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Iannis Xenakis

Giannis Klearchou Xenakis (also spelled for professional purposes as Yannis or Iannis Xenakis; Greek: Γιάννης "Ιωάννης" Κλέαρχου Ξενάκης, pronounced [ˈʝanis kseˈnacis]; 29 May 1922 – 4 February 2001) was a Romanian-born Greek-French avant-garde composer, music theorist, architect, performance director and engineer.[1]

Iannis Xenakis
Xenakis in his Paris studio, c. 1970
Born
Giannis Klearchou Xenakis

(1922-05-29)29 May 1922
Died4 February 2001(2001-02-04) (aged 78)
Occupation(s)Composer, architect
Years active1947–1997
WorksList of compositions
Spouse
(m. 1953)
Children1

After 1947, he fled Greece, becoming a naturalised citizen of France eighteen years later.[2] Xenakis pioneered the use of mathematical models in music such as applications of set theory, stochastic processes and game theory and was also an important influence on the development of electronic and computer music. He integrated music with architecture, designing music for pre-existing spaces, and designing spaces to be integrated with specific music compositions and performances.[3]

Among his most important works are Metastaseis (1953–54) for orchestra, which introduced independent parts for every musician of the orchestra; percussion works such as Psappha (1975) and Pléïades (1979); compositions that introduced spatialization by dispersing musicians among the audience, such as Terretektorh (1966); electronic works created using Xenakis's UPIC system; and the massive multimedia performances Xenakis called polytopes, that were a summa of his interests and skills.[4]

Among the numerous theoretical writings he authored, the book Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition (French edition 1963, English translation 1971) is regarded as one of his most important publications. As an architect, Xenakis is primarily known for his early work under Le Corbusier: the priory of Sainte-Marie de La Tourette, on which the two collaborated, and the Philips Pavilion at Expo 58, which Xenakis designed by himself.[citation needed]

Life Edit

1922–47: early years Edit

Giannis Klearchou Xenakis was born in Brăila, Romania—the site of a large Greek community, as the eldest son of Greek parents; Klearchos Xenakis, a businessman from Euboea who was managing director of an English export-import agency and one of the richest men in the city, and Fotini Pavlou from Lemnos, a pianist who also spoke German and French.[1] His two younger brothers were Jason, who became a philosophy professor in the United States and Greece, and Kosmas, an architect, urban planner and artist.

His parents were both interested in music, and it was Pavlou who encouraged the young child to learn more about it: the young Giannis was given a flute by his mother, and the family visited the Bayreuth Festival several times, due to his father's interest in opera. Her early death in 1927, when Xenakis was five years old, was a traumatic experience that, in his own words, "deeply scarred" the future composer. She had previously been infected from measles and died after giving birth to a stillborn daughter.[5]

He was subsequently educated by a series of English, French, and German governesses, and then, in 1932, sent to Greece to study at the Anargyrio-Korgialenio boarding school on the Aegean island of Spetses.[1] He excelled in both academics and athletics and sang in the school's boys' choir, where the repertoire included works by Palestrina, and Mozart's Requiem, which Xenakis memorized in its entirety.[6]

It was also at the Spetses school that Xenakis studied notation and solfège, being introduced to the music of Ludwig van Beethoven and Johannes Brahms and became enamoured of Greek traditional and church music.[6] At the same time, he discovered the writer Homer and had a habit of visiting museums.

In 1938, after graduating from the school, Xenakis moved to Athens to prepare for entrance exams at its National Technical University, also studying Ancient Greek. He was encouraged by his friends and family to do so due to his interests in physics and mathematics. Although he intended to study architecture and engineering, he also took lessons in harmony and counterpoint with Aristotelis Koundouroff.[7] In 1940, he successfully passed the exams, but his studies were cut short by the Greco-Italian War, which began with the Italian invasion on 28 October 1940. Although Greece eventually won the war, it was not long before the German army joined the Italians in the Battle of Greece, in April 1941.

This led to the Axis occupation of Greece during World War II, which lasted until late 1944, when the Allies began their drive across Europe, forcing the Axis forces to withdraw. Xenakis joined the National Liberation Front early during the war, participating in mass protests and demonstrations, and later becoming part of armed resistance — this last step was a painful experience Xenakis refused to discuss until much later in life.[8][9]

After the Axis forces left, Churchill ordered that British forces step in to help restore the Greek monarchy; they were opposed by the Democratic Army of Greece, and the country plunged into a civil war. In December 1944, during the period of Churchill's martial law,[10]

Xenakis (who was by then a member of the communist students' company of the left-wing Lord Byron faction of ELAS) became involved in street fighting against British tanks. He was wounded and facially disfigured when shrapnel from a tank blast hit his cheek and left eye, which was blinded;[11] the fact that Xenakis survived the injury has been described as a miracle.[12][13]

The Technical University operated intermittently during these years. Despite this, and Xenakis's other activities, he was able to graduate in 1947, with a degree in civil engineering.[14]

Xenakis was then conscripted into the national armed forces. Around 1947 the Greek government began arresting former resistance members that were left-wing oriented and sending them to prison. Xenakis, fearing for his life, went into hiding. With the help of his father and others, he fled Greece through Italy by using a fake passport. On 11 November 1947 he arrived in Paris. In a late interview, Xenakis admitted to feeling tremendous guilt at leaving his country, and that guilt was one of the sources of his later devotion to music:

For years I was tormented by guilt at having left the country for which I'd fought. I left my friends—some were in prison, others were dead, some managed to escape. I felt I was in debt to them and that I had to repay that debt. And I felt I had a mission. I had to do something important to regain the right to live. It wasn't just a question of music—it was something much more significant.[15]

In the meantime, in Greece he was sentenced in absentia to death by the right-wing administration. The sentence was commuted to ten years' imprisonment in 1951, and only lifted some 23 years later, after the fall of the Greek junta in 1974. He later returned the same year.[16]

1947–59: architecture and music Edit

 
The Philips Pavilion at the time of the exhibition, designed by Xenakis

Although he was an illegal immigrant in Paris, Xenakis was able to get a job at Le Corbusier's architectural studio. He worked as an engineering assistant at first, but quickly rose to performing more important tasks, and eventually to collaborating with Le Corbusier on major projects. These included a kindergarten on the roof of an apartment block in Nantes (Rezé), the Unité d'Habitation of Nantes-Rezé, parts of government buildings in Chandigarh, India, the "undulatory glass surfaces" of Sainte Marie de La Tourette, a Dominican priory in a valley near Lyon, and the Philips Pavilion at Expo 58—the latter project was completed by Xenakis alone from a basic sketch by Le Corbusier.[17][page needed] The experience Xenakis gained played a major role in his music: important early compositions such as Metastaseis (1953–54) were based directly on architectural concepts. At the same time, he dropped the "G" from his professional name to get the name he is most commonly known by, "Iannis".

