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Betsy Jolas

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Elizabeth MacDonald Jolas (born 5 August 1926) is a Franco-American composer.

Key Information

Life and career

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Jolas was born in Paris on 5 August 1926. Her mother, the American translator Maria McDonald, also studied singing. Together with Betsy's father, the poet and journalist Eugene Jolas, she founded and edited the magazine transition,[1][2] which published over ten years many of the great writers of the interwar period.

Her family settled in the United States in late 1940. While completing her general studies in New York, then specializing in music at Bennington College, she joined the Dessoff Choirs, discovering Renaissance music, which had a lasting influence on her work.[3]

After graduating from Bennington College, Jolas returned to Paris in 1946 to continue her studies at the Conservatoire national supérieur de musique, notably with Darius Milhaud and Olivier Messiaen. From 1971 to 1974 she served as Messiaen's assistant at the Conservatoire, and in 1975 was appointed to the faculty. She has since then also taught in the U.S., at Yale, Harvard, Mills College, the University of California, Tanglewood, and the University of Michigan.[4]

Jolas is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[4]

Her numerous works (she has been composing steadily since 1945) are written for a great variety of combinations and have been widely performed, by artists such as Kent Nagano, Anssi Karttunen, Claude Delangle, William Christie, Håkan Hardenberger, Antoine Tamestit, Nicolas Hodges, and Sir Simon Rattle, and ensembles and orchestras including the Ensemble intercontemporain, the Berlin Philharmonic, the Orchestre de Paris, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and the BBC Symphony Orchestra.

Among Jolas's notable students is the composer Robert Carl.[5]

Personal life

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Jolas married the physician Gabriel Illouz in 1949; the pair had three children. She retains dual U.S./French citizenship.[6]

Style

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Descriptions of Jolas's style note her early experience of 16th-century Western European polyphonic vocal music (in particular, that of Orlando di Lasso), continual exploration of vocality encompassing both vocal and instrumental works, and a flexible but steady flow free from conventional metric pulse.[3][7][8] Though drawn to some aesthetic aspects of the serialism of her close contemporary Pierre Boulez and others, Jolas has remained an independent figure who never adopted serial technique.[3][8]

List of major works

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Operas

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  • Le Pavillon au Bord de la Rivière (1975), chamber opera in 4 acts
  • Schliemann (1982–83), opera in 3 acts
  • Le Cyclope (1986), chamber opera in 1 act

Orchestral

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  • D'un opéra de voyage (1967) for chamber orchestra
  • Quatre Plages (1967) for string orchestra
  • Well Met (1973) for string orchestra
  • Tales of a summer sea (1977) for orchestra
  • Cinq pièces pour Boulogne (1982)
  • B Day (2006) for symphony orchestra
  • A Little Summer Suite (2015)
  • Les Belles Années (The Good Years) (2023) (World premiere 14 June 2023, LSO, Barbican, London, as a gift to Sir Simon Rattle on elevation to Conductor Emeritus of the LSO)

Solo works with orchestra or ensemble

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  • Points D'Aube (1968) for viola and ensemble
  • Musique d'hiver (1971) for organ and small orchestra
  • Trois Rencontres (1973) for solo string trio and symphony orchestra
  • Stances (1978) for piano and orchestra
  • Histoires vraies (2015) double concerto for trumpet and piano
  • Side Roads (2017) for cello and string orchestra
  • b Tunes for Nicolas (2021) piano concerto for Nicolas Hodges and BBC Symphony Orchestra[11]

Works for large ensemble

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  • Figures (1965) for 9 instruments
  • J.D.E. (1966) for 14 musicians
  • D'un opéra de poupée en sept musiques (1982) for 11 instruments
  • Préludes, Fanfares, Interludes, Sonneries (1983) for wind band
  • Sonate à 8 (1998) for cello octet

Chamber music

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  • Quartets Nos. 1–6 (1956–1997)
  • O Wall (1976) for wind quintet
  • Quatuor VII (Afterthoughts) (2018) for trumpet, violin, viola and cello
  • Episode No. 1–9 (1964–1990) for various solo instruments
  • B for Sonata (1973) for piano
  • Musique de jour (1976) for organ
  • Signets, hommage à Maurice Ravel (1987) for piano
  • Femme le soir (2018) for cello and piano

