Lojze Lebič (born 23 August 1934) is a Slovenian composer and conductor of choral and instrumental music.
Life
editLebič was born on 23 August 1934 in Prevalje, in the Carinthia region of Slovenia (then part of Yugoslavia). He attended the University of Ljubljana for a bachelor's degree in archaeology and the Academy of Music in Ljubljana, where he studied with composition with Marjan Kozina and conducting with Danilo Švara.[1] He was the youngest member of the Pro musica viva group, a group of composers based in Ljubljana that was advocated for Slovenian modernism.[2]
Music
editLebič's early style was fairly traditional, but his work from after 1965 demonstrates the influence of the European avant-garde.[3] The opening of Slovenia to foreign travel in the 1950s and 60s allowed for greater musical and cultural exchange with the rest of Yugoslavia and Europe, encouraging the development of a Slovenian avant garde. Lebič's 1965 works Meditacije za dva for viola and cello and the cantata Požgana trava are examples of his use of new melodic and vocal techniques.[4] Later, he developed a style that balanced respect for traditional culture with cosmopolitan modernism.[2]
Works
edit- Per Archi (Za Golala) for string orchestra (2009)
- Invocation/ à Primož Ramovš (clarinet and piano), commissioned by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Libraries
- Meditacije za dva (Meditations for Two) for viola and cello (1965, revised 1972)
- Rubato per viola for viola solo (1989)
- Hvalnica svetu (In Praise of the World) for double choir, piano four-hands and percussion (1988)
Awards
editIn 1967, he was awarded the Prešeren Award for conducting.[5]
References
edit- ^ Hostnik, Tomaž (2016). Lojze Lebič One of the greatest overlooked composers of our time? (1. Auflage ed.). Saarbrücken. ISBN 978-3-639-64336-7. OCLC 953292848.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b Samson, Jim (2013). Music in the Balkans. Balkan studies library. Boston: Brill. p. 486. ISBN 978-90-04-25037-6.
- ^ O'Loughlin, Niall (1983-12-01). "The Music of Lojze Lebič". Musicological Annual. 19 (1): 71–81. doi:10.4312/mz.19.1.71-81. ISSN 2350-4242.
- ^ O'Loughlin, Niall (2004). "Slovenian Music in its Central European Context: the 20th-century experience". Musicological Annual. 40 (1–2): 267–276. doi:10.4312/mz.40.1-2.267-276. ISSN 2350-4242.
- ^ Lebic, Hanka (2000). Lojze Lebic: Katalog del/ Catalogue of Works.
Further reading
edit- Barbo, Matjaz. “Music as a Language of Globalisation? The Metalinguistic Context of Lebic’s Music.” Muzikološki zbornik 43, no. 1 (2007): 187–192.
- Lojze Lebič (1993) From generation to generation the spirit seeks the way: Slovene musical Creativity in the past and today, Nationalities Papers, 21:1, 145-155, DOI: 10.1080/00905999308408264
- Pompe, Gregor. “Sacred Rituality and Mysticism in the Service of the Awakening of National Identity. Baltic-Balkan Parallels in the Works of B. Kutavicius, L. Lebic and V. Tormis.” Muzikološki zbornik 50, no. 2 (2014): 111–125.