Michael Hersch

Michael Nathaniel Hersch (born June 25, 1971) is an American composer and pianist.

Contents

Biography

Initial inspiration and musical education

Born in Washington, D.C., and raised in Reston, Virginia, Hersch was introduced to classical music at the age of 18 by his younger brother Jamie, who showed him a videotape of Georg Solti conducting Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. This "shook me," Hersch has written. "It scrambled everything. That's when I knew that I was to be a composer... My whole life started over at that moment."

He almost immediately began studies at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore. Hersch has stated that "with Morris Cotel - the teacher I spent the most time with during my studies at the Peabody Conservatory - lessons consisted only of week after week coming into the teacher's studio, playing and singing through the latest work at the piano and his saying nothing more than, 'Okay. Fine. See you next week.' He believed that a composer confronting his or herself in this manner would force the composer to look in the mirror seeing, along with the good, all the flaws."[1] Hersch moved on to the Moscow Conservatory, where he worked with Albert Leman and Roman Ledenev, and received a Certificate in Composition in 1995. He also worked with John Corigliano, John Harbison and George Rochberg at a program for young composers in 1995. Hersch then returned to Peabody for graduate studies.

Early success

His first success came when Marin Alsop selected Elegy for Strings as winner of the American Composers Prize, and conducted it at Lincoln Center in New York in 1997. That year also saw Hersch win a Guggenheim Fellowship and become a fellow at the prestigious Tanglewood Music Center, where he worked with Christopher Rouse, followed by fellowships at the Norfolk Festival for Contemporary Music and the Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, Japan in 1998. In 2000 Hersch won the Rome Prize, where he worked with Luciano Berio, and in 2001 the Berlin Prize, where he worked with Hans Werner Henze.

A CD of orchestral works with Marin Alsop conducting the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra has been released on the Naxos Records label, and another disc on the Vanguard Classics label features Mr. Hersch as a pianist, performing not only his own work, but works of Morton Feldman, Wolfgang Rihm, and Josquin des Prez (Hersch's own arrangements of Mille Regretz and De Profundis Clamavi). The disc was selected by The Washington Post and Newsday as among the most important recordings of 2004-05.

Music

His music increasingly recorded, Vanguard Classics is in the midst of an acclaimed three volume survey of Hersch’s complete music for solo strings. This project comes several years after the 2007 release of Hersch’s, The Vanishing Pavilions, with the composer at the keyboard. Critic David Patrick Stearns of The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote on the premiere of "The Vanishing Pavilions," a work lasting over 2 hours, premiered on October 14, 2006: "Everything unfolds in open-ended, haiku-like eruptions, though built on ideas that recur throughout the 50 movements... Overtly or covertly, The Vanishing Pavilions is about the destruction of shelter (both in fact and in concept) and life amid the absence of any certainty. And though the music is as deeply troubled as can be, its restless directness also commands listeners not to be paralyzed by existential futility."[2]

Composer Christopher Theofanidis on Hersch's music: “I am always cognizant of Hersch’s formal rigor, not in the usual way, i.e., developmental, but more modernistic in terms of relationship of materials. There is a juxtaposition of something violently virtuosic and something Spartan. If you are not following the line you could be shocked. There is a volatility from movement to movement. It is very personal...”[3] “...it is also clear that it represents a single person in dialogue with himself. The listener must begin with a premise that involves a different way of thinking about materials. Most composers’ compositions are modulated by influences from the outside world. Michael begins with his own internal struggle.”[4]

Piano performance

Michael Hersch has appeared on the Van Cliburn Foundation’s Modern at the Modern Series, the Romaeuropa Festival, the Phillips Collection in Washington D.C., the Festival of Contemporary Music Nuova Consonanza, the Warhol Museum, the Network for New Music Concert Series, the Left Bank Concert Society, the American Academy in Berlin Series, Festa Europea della Musica, St. Louis' Sheldon Concert Hall, and in New York City at Merkin Concert Hall, the 92nd St. Y - Tisch Center for the Performing Arts, and Carnegie Hall’s Weill Recital Hall, among others.

Michael Hersch's public debut took place in Carnegie Recital Hall in 1999. Also on the program was noted composer Jason Eckardt. Both Hersch and Eckardt had received commissions from Carnegie Hall. Eckardt recalls that "as part of the commission we were asked to coach pieces that we had written in open rehearsals. As it happened, the pianist for Michael’s Piano Quartet had dropped out, and Michael stepped in to play the part himself. When Michael played, it was clear that he was very technically accomplished, as the writing in his piece was quite virtuosic. But what really impressed me was his command of the music and the musical ideas of his work. I was startled when, without the music, Michael would rehearse and be able to recall from memory not just entire passages but also the specific music that occurred at a particular measure number that another performer would use as a point of reference during practice. For the performance, Michael played the complete piece—which was quite long—from memory and with bravura. It never occurred to me that Michael did any of these things to impress the audience or his colleagues but rather were just a natural extension of his musicality."[5]

Michael Hersch rarely performs in public, but commands a wide repertoire from Josquin to Boulez.[6] Since 2000 he has primarily focused on performances of his own work.[7]

Selected works

Orchestral
Concertante
Chamber
Solo instrumental
Piano
Vocal
Choral

Audio recording

Michael Hersch - the wreckage of flowers - Works for Violin

Michael Hersch: Sonatas Nos. 1 & 2 for Unaccompanied Cello

Michael Hersch - The Vanishing Pavilions

Michael Hersch: Chamber Music

Hersch – Josquin – Rihm – Feldman

Michael Hersch • Naxos American Classics • Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra

References

  1. ^ iClassic.com interview of Hersch on the release of the Vanguard Classics Chamber Music CD in January, 2004.[1]
  2. ^ The Hopkins Review - Volume 4, Number 2, Spring 2011, pp. 195-209: On the Life of a Twenty-First Century Composer: Michael Hersch by Susan Forscher Weiss.[2] Subscription required.
  3. ^ The Hopkins Review - Volume 4, Number 2, Spring 2011, pp. 195-209: On the Life of a Twenty-First Century Composer: Michael Hersch by Susan Forscher Weiss.[3] Subscription required.
  4. ^ The Hopkins Review - Volume 4, Number 2, Spring 2011, pp. 195-209: On the Life of a Twenty-First Century Composer: Michael Hersch by Susan Forscher Weiss.[4] Subscription required.
  5. ^ The Hopkins Review - Volume 4, Number 2, Spring 2011, pp. 195-209: On the Life of a Twenty-First Century Composer: Michael Hersch by Susan Forscher Weiss.[5] Subscription required.
  6. ^ The Hopkins Review - Volume 4, Number 2, Spring 2011, pp. 195-209: On the Life of a Twenty-First Century Composer: Michael Hersch by Susan Forscher Weiss.[6] Subscription required.
  7. ^ (Video) Michael Hersch: The Vanishing Pavilions - Movement No. 6 / Michael Hersch, piano.[7]
  8. ^ The New York Times, April 27, 2010.
  9. ^ Naxos product page. Accessed 18 November 2009.
  10. ^ Information accompanying the CD Naxos 8.559281.
  11. ^ Fanfare, 30:5 (May/June 2007). Subscription required. Accessed 18 November 2009.

External links