Chorus

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  • Mass (1945) for choir, soloists and orchestra
  • Motet I–IV (1947–2002) for various voices, chorus, orchestra, ensemble
  • Enfantillages (1956) for women's or children's choir in 3 equal voices
  • L'oeil égaré dans les plis de l'obéissance au vent, cantate radiophonique (1961) for soprano, contralto, baritone, mixed choir and orchestra
  • Dans la chaleur vacante, cantate radiophonique (1963) for choir and orchestra
  • Autres enfantillages (2000) for children's or women's choir with clarinet ad libitum

Vocal

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  • Mots (1963) for soprano and ensemble
  • Quartet No. 2 (1964) for soprano and string trio
  • Liring Ballade (1980) for baritone and orchestra
  • Sigrancia-Ballade (1995) for baritone and orchestra
  • L'Ascension du Mont Ventoux (2004) for soprano, narrator, flute, clarinet, violin, cello and harp

Honors

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  • Officier de la Légion d'honneur (2006)
  • Prix de l'Académie Charles Cros pour l'ensemble de son œuvre (2015)
  • Officier de l'Ordre du Mérite (2003)
  • Berlin Prize (2000)
  • Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres (1985)
  • Prix International Maurice Ravel (1992)
  • Grand prix de la SACEM (1982)
  • Grand Prix de la Ville de Paris (1981)
  • Prix National de la Musique (1974)
  • Koussevitzky Prize (1974)
  • Copley Foundation award (1954)

References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Betsy Jolas'' is a French-American composer and educator known for her distinctive emphasis on melody, vocal expressivity in instrumental writing, and a fluid, seamless approach to form that bridges European and American musical traditions. Born in Paris on 5 August 1926 to American parents deeply involved in interwar avant-garde circles—her mother Maria Jolas was a translator and singer, her father Eugène Jolas a poet and founder of the literary review transition—she relocated to the United States in 1940 amid World War II. There she completed her schooling in New York and earned a Bachelor of Arts from Bennington College in 1946, where she sang in choirs, accompanied ensembles, and discovered Renaissance and medieval polyphony, experiences that profoundly shaped her musical thinking. [1] [2] Returning to Paris in 1946, Jolas pursued advanced studies at the Conservatoire de Paris, earning prizes in fugue under Simone Plé-Caussade, analysis under Olivier Messiaen (Première Mention, 1954), and composition under Darius Milhaud (Deuxième Accessit, 1955). She also studied with Arthur Honegger and won the Besançon International Orchestra Conducting Competition in 1953. From 1955 to 1970 she worked as a programmer for French radio (ORTF), receiving commissions for cantatas and orchestral pieces, and from 1971 to 1974 she served as assistant to Messiaen at the Conservatoire before succeeding him as professor of analysis in 1975 and professor of composition from 1978 until 1992. She has also taught regularly in the United States at institutions including Yale University, Harvard University, the University of California at Berkeley, and Mills College. [1] [3] Jolas's compositional style draws from Monteverdi, Debussy, and Renaissance polyphony while maintaining a measured distance from strict serialism and the Vienna School, prioritizing expressive melody, the "speaking" qualities of instruments, and ambiguities between voice and poetic utterance. Her catalogue features innovative works across genres—including Quatuor II, D’un opéra de voyage, Sonate à 12, Tales of a Summer Sea, Schliemann, A Little Summer Suite, and Letters from Bachville—and has garnered premieres by leading ensembles such as the Berlin Philharmonic and London Symphony Orchestra. She has received numerous honors, among them the Grand Prix National de la Musique (1974), Grand Prix de la Ville de Paris (1981), Grand Prix de la SACEM (1982), membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1983) and American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1995), appointments as Commandeur des Arts et Lettres (1985), Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur (1997), and Commandeur de la Légion d’Honneur (2022). [1] [3] [2] [4] [5]

Early life and education

Family background and childhood in Paris

Betsy Jolas, born Elizabeth MacDonald Jolas on August 5, 1926, in Paris, France, grew up in a bilingual, bicultural household with dual French-American citizenship stemming from her American parents and her birthplace. [1] Her father, Eugène Jolas, was a poet and journalist who founded and edited the influential literary review transition from 1927 to 1938, a key publication in interwar modernism that notably serialized James Joyce's Finnegans Wake under its working title "Work in Progress." [6] Her mother, Maria Jolas (née McDonald), was an American translator who collaborated with her husband on transition. [7] [6] Jolas's childhood unfolded in the heart of Paris's artistic and literary circles, deeply shaped by her parents' central role in transition. [1] She was immersed from an early age in an intensely literary environment that brought her into personal contact with many prominent modernist writers, including James Joyce. [7] This exposure to interwar Europe's avant-garde intellectual and creative figures defined her formative years in Paris until the family's relocation to the United States in 1940 amid World War II. [7]

