Peteris Vasks
(1946-)
Three Poems by Czeslaw Milosz
I. Window (1994)
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Pēteris Vasks (born April 16, 1946) is a Latvian composer. Vasks was born in
Aizpute, Latvia. He trained as a double-bass player, and played in several
Latvian orchestras before entering the Latvian State Conservatory to study
composition. He started to become known outside Latvia in the 1990s. Initially,
Vasks' style owed much to the aleatoric experiments of Witold Lutosławski,
Krzysztof Penderecki and George Crumb. Later works included elements of Latvian
folk music, such as his gentle and pastoral cor anglais concerto (1989). His
works are generally extremely clear and communicative, with a solid and muscular
sense of harmony. Lyrical passages may be followed by agitated dissonances, or
interrupted by sombre sections with a march-like feel. Vasks feels strongly
about environmental issues, and a sense of nature both pristine and destroyed
can be found in many of his works, such as the String Quartet No. 2 (1984).
Other important works include Cantabile (1979) and Musica dolorosa (1984). He
has written five string quartets, the fourth of which (2003) was written for the
Kronos Quartet. Vasks was the recipient of the Vienna Herder Award in 1996 and
the Latvian Grand Music Award in 1997, the latter for his violin concerto "Tāla
Gaisma" (1996-7).
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