At the same time, while working for Le Corbusier, Xenakis was studying harmony and counterpoint, and composing. He worked long and hard, frequently far into the night,[18] and sought guidance from a number of teachers, most of whom, however, ultimately rejected him. Such was the case with Nadia Boulanger, who was the first person Xenakis approached about lessons. He then tried studying with Arthur Honegger, whose reaction to Xenakis's music was unenthusiastic. As Xenakis recounted in a 1987 interview, Honegger dismissed a piece which included parallel fifths and octaves as "not music". Xenakis, who was by that time well acquainted with music of Debussy, Béla Bartók, and Stravinsky, all of whom used such devices and much more experimental ones, was furious and left to study with Darius Milhaud, but these lessons also proved fruitless.[19] Annette Dieudonné, a close friend of Boulanger's, then recommended that Xenakis try studying with Olivier Messiaen.[20] Xenakis approached Messiaen for advice on whether he once again start studying harmony and counterpoint. Messiaen later recalled:

I understood straight away that he was not someone like the others. [...] He is of superior intelligence. [...] I did something horrible which I should do with no other student, for I think one should study harmony and counterpoint. But this was a man so much out of the ordinary that I said... No, you are almost thirty, you have the good fortune of being Greek, of being an architect and having studied special mathematics. Take advantage of these things. Do them in your music.[21]

Francisco Estévez has described this work as "mathematical formulas translated . . . into beautiful, exciting, and above all, convincing music."[22]

Xenakis regularly attended Messiaen's classes from 1951 until 1953. Messiaen and his students studied music from a wide range of genres and styles, with particular attention to rhythm.[23] Xenakis's compositions from 1949 until 1952 were mostly inspired by Greek folk melodies, as well as Bartók, Ravel, and others; after studying with Messiaen, he discovered serialism and gained a deep understanding of contemporary music (Messiaen's other pupils at the time included Karlheinz Stockhausen and Jean Barraqué, among others). Messiaen's modal serialism was an influence on Xenakis's first large-scale work, Anastenaria (1953–54): a triptych for choir and orchestra based on an ancient Dionysian ritual. The third part of the triptych, Metastaseis, is generally regarded as the composer's first mature piece; it was detached from the triptych to mark the beginning of the "official" Xenakis oeuvre.[17] He was considered to be part of the Darmstadt School, but later broke with the group of composers, who he believed focused too heavily on serialism and controlling all aspects of composition. In an article titled “The Crisis of Serial Music” he specifically accused Boulez and Stockhausen of steering music into dead-end.[24]

On 3 December 1953, Xenakis married the journalist and writer Françoise Gargouïl, who he met in 1950.[25] Their daughter Mâkhi, who later became a painter and sculptor, was born in 1956 in Paris. In late 1954, with Messiaen's support, Xenakis was accepted into the Groupe de Recherches de Musique Concrète;[26] an organization established by Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry, dedicated to studying and producing electronic music of the musique concrète variety. Shortly after that Xenakis met conductor Hermann Scherchen, who was immediately impressed by the score of Metastaseis and offered his support. Although Scherchen did not premiere that particular work, he did give performances of later pieces by Xenakis, and the relationship between the conductor and the composer was of vital importance for the latter.[27]

By the late 1950s Xenakis slowly started gaining recognition in artistic circles. In 1957, he received his first composition award, from the European Cultural Foundation, and in 1958 the first official commission came through, from Service de Recherche of Radio France.[28][verification needed] In the same year, he produced a musique concrète piece, Concret PH, for the Philips Pavilion. In 1960, Xenakis was well known enough to receive a commission from UNESCO for a soundtrack for a documentary film by Enrico Fulchignoni.[29]

Later life Edit

After leaving Le Corbusier's studio in 1959, Xenakis supported himself by composition and teaching, and quickly became recognized as one of the most important European composers of his time. In 1965, he became a French citizen. He became especially known for his musical research in the field of computer-assisted composition, for which he founded the Equipe de Mathématique et Automatique Musicales (EMAMu) in 1966 (known as CEMAMu: Centre d’Etudes de Mathématique et Automatique Musicales, since 1972). He taught at Indiana University from 1967 until 1972 (and established a studio similar to EMAMu there), and worked as visiting professor at the Sorbonne from 1973 until 1989.[17]

Xenakis frequently lectured (for instance, from 1975 to 1978 he was Professor of Music at Gresham College, London, giving free public lectures),[30] and teaching composition. His works were performed at numerous festivals worldwide, including the Shiraz Arts Festival in Iran. His notable students include Pascal Dusapin, Henning Lohner, Miguel Ángel Coria, Susan Frykberg, Norma Tyer, Robert Carl, and Julio Estrada. In 1983, he was elected as a member of the Académie Française.

 
Xenakis (1975)

In addition to composing and teaching, Xenakis also wrote a number of articles and essays on music. Of these, Formalized Music (1963) became particularly known and was later expanded into a full book. A collection of texts on applications of stochastic processes, game theory and computer programming in music, it was later revised, expanded and translated into English as Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition (1971) during Xenakis's tenure at Indiana University.