Relocation to the United States

In 1940, as World War II intensified and German forces occupied France, Betsy Jolas's family relocated from Paris to the United States, settling in New York City. [2] [8] The move was driven by the wartime conditions in Europe that made continued residence in Paris untenable. [9] [10] In New York, Betsy Jolas completed her general schooling at the Lycée Français de New York. [2] [8] This period of residence in the United States provided her with early exposure to American life and culture. [11]

Studies at Bennington College

Betsy Jolas earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Bennington College in 1946. [1] [9] During her time at the college from 1945 to 1946, she pursued formal musical studies alongside other activities that deepened her engagement with early vocal repertoire. [9] [7] She sang in and served as an accompanist for the Dessoff Choirs in New York, directed by Paul Boepple, through which she gained a thorough acquaintance with 16th-century polyphonists, especially Orlando di Lasso. [9] [1] In addition to her formal lessons, this experience introduced her to Renaissance polyphonic music, an encounter that proved influential in her later development. [9] [1] She received counterpoint and harmony instruction from Boepple at the Dalcroze School, which he also directed. [1] At Bennington College, Jolas studied composition with Paul Boepple, piano with Hélène Schnabel, and organ with Carl Weinrich. [7] [1] These studies and choral experiences formed her initial immersion in American musical life and laid groundwork for her subsequent focus on vocal writing.

Return to Paris and Conservatoire training

After graduating from Bennington College, Betsy Jolas returned to Paris in 1946. [12] She enrolled at the École Normale de Musique, where she studied with Arthur Honegger. [12] On the advice of organist André Marchal, Jolas entered the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris. [12] There she studied fugue with Simone Plé-Caussade, receiving the Deuxième Prix in 1953. [12] She continued with analysis under Olivier Messiaen, earning the Première Mention in 1954, [12] and composition with Darius Milhaud, obtaining the Deuxième Accessit in 1955. [12] These years of rigorous conservatory training marked the culmination of her formal education in France following her American undergraduate studies. [12]

Professional career

Radio work at ORTF

Betsy Jolas worked as a radio programmer for the ORTF from 1955 to 1970, a position that marked her entry into professional musical life in France after completing her conservatory studies. [1] With the support of Henri Dutilleux, who held a key role in French radio music programming during this era, she received numerous commissions for radio cantatas and orchestral pieces, enabling her to develop her compositional voice through broadcast-oriented works. [1] Some biographical accounts extend her ORTF association until 1971. [2]

Teaching at the Paris Conservatoire

Betsy Jolas began her teaching career at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris (now the Conservatoire de Paris) in 1971, when she served as assistant to Olivier Messiaen and replaced him in his course until 1974. [1] [13] [14] In 1975, she succeeded Messiaen as Professor of Analysis at the institution. [1] [7] [14] She was appointed Professor of Composition in 1978 and held the position until 1992. [1] Jolas has since been named an honorary professor at the Conservatoire de Paris. [1]

Guest teaching in American universities

Betsy Jolas has engaged in guest teaching and visiting professorships at various American universities intermittently since the early 1970s, complementing her long-term tenure at the Paris Conservatoire.[12] Her American engagements have included Yale University, Harvard University, the University of California, Berkeley, the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), the University of California, San Diego, Mills College (where she held the Darius Milhaud Chair), the University of Southern California (USC), the University of Michigan, and Tanglewood.[8][2][15] These positions, often described as visiting or guest roles rather than permanent appointments, have allowed her to offer masterclasses, lectures, and composition instruction to students across multiple institutions.[7][12]

