Sonic Grace

Lukas Ligeti
Lonely Child (1980) for soprano and orchestra by Claude Vivier

09.11.23

Given that my father was György Ligeti, it wouldn't come as a surprise that I was exposed to the sounds of unconventional musics from a young age, even if I didn't start learning or playing music systematically until much, much later. So I'm not sure I can identify any specific piece that opened the door to new music for me, but Claude Vivier's Lonely Child has opened other doors. He's a fairly under appreciated composer (maybe not in Canada, but internationally) who I love and my father loved, too, and we agree that Lonely Child might be his greatest work. And he has become quite influential on my composing, mainly by showing me ways to break out of my own clichés and routines.

Like my father I love polyphony, and much of my music has been metrically complex and built upon a simultaneity of several musical strands, phrases, rhythms, or tempos. By contrast, Lonely Child couldn't be any less polyphonic. Here voices move in rhythmic unison, demonstrating how interesting exactly that can be and allowing me to access a ritualistic expression in my own music.

Perhaps even more intriguing are Vivier's harmonies. I've long experimented with microtonality, but mostly using electronics; I was unsure how to do this with conventional instruments given how much musicians work on not being "out of tune". Vivier was a sonic realist who incorporated microtonality without becoming caught up in mathematical dogma. The intonations he asks for are approximate, a compromise between musicians' habits and being just close enough to the alien in order for it to shine through. It's an exemplary way of reaching the unknown while allowing musicians to remain comfortable.

I'm a pretty free-thinking person and composer, but Vivier has freed me up quite a bit more.

- Lukas Ligeti

Lonely Child (1980) for soprano and orchestra by Claude Vivier

Lukas Ligeti Bio

Drawing upon influences including Downtown New York experimentalism, contemporary composition, jazz, and traditional music from Africa, Lukas Ligeti has developed a unique voice as a composer and improvisor.

Born in Austria, Ligeti lived in New York City from 1998 until 2015. After serving for several years on the faculty of the University of California, Irvine, he is currently an Extraordinary Professor at the University of Pretoria and lives in Miami and Johannesburg. He received the CalArts Alpert Award in Music in 2010, and his music is featured on CDs on col legno, Tzadik, Cantaloupe, Intuition, Innova, Leo, and other record labels.

His compositions have been commissioned among others by Ars Musica (Brussels), the Moers Festival, Bang on a Can, Kronos Quartet, Eighth Blackbird, Ensemble Modern, the American Composers Orchestra, MDR Orchestra (Germany), Håkan Hardenberger and Colin Currie, the Vienna Festwochen, Radio France, and choreographer Karole Armitage. His music has also been performed by the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre National de Lyon, Brussels Philharmonic, Gürzenich-Orchester Köin, Tonkünstler Orchestra, London Sinfonietta, Liverpool Philharmonic Ensemble 10/10, San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, etc. He was artist-in-residence at the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, where he created a site-specific performance. In 2019, he was artist-in-residence in Porto, Portugal, where he created a work for improvising musicians and an electro-mechanical, robotic sound sculpture developed by the association Sonoscopia.

As a drummer, he has worked with John Zorn, Marilyn Crispell, Gary Lucas, John Tchicai, Henry Kaiser, John Oswald, Michael Manring, Elliott Sharp, etc., and leads or co-leads several bands such as Hypercolor (with Eyal Maoz and James Ilgenfritz) and Notebook. He has given solo electronic percussion concerts on six continents, performing on the Marimba Lumina, an instrument designed by seminal synthesizer engineer Don Buchla for which he has composed a wide-ranging repertoire.

Engaged in experimental intercultural collaboration in Africa for 25 years, he co-founded the ensemble Beta Foly in Côte d’Ivoire and today co-leads Burkina Electric, the first electronica band from Burkina Faso. He has also engaged in collaborations and/or led projects in Egypt, Uganda (with that country’s premier music/dance group, the Ndere Troupe), Ghana, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, etc.