Xenakis was an atheist. Polish musicologist Zbigniew Skowron, describing Aïs, wrote "In accordance with his atheist views, Xenakis emphasizes the finality of death as the ultimate event of human life, and this is probably why wild shrieks and moans punctuate his score".[31] Xenakis himself wrote, "Man is one, indivisible, and total. He thinks with his belly and feels with his mind. I would like to propose what, to my mind, covers the term "music": ... 7. It is a mystical (but atheistic) asceticism ...".[32]

Xenakis completed his last work, O-mega for percussion soloist and chamber orchestra, in 1997. His health had been getting progressively worse over the years, and by 1997 he was no longer able to work. In 1999, Xenakis was awarded the Polar Music Prize "for a long succession of forceful works, charged with sensitivity, commitment and passion, through which he has come to rank among the most central composers of our century in the realm of art music, exercising within its various fields an influence which cannot be readily overstated".[33]

After several years of serious illness, on 1 February 2001 the composer lapsed into a coma. He died in his Paris home four days later, on 4 February, aged 78; and was shortly after cremated, with his ashes being given to his family. He was outlived by his wife, who died on 12 February 2018 in Courbevoie, and his daughter.[34]

Works Edit

Specific examples of mathematics, statistics, and physics applied to music composition are the use of the statistical mechanics of gases in Pithoprakta, statistical distribution of points on a plane in Diamorphoses, minimal constraints in Achorripsis, the normal distribution in ST/10 and Atrées, Markov chains in Analogique, game theory in Duel, Stratégie, and Linaia-agon, group theory in Nomos Alpha (for Siegfried Palm), set theory in Herma and Eonta,[35] and Brownian motion in N'Shima. Persephassa, commissioned by the Shiraz Arts Festival, was performed by Les Percussions de Strasbourg, receiving its world premiere in Persepolis in 1969. Subsequently, he was once again commissioned by the Shiraz Arts Festival and composed Persepolis for the occasion, a "polytope" composed specific to the historic site.[36]

Although electroacoustic compositions represent only a small fraction of Xenakis's output, they are highly relevant to musical thinking in the late 20th century. Important works in this medium include Concret PH (1958), Analogique B (1958–59), Bohor (1962), La légende d'Eer (1977), Mycenae-Alpha (1978), Voyage absolu des Unari vers Andromède (1989), Gendy301 (1991), and S709 (1994).[37]

By 1979, he had devised a computer system called UPIC, which could translate graphical images into musical results.[38][39] "Xenakis had originally trained as an architect, so some of his drawings, which he called 'arborescences', resembled both organic forms and architectural structures." These drawings' various curves and lines that could be interpreted by UPIC as real time instructions for the sound synthesis process. The drawing is, thus, rendered into a composition. Mycenae-Alpha was the first of these pieces he created using UPIC as it was being perfected.[40]

Xenakis also developed a stochastic synthesizer algorithm (used in GENDY), called dynamic stochastic synthesis, where a polygonal waveform's sectional borders' amplitudes and distance between borders may be generated using a form of random walk to create both aleatoric timbres and musical forms.[41] Further material may be generated by then refeeding the original waveform back into the function or wave forms may be superimposed. Elastic barriers or mirrors are used to keep the randomly generated values within a given finite interval, so as to not exceed limits such as the audible pitch range, avoid complete chaos (white noise), and to create a balance between stability and instability (unity and variety).[41]

Despite Xenakis's reputation as a "mathematical" composer, his works are known for their power and physicality. Alex Ross wrote that Xenakis "produced some of the rawest, wildest music in history—sounds that explode around the ears. Rarefied methods were employed to release primordial energies."[42] Ben Watson expressed admiration for the "terrifying emotional impact of [Xenakis'] sonic objectivity", describing his music as possessing "truly majestic otherness. It is an alien shard, glimmering in the heart of the West."[43]

Tom Service praised Xenakis' music for its "shattering visceral power" and "sheer, scintillating physicality", noting its "deep, primal rootedness in richer and older phenomena even than musical history: the physics and patterning of the natural world, of the stars, of gas molecules, and the proliferating possibilities of mathematical principles."[11] Service described Xenakis as a composer "whose craggily, joyously elemental music turned collections of pitches and rhythms and instruments into a force of nature, releasing a power that previous composers had only suggested metaphorically but which he would realise with arguably greater clarity, ferocity, intensity than any musician, before or since," and suggested that his music is "expressive: not in a conventionally emotional way, perhaps, but it has an ecstatic, cathartic power. Xenakis's music – and its preternaturally brilliant performers – allows its listeners to witness seismic events close at hand, to be at the middle of a musical happening of cosmic intensity."[11] Service concluded: "it took Xenakis for music to become nature. On holiday in Corsica, Xenakis would pilot his canoe into the teeth of the biggest storm he and his paddle could manage. When you're listening to his music, you also go out there into the eye of a musical storm that will invigorate, inspire, and awe. See you out there..."[11]

Writings Edit

  • Xenakis, Iannis. 2001. Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition (Harmonologia Series No. 6). Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press. ISBN 1-57647-079-2

