Arvo Part

Arvo Part

Genres: contemporary classical, Classical, minimalism, choral, minimalist

About Arvo Part

Arvo Pärt (11 September 1935) is an Estonian composer of classical and sacred music. Since the late 1970s, Pärt has worked in a minimalist style that employs his self-invented compositional technique, tintinnabuli. His music is in part inspired by Gregorian chant. Pärt has been the most performed living composer in the world for 5 consecutive years. Arvo Pärt was born in Paide, Järva County, Estonia. His musical studies began in 1954 at the Tallinn Music Secondary School, interrupted less than a year later while he fulfilled his National Service obligation as oboist and side-drummer in an army band. He returned to Middle School for a year before joining the Tallinn Conservatory in 1957, where his composition teacher was Professor Heino Eller. Pärt started work as a recording engineer with Estonian Radio, wrote music for the stage and received numerous commissions for film scores so that, by the time he graduated from the Conservatory in 1963, he could already be considered a professional composer. A year before leaving, he won first prize in the All-Union Young Composers' Competition for a children's cantata, Our Garden, and an oratorio, Stride of the World. Today Arvo Pärt is best known for his choral works, which he started to produce in the 1980s, after his emigration from the former Soviet Union to Germany, Berlin. Before that he had written his most recognised works from the 1970s, Fratres, Cantus in memoriam Benjamin Britten, and Tabula Rasa. In 1978 Pärt composed Spiegel im Spiegel (Mirror in Mirror). Pärt's oeuvre is generally divided into two periods. His early works ranged from rather severe neo-classical styles influenced by Shostakovich, Prokofiev and Bartók. He then began to compose using Schoenberg's twelve-tone technique and serialism. This, however, not only earned the ire of the Soviet establishment, but also proved to be a creative dead-end. When early works were banned by Soviet censors, Pärt entered the first of several periods of contemplative silence, during which he studied choral music from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries. The spirit of early European polyphony informed the composition of Pärt's transitional third symphony (1971); thereafter he immersed himself in early music, re-investigating the roots of western music. He studied plainsong, Gregorian chant, and the emergence of polyphony in the Renaissance. The music that began to emerge after this period was radically different. This period of new compositions included Fratres, Cantus in memoriam Benjamin Britten, and Tabula rasa. Pärt describes it as tintinnabuli: like the ringing of bells. The music is characterised by simple harmonies, often single unadorned notes, or triad chords which form the basis of western harmony. These are reminiscent of ringing bells. Tintinnabuli works are rhythmically simple, and do not change tempo. The influence of early music is clear. Another characteristic of Pärt's later works is that they are frequently settings for sacred texts, although he mostly chooses Latin or the Church Slavonic language used in Orthodox liturgy instead of his native Estonian language. Large-scale works inspired by religious texts include St John Passion, Te Deum, and Litany. Choral works from this period include Magnificat and The Beatitudes. A new composition, Für Lennart, written for the memory of the Estonian President Lennart Meri, was played at his funeral service on 2nd April 2006. In response to the murder of the Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya in Moscow on 7th October 2006, Pärt declared that all his works performed in 2006-2007 would be in commemoration of her death. Pärt was honoured as the featured composer of the 2008 RTÉ Living Music Festival in Dublin, Ireland. He was also recently commissioned by Louth Contemporary Music Society to compose a new choral work based on St Patrick's Breastplate, to be premiered in 2008 in Louth, Ireland.

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Arvo Part — Top 30 songs of 70

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Arvo Part Kanon Pokajanen (Canon of Repentance): Prayer
Arvo Part Magnificat
Arvo Part Nunc dimittis
Arvo Part The Beatitudes
Arvo Part Fratres (For Violin And Piano)
Arvo Part Litany
Arvo Part Spiegel im spiegel
Arvo Part Da pacem Domine
Arvo Part Part: Portrait (Angele Dubeau & La Pieta)
Arvo Part Tabula Rasa, I. Ludus
Arvo Part Salve Regina (Full)
Arvo Part Symphony no.
Arvo Part Symphony No. 3
Arvo Part Part: Portrait (Angele Dubeau & La Pieta)
Arvo Part Credo
Arvo Part Spiegel im Spiegel, for violin & piano
Arvo Part Como Cierva Sedienta III
Arvo Part Lamentate (NY Premiere)
Arvo Part Symphony No.3
Arvo Part Trisagion
Arvo Part Fratres, Violin Gidon Kremer, Piano Keith Jarrett
Arvo Part Da pacem (Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir)
Arvo Part Music for Unaccompanied Choir
Arvo Part Te Deum
Arvo Part Spiegel im Spiegel
Arvo Part Für Alina
Arvo Part Adam's Lament
Arvo Part Beatus Petronius
Arvo Part L'abbe Agathon
Arvo Part Passio
Kanon Pokajanen (Canon of Repentance): Prayer
Magnificat
Nunc dimittis
The Beatitudes
Fratres (For Violin And Piano)
Spiegel im spiegel
Da pacem Domine
Part: Portrait (Angele Dubeau & La Pieta)
Tabula Rasa, I. Ludus
Salve Regina (Full)
Symphony no.
Symphony No. 3
Part: Portrait (Angele Dubeau & La Pieta)
Spiegel im Spiegel, for violin & piano
Como Cierva Sedienta III
Lamentate (NY Premiere)
Symphony No.3
Trisagion
Fratres, Violin Gidon Kremer, Piano Keith Jarrett
Da pacem (Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir)
Music for Unaccompanied Choir
Te Deum
Spiegel im Spiegel
Für Alina
Adam's Lament
Beatus Petronius
L'abbe Agathon