List of compositions by Jean-Claude Éloy explained

This is a complete list of musical works by the French composer Jean-Claude Éloy, arranged in chronological order.

Early works (unpublished)

  1. Le poseur de questions
  2. Belle à couper le souffle
  3. Absence
  4. Claire
  5. Le ciel et l’enfer
  6. Claire au loin
  7. Petit matin
  1. Automne
  2. Le dernier poème
  1. Vague ma sœur...
  2. J’entends monter de toi...
  3. Tant d’hirondelles...
  4. Grandit un arbre de poussière...
  1. Hiver
  2. Ombre
  1. Sommeil sur la terre...
  2. Quand mon âme pure...
  3. Chaque matin la rosée...
  4. Lampes qui s’éteignent...
  1. Que vraie la réalité...
  2. Comment cette passion...
  3. Aucun désir de vivre...
  4. Mon unique désir...
  5. Oh! combien plaintivement...
  1. Hommage à Schoenberg (for getting familiar with atonalism)
  2. Hommage à Webern (for studying the hand's crossing, the changes of tempi, the nuance precision)
  3. Bali (for getting the habits to the wide registers and to the numerous passings of the thumb)
  4. Flûte égyptienne (for working on the grace notes and the irrational values)
  5. Amitabha: lumière infinie. Hommage à Messiaen (to acquire a subtle touch)
  1. Chant 1
  2. Chant 2

Publicly performed works

  1. Le Regard vers la conscience contemplative [Towards contemplative awareness], for four solo monk singers (Shômyô technics), monk choir (unseen), one Ô-Hichiriki solo, two Ô-Shô, a few isolated percussion instruments
  2. L'Appel vers le mouvement des choses [Beckoned by the movement of things], for nine gagaku wind instruments (3 Ryûteki, 2 Hichiriki, 1 Ô-Hichiriki, 2 Shô, 1 Ô-Shô)
  3. Le Cheminement à travers les mondes [Progressing through worlds], for 27 gagaku instrumentalists, four groups of monk choirs (Shômyô technics – Sect Tendai and Shingon) including four soloists, six percussionists, and five bugaku dancers
  1. Âhata-Anâhata ("Le son frappé, le son non-frappé"), for two solo voices of Japanese Buddhist monks (Shômyô technics from the Tendai and Shingon sects), one Ô-Hichiriki solo, one percussionist with a percussion instruments orchestra, electronic and concrete sounds, with sound and light system
  2. Akshara-Kshara ("L'immuable, le muable"), for Ryûteki solo, Hichiriki solo, electronic and concrete sounds, with sound and light system
  3. Nîmîlana-Unmîlana ("Ce qui s'éveille, ce qui se replie"), for Shô solo (plus Ô-Shô and Sheng-Alto), electronic and concrete sounds, with sound and light system
  1. Butsumyôe ("La cérémonie du repentir"), for two female voices (sopranos with extended vocal techniques, using varied percussion instruments); text by Ihara Saikaku (The Life of an Amourous Woman) in ancient Japanese from the Osaka area. Part I of the cycle Songs for the Other Half of the Sky
  2. Sappho hiketis ("Sappho implorante"), for two female voices (sopranos with extended vocal techniques), and electroacoustic music; text by Sappho (fragments) in Greek language, with modern pronunciation. Part II of the cycle Songs for the Other Half of the Sky
  1. Introduction
  2. Biwa 1
  3. Unban
  4. Biwa 2
  5. Chœurs
  1. To Her
  2. Call
  3. Song (Eileithyia)
  1. She (The Consecrating Mother)
  2. I am

References

External links