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Harley, Dr James (28 September 2015). Iannis Xenakis: Kraanerg. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-4094-2331-7.
  2. ^ Gagné, Nicole V. (2012). Historical Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Classical Music, p. 299, Lanham: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-6765-6: "Xenakis settled in Paris, becoming a French citizen in 1965."
  3. ^ Gérard Pape, Musipoesc: Writings About Music, Paris: Éditions Michel de Maule, 2015, pp. 351-353.
  4. ^ "Yannis Xenakis' Polytopes: Cosmogonies in Sound and Architecture – SOCKS". Socks. 8 January 2014. Retrieved 2 June 2019.
  5. ^ Matossian, 13.
  6. ^ a b Varga, p. 14.
  7. ^ Matossian, 14–17.
  8. ^ Matossian, pp. 18–27.
  9. ^ Varga, pp. 14–19.
  10. ^ Gilbert 1966, p. 56.
  11. ^ a b c d Service, Tom (23 April 2013). "A guide to Iannis Xenakis's music". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  12. ^ Harley, 2.
  13. ^ Barthel-Calvet, Anne-Sylvie. (2002). "Chronologie". In Portrait(s) de Iannis Xenakis, edited by François-Bernard Mâche, pp. 25–82. Paris: Bibliothèque Nationale de France. ISBN 2-7177-2178-9.
  14. ^ Baltensperger, André. (1995). Iannis Xenakis und die Stochastische Musik – Komposition im Spannungsfeld von Architektur und Mathematik. Zürich. Paul Haupt. p. 72.
  15. ^ Varga, p. 47.
  16. ^ Harley, p.92.
  17. ^ a b c Hoffmann
  18. ^ Matossian, 37.
  19. ^ Xenakis, Iannis; Brown, Roberta; Rahn, John (1987). "Xenakis on Xenakis" (PDF). Perspectives of New Music. 25 (1–2): 16–63 (20). JSTOR 833091.
  20. ^ Harley, 4.
  21. ^ Matossian, 48.
  22. ^ Thatcher, Nathan. 2016. Paco. New York: Mormon Artists Group. ISBN 978-1-5238-5909-2. p. 116.
  23. ^ For a study of Messiaen's teaching methods, see Boivin 1995,[page needed].
  24. ^ Slabihoudek, Jiri (22 September 2022). "With a Sound Forged in War, Iannis Xenakis Embraced Chaos". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 24 September 2022.
  25. ^ Xenakis, Françoise, and Andreas Waldburg-Wolfegg. "", translated by Sarah Green and Maro Elliott. International Contemporary Ensemble website (archive from 11 June 2015, accessed 29 April 2016).
  26. ^ Harley, 12.
  27. ^ Matossian, 77–79.
  28. ^ Harley, 23.
  29. ^ Harley, 19.
  30. ^ Cole, Jonathan 2009. , Gresham College (21 September, archive from 18 January 2015, accessed 29 April 2016)
  31. ^ Skowron, Zbigniew (ed.). (2001). Lutosławski Studies. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816660-3. pp. 122–123.
  32. ^ Xenakis, Iannis. (1992). Formalized Music: Thought and Mathematics in Composition, second edition. Harmonologia Series, no. 6. Stuyvesant, New York: Pendragon Press. ISBN 978-1-57647-079-4. p. 181.
  33. ^ "Iannis Xenakis, Laureate of the Polar Music Prize 1999". Polar Music Prize website (accessed 29 April 2016) 8 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ Griffiths, Paul. (5 February 2001). Iannis Xenakis, Composer Who Built Music on Mathematics, Is Dead at 78", The New York Times, p. B7
  35. ^ Chrissochoidis, Ilias, Stavros Houliaras, and Christos Mitsakis. (2005). "Set theory in Xenakis' EONTA". In International Symposium Iannis Xenakis, edited by Anastasia Georgaki and Makis Solomos, pp. 241–249. Athens: The National and Kapodistrian University.
  36. ^ Gluck, Robert (2007). "The Shiraz Arts Festival: Western Avant-Garde Arts in 1970s Iran". Leonardo. 40: 21–28. doi:10.1162/leon.2007.40.1.20. S2CID 57561105.
  37. ^ Di Scipio, 201.
  38. ^ Hugill 2008, pp. 95, 182.
  39. ^ Gagné, Nicole V. (17 July 2019). Historical Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Classical Music. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 397. ISBN 978-1-5381-2298-3.
  40. ^ Di Scipio, 220.
  41. ^ a b Serra, 241.
  42. ^ Ross, Alex (22 February 2010). "Waveforms: The singular Iannis Xenakis". The New Yorker. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  43. ^ Watson, Ben (June 1995). "Iannis Xenakis: Primal Architect". The Wire. No. 136.

Cited sources Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Amagali, Rosemary Tristano. (1975). "Texture as an Organizational Factor in Selected Works of Iannis Xenakis". M.M. Thesis, Indiana University.
  • Anther, Eric (1986). ""Mi-homme, mi dragon" par Iannis Xenakis" (PDF). Le monde de la musique. France: Le monde and Telerama.
  • Ariza, Christopher (2005). "The Xenakis Sieve as Object: A New Model and a Complete Implementation". Computer Music Journal. 29 (2): 40–60. doi:10.1162/0148926054094396. ISSN 0148-9267. S2CID 10854809.
  • Bardot, Jean-Marc. (1999). "Cendrées de Xenakis ou l'émergence de la vocalité dans la pensée xenakienne." Undergraduate thesis (equivalent). Saint-Etienne: Université Jean Monnet.
  • Biasi, Salvatore di. (1994). Musica e matematica negli anni 50–60: Iannis Xenakis. Bologna. Università degli Studi di Bologna.
  • Boivin, Jean. 1995. La Classe de Messiaen. Paris: Christian Bourgois.
  • Clark, Philip. (2009). "Xenakis", in The Wire Primers: A Guide To Modern Music, 191–198. London and New York: Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-427-5.
  • Kitsikis, Dimitri. (2014). Περί Ηρώων: Οι ήρωες και η σημασία τους για τον σύγχρονο ελληνισμό (On Heroes.: Heroes and Their Importance for Contemporary Hellenism). Athens: Herodotos. ISBN 978-960-485-068-6 (Chapter "Iannis Xenakis: Souvenirs from Paris, by D. Kitsikis, Xenakis's Intimate Friend").
  • McCallum, Peter (17 October 1992). "Metaphors of space". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 47. Retrieved 23 May 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Murray, Margaret (5 November 1988). "Taking Bach to the planets". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 93. Retrieved 23 May 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Paland, Ralph, and Christoph von Blumröder (eds.). (2009). Iannis Xenakis: Das elektroakustische Werk. Internationales Symposion. Tagungsbericht 2006. Signale aus Köln. Beiträge zur Musik der Zeit 14. Vienna. Der Apfel. ISBN 978-3-85450-414-6.
  • Peters, Frank (2 May 1967). "Battle Sounds Graphed Into Music". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. St. Louis, Missouri. p. 41. Retrieved 23 May 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  • Schaal, Hans-Jürgen (29 May 2022). "Die Mathematik der Klangwolken – Ausgabe: 5/22 – neue musikzeitung". nmz (in German). Retrieved 29 May 2022.
  • Swed, Mark (10 November 2010). "Cold, stern and so very hip". The Los Angeles Times. p. 32. Retrieved 23 May 2020 – via Newspapers.com.

