Composer
Hans Werner Henze (1926-); DEU
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Hans Werner Henze has been a prolific composer over a career spanning six decades, writing extensively in all the standard genres such as symphony, concerto, opera, and song, in a remarkable variety of styles. As he has said, "I am bored by the idea of employing approaches which I have already tried." At times in his career, his controversial political views have attracted almost as much attention as his music.
Henze started composing at age 12, even before his formal music education began at the Braunschweig State Music School, which he attended from 1942-1944. From an early age, he was interested in political and social issues. His rejection of the bourgeois values of his upbringing and the Nazism that he encountered first hand probably had a large influence on his later political thinking. He served for a time in the German army in World War II and was briefly held as a prisoner-of-war. After the war, he continued his musical studies at the Institute for Church Music in Heidelberg, where he worked with Wolfgang Fortner, and at Darmstadt, where he studied with Schoenberg disciple René Leibowitz. His earliest acknowledged compositions date from this time, like the Chamber Concerto (1946) which was Henze's first publicly performed work. His first full-length opera, Boulevard Solitude, was completed in 1951.
Despite the hints of jazz and neo-Classicism in some of that early music, Henze was strongly identified with the post-Arnold Schoenberg serial composers for several years. With his move to Italy in 1953, Henze sought to change that perception and brought to his music a new lyricism. One can hear this in his second opera, König Hirsch, premiered in 1956, and the Symphony No. 4, "Il Re Cervo" (1955), which makes use of music from that opera's second act finale. W. H. Auden and Chester Kallman, Stravinsky's librettists for The Rake's Progress, provided the words for Henze's fourth and sixth operas, Elegy for Young Lovers (1961) and The Bassarids (1965-1966). It was around this time that Henze took his first teaching post, director of master classes in composition at the Salzburg Mozarteum.
The notorious premiere of the oratorio Das Floss der Medusa (The Raft of Medusa, a requiem for Che Guevara) in Hamburg in 1968, at which the work's librettist and others were arrested, brought Henze further notoriety. Interactions with German students and Italian intellectuals had motivated Henze to bring to his work an increasing political consciousness. Socialism and the New Left were very appealing to him, even more so after a year of teaching in Cuba in 1969-70, during which he led the Cuban National Symphony in the premiere of his Symphony No. 6 for two chamber orchestras.
Voices (1973), a song cycle with texts by Ho Chi Minh, Bertold Brecht, and others, reflects Henze's political commitment and his musical eclecticism. In his later works, Henze has incorporated such disparate elements as rock and popular music, electronics, taped sounds, microtones, and extended vocal and instrumental techniques. His harrowing Symphony No. 9, premiered in 1997, tells the story of prisoners who escape from a German concentration camp; the Symphony is dedicated to "the heroes and martyrs of German anti-fascism."
Henze has written for many of the great performers of his time, such as Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Peter Pears, Julian Bream, Heinz and Ursula Holliger, and Christoph Eschenbach. He has also actively championed his own music, traveling the world to conduct and record his compositions.
© Chris Morrison, All Music Guide
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Hans Werner Henze has been a prolific composer over a career spanning six decades, writing extensively in all the standard... More
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Chamber Works
99 tracks
- Capriccio, for cello
2 tracks
- Carillon, Recitatif and Masque, for chamber ensemble
6 tracks
- Fragments from a Show, for brass quintet (from opera 'Der langwierige Weg in die Wohnung der Natascha Ungeheurer')
1 track
- Fünf Nachtstücke, for violin and piano
5 tracks
- L'autunno, for 5 wind instruments
5 tracks
- 3 Marchenbilder aus Pollicino, for chamber ensemble
3 tracks
- New Folksongs and Herdsmen Songs, for bassoon, guitar, and string trio (from musical play Öedipus der Tyrann)
7 tracks
- Ode an eine Aolsharfe (Ode to an Aeolian Harp), for chamber ensemble
8 tracks
- Quintet for Winds
3 tracks
- Royal Winter Music (Guitar Sonata No.1)
12 tracks
- Royal Winter Music (Guitar Sonata No.2)
6 tracks
- Selbst und Zweigespräche, for viola, guitar, and keyboard
1 track
- Serenade, for cello
18 tracks
- Sonatina, for trumpet
6 tracks
- Sonatine, for flute and piano
3 tracks
- 3 Tientos, for guitar (from 'Kammermusik 1958')
12 tracks
- Prison Song, for percussion
1 track
- Capriccio, for cello
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Stage Works
129 tracks
- Das Wundertheatre (opera for actors)
21 tracks
- Ballet-Variationen (ballet)
2 tracks
- Moralities (3 morality plays)
3 tracks
- The Tedious Way to Natasha Ungeheur's Apartment (musical)
11 tracks
- Undine (ballet)
57 tracks
- Der junge Lord, comic opera in 2 acts
35 tracks
- Das Wundertheatre (opera for actors)
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Vocal Works
77 tracks
- Ariosi, for soprano, violin and orchestra (or piano, 4 hands)
5 tracks
- Apollo Et Hyazinthus, for voice, chorus and orchestra
1 track
- Being Beauteous, for coloratura soprano, harp and 4 cellos
1 track
- Cantata della fiaba estrema, for soprano, chamber chorus and 13 instruments
7 tracks
- El Cimarrón, for baritone, flutes, guitar and percussion
15 tracks
- 3 Fragments of Hölderlin, for tenor and guitar
3 tracks
- Muses of Sicily (Muzen Sizilians), for chorus, 2 pianos, winds and timpani
3 tracks
- Nachstücke und Arien, for soprano and orchestra
5 tracks
- 5 Neapolitan Lieder, for baritone and chamber orchestra
10 tracks
- The Raft of the Medusa, oratorio for soprano, baritone, speaker, chorus, boys' voices & orchestra
17 tracks
- Versuch über Schweine, for baritone and orchestra
5 tracks
- Whispers from Heavenly Death, cantata for soprano or tenor and small ensemble
5 tracks
- Ariosi, for soprano, violin and orchestra (or piano, 4 hands)
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Orchestral Works
114 tracks
- Symphonies
46 tracks
- Symphony No.1
3 tracks
- Symphony No.2, for large orchestra
3 tracks
- Symphony No.3
6 tracks
- Symphony No.4, for large orchestra
9 tracks
- Symphony No.5, for large orchestra
3 tracks
- Symphony No.6, for 2 chamber orchestras
15 tracks
- Symphony No.7
4 tracks
- Symphony No.8
3 tracks
- Symphony No.1
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Concertos
42 tracks
- Concerto for Double Bass
3 tracks
- Double Concerto, for oboe, harp and strings
4 tracks
- Ode on den Westwind, for cello and orchestra
5 tracks
- Piano Concerto No.2
6 tracks
- Tristan, preludes for piano, orchestra and tape
6 tracks
- Violin Concerto No.1
8 tracks
- Violin Concerto No.2, for solo violin, tape, voices and 33 instrumentalists
6 tracks
- Violin Concerto No.3
3 tracks
- Compases para Preguntas Ensimisades, for viola and 22 players)
1 track
- Concerto for Double Bass
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Band
11 tracks
- Ragtimes and Habaneras
11 tracks
- Ragtimes and Habaneras
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Other Orchestral Works
15 tracks
- Symphonies
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