Piano Quintets

Menu

Quintets


First name: Claude
Last name: Ledoux
Dates: 1960
Category: Quintet
Nationality: Belgian
Opus name: Quintette à clavier : pour 2 violons, alto, violoncelle et piano 2005)
Publisher:
Peculiarities: http://catalogue.cdmc.asso.fr/EXPLOITATION/form.aspx?SC=DEFAULT#/Detail/(query:(Id:'43_OFFSET_0',Index:44,NBResults:73,SearchQuery:(CloudTerms:!(),ForceSearch:!t,Page:4,QueryString:'piano%20quintet',ResultSize:10,ScenarioCode:DEFAULT,SearchContext:8,S
Information: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Claude Ledoux is a Belgian composer, born in 1960. For many years now, the composer has explored the idea of "musical crossing borders" as he attempts to reflect our fragmented world in his musical processes. As a result, his works has been marked by interactions between contemporary sounds and popular musics, non-European idioms and technology. His recent works, accordingly, demonstrate this interest in the "cultural porosity" in which emotion arises from geographical and historical encounters, linking spirituality to the most sensual aspects of our material existence. Passionated by science and art, Ledoux began at 17 y.o. his studies in painting and graphic Art at the Fine Arts School, coupled with music at the Conservatoire de Liège. There, he met Jean-Louis Robert, Philippe Boesmans, Frederic Rzewski, Henri Pousseur and decided for a musical career. He also carried out research into electronic music at the CRFMW studio (today Centre Pousseur) where he met Tristan Murail at the occasion of seminars. Afterwards, Ledoux pursued his education abroad, notably in Hungary (at Béla Bartók seminar), in Italy (in Bolzano and Venice) where he participated in a seminar by György Ligeti, and finally in Paris where he lived for few years on the occasion of IRCAM courses. At the same time, he studied composition with Iannis Xenakis at the University of Paris I. As a composer he won several competitions (including Lille, Paris and Lausanne). In 2003 he received the Musical Prize from the Civitella Ranieri Foundation of New York for his recent works. Afterwards, his music has been performed in many towns in Europe - For instance : Brussels [Ars Musica], Liege [Royal Philharmonic of Liege], Paris [Radio-France, Présences, L’Itinéraire, Intercontemporain...], Strasbourg [Musica], Berlin [WDR, Philharmonie]), Turkey [Ankara Radio Symphony orchestra), in Ukraine and Russia, more recently at the ISCM Ljublijana (at the orchestral opening concert 2015 with the Slovenian Radio Orchestra]. He has also performed in North America (with the Colorado Symphony orchestra and the Montreal Symphony Orchestra) and Asia (Vietnam, Japan). Latterly, Claude Ledoux has been composer in residence at the Ensemble Musiques Nouvelles (Belgium: 1998-2000), subsequently at the Castello of Umbria (Italy: 2003), the Brussels Bozar (2008-2009), Kitara Hall (Japan: 2009), and in Ars Musica (Brussels: 2012). Due to his passion for Asian sounds, he travelled in several eastern countries in order to undertake researches and to learn the traditional art of music. In 1992, he first went through India where he learned traditional musics from the Himalayan slopes to the Rajasthan desert. In 1996, he received a grant from the SPES Foundation to pursue his studies about oriental music in Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia. Afterwards, he travelled many times in Japan (from 2004 until now) where he went deeper into the knowledge of traditional musical practices and instruments of that country which counts as one of the most important for the composer. More recently he made also researches in China. In 2009, Claude Ledoux composed the compulsory work for the semi-final of the Queen Elisabeth Competition. Later, in 2012, he served as Artistic Director of the Ars Musica Festival. in that framework, he composed "Ayl" for Clarinet and orchestra, based on an Armenian traditional tune. Afterwards, he wrote an important number of works with an Eastern dimension over recent years : "Crossing Edges" for erhu and orchestra, "Echoes of Crossing Edges" for the Shanghai Sinfonietta, and "Eurydice effacée", commissioned by the Muromachi Ensemble (Tokyo). In 2016 he composed "A Butterfly's Dream" - based on the Chinese Zhuangzi (book) - the compulsory concerto for the Final of the Queen Elisabeth Competition, piano. In addition to composing instrumental works, 2016 sees him continue this journey, with new pieces for orchestra (including a Shakuhachi concerto for the famous Reison Kuroda) as well as a vocal work that will be premiered in Japan in the context of the 150th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Japan and Belgium. Claude Ledoux earned a Master in "Art and Sciences of Music" (musicology and communication) from the University of Liège. Artistic Director (and founding member) of LAPS, a new ensemble that combines laptops with acoustic instruments, the composer has also written numerous articles on composition, analysis and contemporary music. Nowadays, apart from composition, he works as a musical journalist as well as a Musical Analysis professor at the CNSMDP - Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris (France) and Composition professor at Arts2 - Visual/Music Art School, Music Conservatory of Mons (Belgium). He also taught these subjects at the Universities of São Paulo and Campinas (Brazil: 2008-09) and at the Shanghai Conservatory (China: 2014-15). He is also member of The Royal Academies for Science and the Arts of Belgium since 2006.