Bayerischer Rundfunk from November 1971 to March 2006. At first, his programmes included upmarket light music and, from 1974, symphonic music; later he was editor for special programmes. In addition, Hiller composed music for the 30-part series Klangbaustelle Klimperton for and was the organiser of the Musica-Viva studio concerts under Wolfgang Fortner. In addition, he founded the series musik unserer zeit, from which the Münchner Musiknächte later emerged, as well as the festival Orff in Andechs.As an editor at Bayerischer Rundfunk, he was responsible for the following series, among others:
- Münchner Musikgeschichte in Straßennamen
- Dirigenten bei der Probe
- Musik meiner Wahl
- Komponisten machen Programm
- außereuropäische Musik
- musik unserer zeit
- Nachtakzente
- Concerto bavarese
- Festival traditioneller Musik
Works
Source:Stage work
Operas and other works for music theatre:An diesem heutigen Tage, monodrama for actress and percussion, libretto: Elisabet Woska after Mary Stuart's lettersNiobe, in ancient GreekIjob, monodrama for tenor, based on the biblical Book of Job in the translation by Martin Buber; 2nd version: premiere 22 February 1984, Französische Kirche, BernLiebestreu und Grausamkeit, after Wilhelm BuschDer Goggolori. Eine bairische Mär mit Musik, libretto in bavarian by Michael Ende- Vervollständigung von Chaplin-Ford-Trott from the Wachsfigurenkabinett by Karl Amadeus Hartmann Die Jagd nach dem Schlarg, libretto: Michael Ende after Lewis CarrollDer Rattenfänger, libretto: Michael EndeDie Geschichte vom kleinen blauen Bergsee und dem alten Adler, libretto: Herbert AsmodiHeidenröslein, after Christian Morgenstern and Johannes BrahmsDer Schimmelreiter, libretto by Andreas K. W. Meyer after Theodor StormEduard auf dem Seil, libretto: Rudolf Herfurtner – Opera about Eduard MörikeDer Geigenseppel, melodrama for puppets after Wilhelm Busch's poem, commissioned by the cultural programme in the German Pavilion at the World's Fair Expo 2000 in HannoverWolkenstein – Opera about Oswald von WolkensteinAugustinus – Ein klingendes Mosaik, libretto by Wolfgang Adenberg
- * Der Lindwurm und der Schmetterling oder Der seltsame Tausch
- * Tranquilla Trampeltreu, die beharrliche Schildkröte
- * Die Ballade von Norbert Nackendick oder Das Nackte Nashorn
- * Die Fabel von Filemon Faltenreich oder Die Fußballweltmeisterschaft der Fliegen Die zerstreute Brillenschlange for narrator, clarinet and drone, text: Michael EndeJosa mit der Zauberfiedel Das Traumfresserchen, libretto: Michael EndePeter Pan, after J. M. BarrieDie Waldkinder, "Taschenoper", libretto: Rudolf HerfurtnerPinocchio, after the novel Pinocchio by Carlo CollodiMomo, after the eponymous novel by Michael Ende.
- ''Momo''
Vocal work
Der Leuchtturm for aaritono and Hammered dulcimer, Neubearbeitung 1997Let Thy Song Be Love for soprano and pianoSchulamit for solo singer, choir and orchestraMuspilli for baritone and instrumentsEin Frosch sah einstmals einen Stier, for solo singers, choir and orchestraTrödelmarkt der Träume, song cycleKlangbaustelle Klimperton, music for school radio broadcasts- Sappho-Fragmente' for girls' choir, flute and celloMerseburger Zaubersprüche for children's choir and brass, setting of the Merseburger ZaubersprücheServietten-Haiku for soprano and chamber ensemble.Aias for mezzo-soprano, baritone, narrator and orchestraHeilige Nacht for male sextet, speaker and instrumentsMichael-Ende-Liederbuch for girls' choir, cello and percussionGilgamesh for baritone and instruments, after the Epic of Gilgamesh
Orchestral work
Fanfare for trumpets, timpani and bass drumNachtgesang München, SuiteHintergründige Gedanken des erzbischöflichen Compositeurs Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber beim Belauschen eines Vogelkonzertes Chagall-Zyklus for clarinet and chamber orchestraPegasus 51 for jazz percussion and symphony orchestraFanfare for brass and timpaniEnigma Canon, arrangement after Johann Sebastian BachVia Dolorosa Bavariations Tarot XVI for strings and zitherCappella Sistina Roman frescoes for orchestra, soprano and Quartetto lontanoChamber music
Movements for a Big Cat for oboe and bassoonPas de deux for two pianosNatura morta con saltiero, quintetLilith for four strings and pianoNotenbüchlein für Tamino for eight flutesNiobe, piano trioDevil's Toccata for violin and four percussionistsLiocorno di Bomarzo for organ and alphornBook of Stars for one, two or three pianosDuetti amorosi for octetDer Tod ist eine schöne Frau for violin and pianoSolo pieces
Elegy for oboeRhythmizomenon for pianoKatalog für Schlagzeug I-V Phantasy for piano after a cycle of pictures by Wilhelm BuschToccata diabolica for organScherzo for celloToccata cabbalistica sopra la-sol for organTarot XVI for organOphelia for violinAwards
- 1968: Richard-Strauss-Preis der Stadt Munich
- 1971:
- 1977: Brünner Preis, Anerkennungspreis der Stadt Salzburg für sein Werk Niobe
- 1978: Stipendiat der Deutschen Akademie Rom Villa Massimo
- 1978: Schwabing Art Prize für Musik
- 1988: Raiffeisen-Förderpreis
- 1997: Werner-Egk-Preis, Kunstpreis der Stadt Donauwörth
- 2000: Bayerischer Poetentaler, Literatenpreis der
- 2008: Bayerischer Verdienstorden
- 2010: Bayerischer Maximiliansorden für Wissenschaft und Kunst
- 2013: Oberbayerischer Kulturpreis