Musical style and influences

Key influences and aesthetic principles

Betsy Jolas's profound engagement with Renaissance polyphony began during her time in the United States, when she sang as the youngest member of the Dessoff Choirs under Paul Boepple and was struck by the music of Orlando di Lasso during preparations for an all-Lassus concert. [16] [11] She has described Lasso as one of the most important composers to her ever since this early encounter, crediting the choir's exploration of medieval and Renaissance repertoire with widening her musical perspective. [17] Jolas maintains a deep attachment to vocal traditions embodied by Monteverdi, Mozart, Schumann, and Debussy, composers she associates with a central emphasis on the human voice. [2] [1] [18] She has shown particular interest in Arnold Schoenberg's Sprechmelodie in Pierrot lunaire, referring to it as a "strange voice" that fascinated her, while developing her own solutions to the challenges of spoken-sung expression. [2] Nonetheless, she kept a measured distance from the Vienna School and did not pursue the radical break with Romanticism it promoted, remaining instead a "fellow-traveller" of serialism in the 1960s without accepting pointillism or becoming an unconditional adherent. [1] [2] Throughout her career, Jolas formed friendships and professional contacts with leading contemporaries, including Pierre Boulez, Iannis Xenakis, Luciano Berio, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Elliott Carter, John Cage, and Morton Feldman. [1] [16] She explicitly rejected calls for a complete rupture with musical history, disagreeing with Boulez's concept of "le devoir d’amnésie" (the obligation to forget the past) and affirming that her roots lie deep in music's historical continuum. [16] [17] Her aesthetic outlook emphasizes a continuous dialogue between European and American traditions, informed by her bicultural experience. [1] These influences collectively reinforce her enduring commitment to vocality across her work. [2] [1]

Characteristics of her compositional approach

Betsy Jolas's music centers on the voice as a primary expressive force, whether featured explicitly in vocal writing or implied through instrumental lines that evoke speaking voices or distinct personalities. [2] [1] This approach counters long-standing trends that impose instrumental conceptions on vocal parts, instead prioritizing the natural qualities and inflections of the human voice. [2] She has described melody as her principal contribution to contemporary music, cultivating lyrical lines that stand out in a modern context often oriented toward other parameters. [2] Jolas favors fluid rhythms shaped by frequent glissandi and portamenti, which contribute to smooth, continuous motion and blur boundaries between sections. [2] Her works pursue a seamless character, with transitions that occur effortlessly and forms that reinvent themselves endlessly without reliance on conventional metric pulses. [2] [1] She has characterized this ideal as "building without seams," seeking an unpredictable fluidity that allows music to unfold organically. [1] Jolas often challenges genre conventions through her titles, as in examples that designate sonatas for vocalists without text, thereby upending traditional expectations. [2] This reflects her broader delight in blurring distinctions between voice and instrument, drawing broadly from vocal traditions to inform her aesthetic. [1]

Notable works

Vocal and operatic compositions

Betsy Jolas's vocal and operatic output forms a cornerstone of her catalogue, shaped by her early experiences as a singer and her enduring fascination with the ambiguities of vocality, poetic utterance, and the blurring of boundaries between voice and instrument. The voice serves as the central element in much of her creative work, often guiding her melodic mastery and leading her to attribute speaking-like qualities to instruments or to write for voices without text. [19] Her operas include the chamber opera Le Pavillon au bord de la rivière (1975), scored for soprano, six actor-singers, two flutes (doubling bass flute), English horn, three trombones, and percussion, lasting about one hour and thirty minutes, with a libretto drawn from a 13th-century Chinese text by Kuan Han Chin; it premiered at the Festival d'Avignon in July 1975. [20] Schliemann (1982–1983), an opera in three acts, received its premiere at the Opéra de Lyon in May 1995. [19] Le Cyclope (1986), a chamber opera after Euripides, premiered in Avignon in July 1986. [19] D’un opéra de poupée en sept musiques (1982) evokes an operatic framework through its title and conception, though written for eleven instrumentalists. [8] Jolas has also produced a range of other vocal works, including motets composed across several decades, such as Motet II (1965) for chorus and small orchestra and Motet III: Hunc igitur terrorem (1999) for soloists, chorus, and baroque orchestra. [19] L’Ascension du Mont Ventoux (2004) exists in a stage version for soprano, narrator, and ensemble, developed from her Motet IV "Ventosum Vocant" (2002) for soprano and mixed chamber group. [21] Lovaby (2000), a concert aria extracted from the opera Schliemann, is written for soprano and orchestra. [8] Her interest in vocal forms extends to instrumental contexts through lieder-inspired pieces, notably Frauenleben (1992), a cycle of nine lieder arranged for viola and orchestra, which transposes song-like expression to a non-vocal medium. [19] Such works illustrate Jolas's characteristic approach of treating melody and utterance in ways that retain a vocal primacy even beyond traditional singing roles. [19]