Obituaries Edit

External links Edit

  • xenakis.musicportal.gr from the Institute for Research on Music and Acoustics, Athens (Greece) – in Greek and English with many score and audio examples
  • Iannis-Xenakis.org by the Friends of Xenakis
  • Medieval.org: Modern Music: Xenakis
  • Luque, Sergio. 2009. "The Stochastic Synthesis of Iannis Xenakis." Leonardo Music Journal (19): 77–84
  • 70-page PDF from Xenakis's publisher Éditions Durand-Salabert-Eschig
  • Iannis Xenakis @ Boosey & Hawkes Publisher
  • Iannis Xenakis: the aesthetics of his early works by Markos Zografos
  • Iannis Xenakis Bibliography and Discography compiled by James Harley for Leonardo/ISAST
  • Two articles by Grant Chu Covell (2006) documenting then-recent Xenakis recordings and books about Xenakis: and
  • "Iannis Xenakis (biography, works, resources)" (in French and English). IRCAM.
  • Interview with Iannis Xenakis, 25 March 1997

iannis, xenakis, giannis, klearchou, xenakis, also, spelled, professional, purposes, yannis, greek, Γιάννης, Ιωάννης, Κλέαρχου, Ξενάκης, pronounced, ˈʝanis, kseˈnacis, 1922, february, 2001, romanian, born, greek, french, avant, garde, composer, music, theorist. Giannis Klearchou Xenakis also spelled for professional purposes as Yannis or Iannis Xenakis Greek Giannhs Iwannhs Klearxoy 3enakhs pronounced ˈʝanis kseˈnacis 29 May 1922 4 February 2001 was a Romanian born Greek French avant garde composer music theorist architect performance director and engineer 1 Iannis XenakisXenakis in his Paris studio c 1970BornGiannis Klearchou Xenakis 1922 05 29 29 May 1922Brăila RomaniaDied4 February 2001 2001 02 04 aged 78 Paris FranceOccupation s Composer architectYears active1947 1997WorksList of compositionsSpouseFrancoise Gargouil m 1953 wbr Children1After 1947 he fled Greece becoming a naturalised citizen of France eighteen years later 2 Xenakis pioneered the use of mathematical models in music such as applications of set theory stochastic processes and game theory and was also an important influence on the development of electronic and computer music He integrated music with architecture designing music for pre existing spaces and designing spaces to be integrated with specific music compositions and performances 3 Among his most important works are Metastaseis 1953 54 for orchestra which introduced independent parts for every musician of the orchestra percussion works such as Psappha 1975 and Pleiades 1979 compositions that introduced spatialization by dispersing musicians among the audience such as Terretektorh 1966 electronic works created using Xenakis s UPIC system and the massive multimedia performances Xenakis called polytopes that were a summa of his interests and skills 4 Among the numerous theoretical writings he authored the book Formalized Music Thought and Mathematics in Composition French edition 1963 English translation 1971 is regarded as one of his most important publications As an architect Xenakis is primarily known for his early work under Le Corbusier the priory of Sainte Marie de La Tourette on which the two collaborated and the Philips Pavilion at Expo 58 which Xenakis designed by himself citation needed Contents 1 Life 1 1 1922 47 early years 1 2 1947 59 architecture and music 1 3 Later life 2 Works 3 Writings 4 References 5 Cited sources 6 Further reading 6 1 Obituaries 7 External linksLife Edit1922 47 early years Edit Giannis Klearchou Xenakis was born in Brăila Romania the site of a large Greek community as the eldest son of Greek parents Klearchos Xenakis a businessman from Euboea who was managing director of an English export import agency and one of the richest men in the city and Fotini Pavlou from Lemnos a pianist who also spoke German and French 1 His two younger brothers were Jason who became a philosophy professor in the United States and Greece and Kosmas an architect urban planner and artist His parents were both interested in music and it was Pavlou who encouraged the young child to learn more about it the young Giannis was given a flute by his mother and the family visited the Bayreuth Festival several times due to his father s interest in opera Her early death in 1927 when Xenakis was five years old was a traumatic experience that in his own words deeply scarred the future composer She had previously been infected from measles and died after giving birth to a stillborn daughter 5 He was subsequently educated by a series of English French and German governesses and then in 1932 sent to Greece to study at the Anargyrio Korgialenio boarding school on the Aegean island of Spetses 1 He excelled in both academics and athletics and sang in the school s boys choir where the repertoire included works by Palestrina and Mozart s Requiem which Xenakis memorized in its entirety 6 It was also at the Spetses school that Xenakis studied notation and solfege being introduced to the music of Ludwig van Beethoven and Johannes Brahms and became enamoured of Greek traditional and church music 6 At the same time he discovered the writer Homer and had a habit of visiting museums In 1938 after graduating from the school Xenakis moved to Athens to prepare for entrance exams at its National Technical University also studying Ancient Greek He was encouraged by his friends and family to do so due to his interests in physics and mathematics Although he intended to study architecture and engineering he also took lessons in harmony and counterpoint with Aristotelis Koundouroff 7 In 1940 he successfully passed the exams but his studies were cut short by the Greco Italian War which began with the Italian invasion on 28 October 1940 Although Greece eventually won the war it was not long before the German army joined the Italians in the Battle of Greece in April 1941 This led to the Axis occupation of Greece during World War II which lasted until late 1944 when the Allies began their drive across Europe forcing the Axis forces to withdraw Xenakis joined the National Liberation Front early during the war participating in mass protests and demonstrations and later becoming part of armed resistance this last step was a painful experience Xenakis refused to discuss until much later in life 8 9 After the Axis forces left Churchill ordered that British forces step in to help restore the Greek monarchy they were opposed by the Democratic Army of Greece and the country plunged into a civil war In December 1944 during the period of Churchill s martial law 10 Xenakis who was by then a member of the communist students company of the left wing Lord Byron faction of ELAS became involved in street fighting against British tanks He was wounded and facially disfigured when shrapnel from a tank blast hit his cheek and left eye which was blinded 11 the fact that Xenakis survived the injury has been described as a miracle 12 13 The Technical University operated intermittently during these years Despite this and Xenakis s other activities he was able to graduate in 1947 with a degree in civil engineering 14 Xenakis was then conscripted into the national armed forces Around 1947 the Greek government began arresting former resistance members that were left wing oriented and sending them to