Luis de Pablo Costales (28 January 1930 – 10 October 2021) was a Spanish composer belonging to the generation that Cristóbal Halffter named the Generación del 51. Mostly self-taught as a composer and influenced by Maurice Ohana and Max Deutsch, he co-founded ensembles for contemporary music, and organised concert series for it in Madrid. He published translations of notable texts about composers of the Second Viennese School, such as Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt's biography of Arnold Schoenberg and the publications of Anton Webern. He wrote music in many genres, including film scores such as Erice's The Spirit of the Beehive, and operas including La señorita Cristina. He taught composition not only in Spain, but also in the U.S. and Canada. Among his awards is the Premio Nacional de Música.
Spanish composer (1930–2021)
In this Spanish name, the first or paternalsurname is de Pabloand the second or maternal family name is Costales.
Luis de Pablo was born in Bilbao.2021 After losing his father in the Spanish Civil War, he went with his mother and siblings to live in Madrid from age six. Although he started to compose at the age of 12, his circumstances made it impossible to consider an artistic career,[1] and so he studied law at the Complutense University of Madrid.[2] For a short time after graduating in 1952, he was employed as legal advisor to Iberia Airlines, but soon resigned this post in order to pursue a career in music.[3][1] As a composer, he was essentially an autodidact.[2] He travelled to the Darmstädter Ferienkurse in the 1960s, where he met Pierre Boulez, György Ligeti, Bruno Maderna and Karlheinz Stockhausen. In Paris, he studied with Max Deutsch2021 and Maurice Ohana.[2] His participation at the Darmstädter Ferienkurse in 1959 led to the performance of some of his works under Boulez and Maderna.[1]
De Pablo and Cristóbal Halffter are regarded as key members of a group called Generación del 51, formed by young composers at the time they finished their studies, with a mission to connect music in Spain to musical developments in Europe after the Civil War. De Pablo adapted atonalism, serialism, aleatory forms, use of electronics and graphic notation. In 1958, he co-founded the group Grupo Nueva Musica, and in 1959, Tiempo y Musica.[4] He organised several contemporary music concert series, for example the Forum Musical and Bienal de Música Contemporánea de Madrid. He was particularly concerned with promoting appreciation in Spain of the Second Viennese School, publishing translations of Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt's biography of Arnold Schoenberg in 1961, and texts by Anton Webern in 1963.[3][1] In 1965, he founded the first studio for electronic music in Spain, with the group Alea.[5] He founded a festival, Rencontres de Pampelune, for music, theatre, film and the arts in 1972. He was accused of giving too much prominence to "left-wing art" by the Franco regime, but also of being a supporter of that regime by ETA. When one of the festival's patrons was kidnapped by ETA, the event was cancelled, and De Pablo went into exile in the U.S. and Canada, returning only after Franco's death.[3]
De Pablo began teaching at the Madrid Conservatory in 1971.[5] In exile, he lectured at the University of Buffalo, and later at the University of Ottawa and the University of Montreal.[3] He resumed teaching in Spain upon his return.[4] De Pablo was awarded Spain's Premio Nacional de Música for composition in 1991, among many other awards.[2]
De Pablo died in Madrid on 10 October 2021, aged 91.[7]
Compositions
Luis de Pablo Costales has more than 143 works among which are:[5][8]
1953 – Gárgolas
1954 – Coral eucarístico
1954 – Sinfonías
1954–66 – Sinfonías
1955 – Invenciones
1956 – Concierto para clavicémbalo
1956 – Misa Pax humilium,
1956 – Elegía
1956 – Tres Piezas para guitarra
1956 – Comentarios a dos
1957 – Móvil I
1957 – Cinco Invenciones
1958 – Sonata para piano
1958 – Cuarteto nº 1
1959 – Progressus
1959–67 – Móvil II
1960 – Radial
1961 – Glosa
1961–62 – Polar
1961–62 – Libro para el pianista
1962 – Condicionado
1962 – Prosodia
1962–63 – Tombeau
1963 – Recíproco
1963 – Cesuras
1964 – Escena
1964–65 – Módulos I
1965 – Ein Wort
1965 – Mitología I
1965–67 – Módulos IV
1965–66 – Iniciativas
1966 – Módulos II
1967 – Imaginario I
1967 – Módulos III
1967 – Imaginario II
1967 – Módulos V
1968 – Protocolo
1968 – Paráfrasis
1969 – Cuatro Invenciones
1969 – Quasi une fantasia
1969 – Por diversos motivos
Chamber music
Anatomías for viola solo, two clarinets, horn, trombone and harp (2005–2007)
"Luis de Pablo Costales (1930) Obras estrenadas desde 1985". Centro de Documentación de Música y Danza (in Spanish). Instituto Nacional de las Artes Escénicas y de la Música / Secretaría de Estado de Cultura. 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
"Luis de Pablo". spainisculture.com. Portal for the Promotion of Spanish Culture, Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport. 2021. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Luis de Pablo.
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