Orchestral and concerto works

Betsy Jolas has produced a distinguished body of orchestral and concerto works across seven decades, blending intricate instrumental textures with a lyrical sensibility that often evokes vocal qualities. [3] Her early contributions include D’un opéra de voyage (1967) for small orchestra and Points d’aube (1968) for viola and ensemble. [22] Tales of a Summer Sea (1977) further exemplifies her command of orchestral writing during this period. [23] In recent years, Jolas has received commissions from leading ensembles, resulting in prominent premieres under renowned conductors. A Little Summer Suite (2015) was premiered by the Berlin Philharmonic conducted by Sir Simon Rattle. [24] Letters from Bachville (2019) received its world premiere from the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra under Andris Nelsons. [3] More recent orchestral pieces include The Latest (2022), premiered by the Orchestre de Paris with Klaus Mäkelä, and Ces belles années… (2022–2023), premiered by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Simon Rattle. [3] [25] Her concerto output features Points d’aube (1968) for viola and ensemble, Histoires vraies (2015) for trumpet, piano, and orchestra, Side Roads (2017), and a piano concerto known as "Betsy’s tunes," premiered at the BBC Proms in 2022. [3] These works highlight her ongoing exploration of solo-orchestra dialogue within her distinctive compositional voice. [3]

Chamber and instrumental pieces

Betsy Jolas's chamber and instrumental music forms a substantial and innovative part of her output, often exploring four-part textures through unconventional ensembles and emphasizing the implication of vocality even in purely instrumental settings. Her series of Quatuors, spanning several decades, reconsiders traditional quartet writing by varying instrumentation and roles within the ensemble rather than adhering strictly to string quartet norms. The first six Quatuors were composed between 1956 and 1997, while Quatuor VII, titled Afterthoughts (2018), is scored for trumpet, violin, viola, and cello, continuing her experimentation with four-part structures. Quatuor II (1966), for coloratura soprano using phonemes and string trio, stands out as an early key work in her exploration of vocal-instrumental interplay and was featured at Pierre Boulez's Domaine musical concerts. Quatuor III (1973), for string quartet, comprises nine etudes, each concentrating on a particular string technique such as bowing, vibrato, harmonics, multiple stops, and aleatory elements. [22] [22] [22] [22] [26] Other significant chamber pieces demonstrate her interest in diverse formations and conceptual frameworks. O Wall (1976) is written for wind quintet and draws on the "wall" dialogue from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream to investigate framing and theatricality in instrumental music. The Episode series, composed between 1964 and 1990, consists of solo works for different instruments, each serving as an experimental study comparable to Luciano Berio's Sequenze. Music for Joan (1988) is composed for vibraphone and piano. [22] [22] [27] Many of Jolas's chamber and instrumental compositions convey an implicit vocality through lyrical phrasing, expressive gestures, and structures that evoke vocal models even without text or singers. [22]

Awards and honors

Major prizes and recognitions

Betsy Jolas has been the recipient of numerous prestigious prizes and honors recognizing her contributions to contemporary music. She won the Besançon International Conducting Competition in 1953. [13] [2] This was followed by the Copley Foundation award in Chicago in 1954 [1] and the ORTF prize in 1961. [1] In 1973, she received an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. [1] The next year brought recognition from the Koussevitzky Foundation alongside the Grand Prix National de la Musique. [1] [13] Her accolades continued with the Grand Prix de la Ville de Paris in 1981 [1] and the Grand Prix de la SACEM in 1982. [1] In 1983, she was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters [1] and was promoted to Commandeur des Arts et Lettres in 1985. [1] [28] The 1990s included the Prix International Maurice Ravel and designation as "Personality of the Year" in France in 1992 [13] as well as election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1995 [1] and appointment as Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur in 1997. [28] Later recognitions encompassed the Berlin Prize in 2000 [28] the Officier de l’Ordre national du Mérite in 2001 [1] the Prix René Dumesnil in 2003 [1] the Prix du Président de la République in 2012 [1] and promotion to Commandeur de la Légion d'honneur in 2022. [4] [5]

Personal life

Marriage and family

Betsy Jolas married the physician Gabriel Illouz in 1949. [7] [9] Her husband died in 1993. [10] The couple had three children together. [7] [10] Jolas balanced her work as a composer and teacher with family life. [10]

References

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