prison Xenakis fearing for his life went into hiding With the help of his father and others he fled Greece through Italy by using a fake passport On 11 November 1947 he arrived in Paris In a late interview Xenakis admitted to feeling tremendous guilt at leaving his country and that guilt was one of the sources of his later devotion to music For years I was tormented by guilt at having left the country for which I d fought I left my friends some were in prison others were dead some managed to escape I felt I was in debt to them and that I had to repay that debt And I felt I had a mission I had to do something important to regain the right to live It wasn t just a question of music it was something much more significant 15 In the meantime in Greece he was sentenced in absentia to death by the right wing administration The sentence was commuted to ten years imprisonment in 1951 and only lifted some 23 years later after the fall of the Greek junta in 1974 He later returned the same year 16 1947 59 architecture and music Edit nbsp The Philips Pavilion at the time of the exhibition designed by XenakisAlthough he was an illegal immigrant in Paris Xenakis was able to get a job at Le Corbusier s architectural studio He worked as an engineering assistant at first but quickly rose to performing more important tasks and eventually to collaborating with Le Corbusier on major projects These included a kindergarten on the roof of an apartment block in Nantes Reze the Unite d Habitation of Nantes Reze parts of government buildings in Chandigarh India the undulatory glass surfaces of Sainte Marie de La Tourette a Dominican priory in a valley near Lyon and the Philips Pavilion at Expo 58 the latter project was completed by Xenakis alone from a basic sketch by Le Corbusier 17 page needed The experience Xenakis gained played a major role in his music important early compositions such as Metastaseis 1953 54 were based directly on architectural concepts At the same time he dropped the G from his professional name to get the name he is most commonly known by Iannis At the same time while working for Le Corbusier Xenakis was studying harmony and counterpoint and composing He worked long and hard frequently far into the night 18 and sought guidance from a number of teachers most of whom however ultimately rejected him Such was the case with Nadia Boulanger who was the first person Xenakis approached about lessons He then tried studying with Arthur Honegger whose reaction to Xenakis s music was unenthusiastic As Xenakis recounted in a 1987 interview Honegger dismissed a piece which included parallel fifths and octaves as not music Xenakis who was by that time well acquainted with music of Debussy Bela Bartok and Stravinsky all of whom used such devices and much more experimental ones was furious and left to study with Darius Milhaud but these lessons also proved fruitless 19 Annette Dieudonne a close friend of Boulanger s then recommended that Xenakis try studying with Olivier Messiaen 20 Xenakis approached Messiaen for advice on whether he once again start studying harmony and counterpoint Messiaen later recalled I understood straight away that he was not someone like the others He is of superior intelligence I did something horrible which I should do with no other student for I think one should study harmony and counterpoint But this was a man so much out of the ordinary that I said No you are almost thirty you have the good fortune of being Greek of being an architect and having studied special mathematics Take advantage of these things Do them in your music 21 Francisco Estevez has described this work as mathematical formulas translated into beautiful exciting and above all convincing music 22 Xenakis regularly attended Messiaen s classes from 1951 until 1953 Messiaen and his students studied music from a wide range of genres and styles with particular attention to rhythm 23 Xenakis s compositions from 1949 until 1952 were mostly inspired by Greek folk melodies as well as Bartok Ravel and others after studying with Messiaen he discovered serialism and gained a deep understanding of contemporary music Messiaen s other pupils at the time included Karlheinz Stockhausen and Jean Barraque among others Messiaen s modal serialism was an influence on Xenakis s first large scale work Anastenaria 1953 54 a triptych for choir and orchestra based on an ancient Dionysian ritual The third part of the triptych Metastaseis is generally regarded as the composer s first mature piece it was detached from the triptych to mark the beginning of the official Xenakis oeuvre 17 He was considered to be part of the Darmstadt School but later broke with the group of composers who he believed focused too heavily on serialism and controlling all aspects of composition In an article titled The Crisis of Serial Music he specifically accused Boulez and Stockhausen of steering music into dead end 24 On 3 December 1953 Xenakis married the journalist and writer Francoise Gargouil who he met in 1950 25 Their daughter Makhi who later became a painter and sculptor was born in 1956 in Paris In late 1954 with Messiaen s support Xenakis was accepted into the Groupe de Recherches de Musique Concrete 26 an organization established by Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry dedicated to studying and producing electronic music of the musique concrete variety Shortly after that Xenakis met conductor Hermann Scherchen who was immediately impressed by the score of Metastaseis and offered his support Although Scherchen did not premiere that particular work he did give performances of later pieces by Xenakis and the relationship between the conductor and the composer was of vital importance for the latter 27 By the late 1950s Xenakis slowly started gaining recognition in artistic circles In 1957 he received his first composition award from the European Cultural Foundation and in 1958 the first official commission came through from Service de Recherche of Radio France 28 verification needed In the same year he produced a musique concrete piece Concret PH for the Philips Pavilion In 1960 Xenakis was well known enough to receive a commission from UNESCO for a soundtrack for a documentary film by Enrico Fulchignoni 29 Later life Edit After leaving Le Corbusier s studio in 1959 Xenakis supported himself by composition and teaching and quickly became recognized as one of the most important European composers of his time In 1965 he became a French citizen He became especially known for his musical research in the field of computer assisted composition for which he founded the Equipe de Mathematique et Automatique Musicales EMAMu in 1966 known as CEMAMu Centre d Etudes de Mathematique et Automatique Musicales since 1972 He taught at Indiana University from 1967 until 1972 and established a studio similar to EMAMu there and worked as visiting professor at the Sorbonne from 1973 until 1989 17 Xenakis frequently lectured for instance from 1975 to 1978 he was Professor of Music at Gresham College London giving free public lectures 30 and teaching composition His works were performed at numerous festivals worldwide including the Shiraz Arts Festival in Iran His notable students include Pascal Dusapin Henning Lohner Miguel Angel Coria Susan Frykberg Norma Tyer Robert Carl and Julio Estrada In 1983 he was elected as a member of the Academie Francaise nbsp Xenakis 1975 In addition to composing and teaching Xenakis also wrote a number of articles and essays on music Of these Formalized Music 1963 became particularly known and was later expanded into a full book A collection of texts on applications of stochastic processes game theory and computer programming in music it was later revised expanded and translated into English as Formalized Music Thought and Mathematics in Composition 1971 during Xenakis s tenure at Indiana University Xenakis was an atheist Polish musicologist Zbigniew Skowron describing Ais wrote In accordance with his atheist views Xenakis emphasizes the finality of death as the ultimate event of human life and this is probably why wild shrieks and moans punctuate his score 31 Xenakis himself wrote Man is one indivisible and total He thinks with his belly and feels with his mind I would like to propose what to my mind covers the term music 7 It is a mystical but atheistic asceticism 32 Xenakis completed his last work O mega for percussion soloist and chamber orchestra in 1997 His health had been getting progressively worse over the years and by 1997 he was no longer able to work In 1999 Xenakis was awarded the Polar Music Prize for a long succession of forceful works charged with sensitivity commitment and passion through which he has come to rank among the most central composers of our century in the realm of art music exercising within its various fields an influence which cannot be readily overstated 33 After several years of serious illness on 1 February 2001 the composer lapsed into a coma He died in his Paris home four days later on 4 February aged 78 and was shortly after cremated with his ashes being given to his family He was outlived by his wife who died on 12 February 2018 in Courbevoie and his daughter 34 Works EditSee also List of compositions by Iannis Xenakis Specific examples of mathematics statistics and physics applied to music composition are the use of the statistical mechanics of gases in Pithoprakta statistical distribution of points on a plane in Diamorphoses minimal constraints in Achorripsis the normal distribution in ST 10 and Atrees Markov chains in Analogique game theory in Duel Strategie and Linaia agon group theory in Nomos Alpha for Siegfried Palm set theory in Herma and Eonta 35 and Brownian motion in N Shima Persephassa commissioned by the Shiraz Arts Festival was performed by Les Percussions de Strasbourg receiving its world premiere in Persepolis in 1969 Subsequently he was once again commissioned by the Shiraz Arts Festival and composed Persepolis for the occasion a polytope composed specific to the historic site 36 Although electroacoustic compositions represent only a small fraction of Xenakis s output they are highly relevant to musical thinking in the late 20th century Important works in this medium include Concret PH 1958 Analogique B 1958 59 Bohor 1962 La legende d Eer 1977 Mycenae Alpha 1978 Voyage absolu des Unari vers Andromede 1989 Gendy301 1991 and S709 1994 37 By 1979 he had devised a computer system called UPIC which could translate graphical images into musical results 38 39 Xenakis had originally trained as an architect so some of his drawings which he called arborescences resembled both organic forms and architectural structures These drawings various curves and lines that could be interpreted by UPIC as real time instructions for the sound synthesis process The drawing is thus rendered into a composition Mycenae Alpha was the first of these pieces he created using UPIC as it was being perfected 40 Xenakis also developed a stochastic synthesizer algorithm used in GENDY called dynamic stochastic synthesis where a polygonal waveform s sectional borders amplitudes and distance between borders may be generated using a form of random walk to create both aleatoric timbres and musical forms 41 Further material may be generated by then refeeding the original waveform back into the function or wave forms may be superimposed Elastic barriers or mirrors are used to keep the randomly generated values within a given finite interval so as to not exceed limits such as the audible pitch range avoid complete chaos white noise and to create a balance between stability and instability unity and variety 41 Despite Xenakis s reputation as a mathematical composer his works are known for their power and physicality Alex Ross wrote that Xenakis produced some of the rawest wildest music in history sounds that explode around the ears Rarefied methods were employed to release primordial energies 42 Ben Watson expressed admiration for the terrifying emotional impact of Xenakis sonic objectivity describing his music as possessing truly majestic otherness It is an alien shard glimmering in the heart of the West 43 Tom Service praised Xenakis music for its shattering visceral power and sheer scintillating physicality noting its deep primal rootedness in richer and older phenomena even than musical history the physics and patterning of the natural world of the stars of gas molecules and the proliferating possibilities of mathematical principles 11 Service described Xenakis as a composer whose craggily joyously elemental music turned collections of pitches and rhythms and instruments into a force of nature releasing a power that previous composers had only suggested metaphorically but which he would realise with arguably greater clarity ferocity intensity than any musician before or since and suggested that his music is expressive not in a conventionally emotional way perhaps but it has an ecstatic cathartic power Xenakis s music and its preternaturally brilliant performers allows its listeners to witness seismic events close at hand to be at the middle of a musical happening of cosmic intensity 11 Service concluded it took Xenakis for music to become nature On holiday in Corsica Xenakis would pilot his canoe into the teeth of the biggest storm he and his paddle could manage When you re listening to his music you also go out there into the eye of a musical storm that will invigorate inspire and awe See you out there 11 Writings EditXenakis Iannis 2001 Formalized Music Thought and Mathematics in Composition Harmonologia Series No 6 Hillsdale New York Pendragon Press ISBN 1 57647 079 2References Edit a b c Harley Dr James 28 September 2015 Iannis Xenakis Kraanerg Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 3 ISBN 978 1 4094 2331 7 Gagne Nicole V 2012 Historical Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Classical Music p 299 Lanham Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 6765 6 Xenakis settled in Paris becoming a French citizen in 1965 Gerard Pape Musipoesc Writings About Music Paris Editions Michel de Maule 2015 pp 351 353 Yannis Xenakis Polytopes Cosmogonies in Sound and Architecture SOCKS Socks 8 January 2014 Retrieved 2 June 2019 Matossian 13 a b Varga p 14 Matossian 14 17 Matossian pp 18 27 Varga pp 14 19 Gilbert 1966 p 56 a b c d Service Tom 23 April 2013 A guide to Iannis Xenakis s music The Guardian London Retrieved 23 May 2020 Harley 2 Barthel Calvet Anne Sylvie 2002 Chronologie In Portrait s de Iannis Xenakis edited by Francois Bernard Mache pp 25 82 Paris Bibliotheque Nationale de France ISBN 2 7177 2178 9 Baltensperger Andre 1995 Iannis Xenakis und die Stochastische Musik Komposition im Spannungsfeld von Architektur und Mathematik Zurich Paul Haupt p 72 Varga p 47 Harley p 92 a b c Hoffmann Matossian 37 Xenakis Iannis Brown Roberta Rahn John 1987 Xenakis on Xenakis PDF Perspectives of New Music 25 1 2 16 63 20 JSTOR 833091 Harley 4 Matossian 48 Thatcher Nathan 2016 Paco New York Mormon Artists Group ISBN 978 1 5238 5909 2 p 116 For a study of Messiaen s teaching methods see Boivin 1995 page needed Slabihoudek Jiri 22 September 2022 With a Sound Forged in War Iannis Xenakis Embraced Chaos The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 September 2022 Xenakis Francoise and Andreas Waldburg Wolfegg Mme Xenakis in Conversation translated by Sarah Green and Maro Elliott International Contemporary Ensemble website archive from 11 June 2015 accessed 29 April 2016 Harley 12 Matossian 77 79 Harley 23 Harley 19 Cole Jonathan 2009 Music and Architecture Confronting the Boundaries between Space and Sound Gresham College 21 September archive from 18 January 2015 accessed 29 April 2016 Skowron Zbigniew ed 2001 Lutoslawski Studies Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816660 3 pp 122 123 Xenakis Iannis 1992 Formalized Music Thought and Mathematics in Composition second edition Harmonologia Series no 6 Stuyvesant New York Pendragon Press ISBN 978 1 57647 079 4 p 181 Iannis Xenakis Laureate of the Polar Music Prize 1999 Polar Music Prize website accessed 29 April 2016 Archived 8 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Griffiths Paul 5 February 2001 Iannis Xenakis Composer Who Built Music on Mathematics Is Dead at 78 The New York Times p B7 Chrissochoidis Ilias Stavros Houliaras and Christos Mitsakis 2005 Set theory in Xenakis EONTA In International Symposium Iannis Xenakis edited by Anastasia Georgaki and Makis Solomos pp 241 249 Athens The National and Kapodistrian University Gluck Robert 2007 The Shiraz Arts Festival Western Avant Garde Arts in 1970s Iran Leonardo 40 21 28 doi 10 1162 leon 2007 40 1 20 S2CID 57561105 Di Scipio 201 Hugill 2008 pp 95 182 Gagne Nicole V 17 July 2019 Historical Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Classical Music Rowman amp Littlefield p 397 ISBN 978 1 5381 2298 3 Di Scipio 220 a b Serra 241 Ross Alex 22 February 2010 Waveforms The singular Iannis Xenakis The New Yorker Retrieved 23 October 2020 Watson Ben June 1995 Iannis Xenakis Primal Architect The Wire No 136 Cited sources EditDi Scipio Agostino 1998 Compositional Models in Xenakis s Electroacoustic Music Perspectives of New Music 36 2 201 243 doi 10 2307 833529 JSTOR 833529 Gilbert Martin 1966 Winston Churchill Oxford University Press Harley James 2004 Xenakis His Life in Music London Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 415 97145 4 Hoffmann Peter 2001 Xenakis Iannis In Deane Root ed Grove Music Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 30654 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 Hugill Andrew 2008 The Digital Musician New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 80660 2 Matossian Nouritza 1986 Xenakis London Kahn and Averill ISBN 1 871082 17 X Serra Marie Helene Winter 1993 Stochastic Composition and Stochastic Timbre GENDY3 by Iannis Xenakis Perspectives of New Music 32 1 236 257 doi 10 2307 833052 JSTOR 833052 Varga Balint Andras 1996 Conversations with Iannis Xenakis London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 17959 2 Further reading EditAmagali Rosemary Tristano 1975 Texture as an Organizational Factor in Selected Works of Iannis Xenakis M M Thesis Indiana University Anther Eric 1986 Mi homme mi dragon par Iannis Xenakis PDF Le monde de la musique France Le monde and Telerama Ariza Christopher 2005 The Xenakis Sieve as Object A New Model and a Complete Implementation Computer Music Journal 29 2 40 60 doi 10 1162 0148926054094396 ISSN 0148 9267 S2CID 10854809 Bardot Jean Marc 1999 Cendrees de Xenakis ou l emergence de la vocalite dans la pensee xenakienne Undergraduate thesis equivalent Saint Etienne Universite Jean Monnet Biasi Salvatore di 1994 Musica e matematica negli anni 50 60 Iannis Xenakis Bologna Universita degli Studi di Bologna Boivin Jean 1995 La Classe de Messiaen Paris Christian Bourgois Clark Philip 2009 Xenakis in The Wire Primers A Guide To Modern Music 191 198 London and New York Verso ISBN 978 1 84467 427 5 Kitsikis Dimitri 2014 Peri Hrwwn Oi hrwes kai h shmasia toys gia ton sygxrono ellhnismo On Heroes Heroes and Their Importance for Contemporary Hellenism Athens Herodotos ISBN 978 960 485 068 6 Chapter Iannis Xenakis Souvenirs from Paris by D Kitsikis Xenakis s Intimate Friend McCallum Peter 17 October 1992 Metaphors of space The Sydney Morning Herald p 47 Retrieved 23 May 2020 via Newspapers com Murray Margaret 5 November 1988 Taking Bach to the planets The Sydney Morning Herald p 93 Retrieved 23 May 2020 via Newspapers com Paland Ralph and Christoph von Blumroder eds 2009 Iannis Xenakis Das elektroakustische Werk Internationales Symposion Tagungsbericht 2006 Signale aus Koln Beitrage zur Musik der Zeit 14 Vienna Der Apfel ISBN 978 3 85450 414 6 Peters Frank 2 May 1967 Battle Sounds Graphed Into Music St Louis Post Dispatch St Louis Missouri p 41 Retrieved 23 May 2020 via Newspapers com Schaal Hans Jurgen 29 May 2022 Die Mathematik der Klangwolken Ausgabe 5 22 neue musikzeitung nmz in German Retrieved 29 May 2022 Swed Mark 10 November 2010 Cold stern and so very hip The Los Angeles Times p 32 Retrieved 23 May 2020 via Newspapers com Obituaries Edit Swed Mark 5 February 2001 Iannis Xenakis Avant Garde Composer The Los Angeles Times p 22 Retrieved 23 May 2020 via Newspapers com External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iannis Xenakis nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Iannis Xenakis xenakis musicportal gr from the Institute for Research on Music and Acoustics Athens Greece in Greek and English with many score and audio examples Iannis Xenakis org by the Friends of Xenakis Medieval org Modern Music Xenakis Luque Sergio 2009 The Stochastic Synthesis of Iannis Xenakis Leonardo Music Journal 19 77 84 Works catalogue 70 page PDF from Xenakis s publisher Editions Durand Salabert Eschig Iannis Xenakis Boosey amp Hawkes Publisher Iannis Xenakis the aesthetics of his early works by Markos Zografos Iannis Xenakis Bibliography and Discography compiled by James Harley for Leonardo ISAST Two articles by Grant Chu Covell 2006 documenting then recent Xenakis recordings and books about Xenakis Part 1 and Part 2 Iannis Xenakis biography works resources in French and English IRCAM Interview with Iannis Xenakis 25 March 1997 Portals nbsp Classical music nbsp Greece nbsp Biography nbsp Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iannis Xenakis amp oldid 1174271104, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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