Vytautas Montvila Explained

Vytautas Montvila
Birth Date:1 June 1935
Birth Place:Kaunas, Lithuania
Death Place:Vilnius, Lithuania
Othername:Витаутас Петрович Монтвила (Russian)
Citizenship: Lithuania
Occupation:Composer, bassoonist, sound engineer
Yearsactive:1953–2003
Spouse:Milda Lapėnaitė

Vytautas Montvila (1 June 1935 – 13 July 2003) was a Lithuanian composer, bassoonist and sound engineer.

Biography

Montvila studied bassoon at the Juozas Gruodis Music School in Kaunas, graduating in 1954.[1] He then continued his bassoon studies with Kazimieras (Kazys) Paulauskas at the Lithuanian State Conservatory, completing his degree in 1959. Montvila performed with the Kaunas Musical Theater Orchestra 1953-54, then with the Lithuanian Opera and Ballet Orchestra 1954-58. In 1957, he won first prize at a bassoon competition in Moscow.[2] In 1959, Montvila began working for the Lithuanian Radio and Television Committee, first as a music editor and later as a sound engineer. In 1975 he became a sound engineer for the Lithuanian Composers' Union, where he remained until 1999.[3]

After completing his bassoon studies in 1959, Montvila remained at the conservatory to study composition with Julius Juzeliūnas until 1964. Montvila quickly established himself as one of the leading figures of the Lithuanian post-war avant-garde, embracing serial, aleatoric, twelve-tone, micropolyphonic, sonorist, and pointillist techniques. He became the first Lithuanian composer to utilize graphic notation with his piece Trikampiai (Triangles) for flute and piano (1968).[4] Montvila also composed the earliest surviving example of Lithuanian tape music: discovered in 2016, his Juodoji pantomima (Black Pantomime) likely dates from the early 1970s.[5] Beginning in 1968, Montvila began corresponding with fellow modernist composers outside the Soviet Union including György Ligeti, Sylvano Bussotti, Karlheinz Stockhausen, György Kurtag, John Cage, Elliott Carter, Luigi Dallapiccola and Henri Pousseur, as well as Lithuanian expatriates Vytautas Bacevičius and Jeronimas Kačinskas.[6] [7]

Despite his strong experimental leanings, Montvila based many of his compositions around Lithuanian folk music, which he began exploring after completing his conservatory education.[8] His Gothic Poem for orchestra (1970) blends micropolyphony, Klangfarbenmelodie-like tone clusters, and melodies based on a pair of sutartinės, an ancient form of Lithuanian polyphonic vocal music.[9] Montvila wrote extensively for Lithuanian folk instruments including kanklės, birbynė and skudučiai, sometimes in combination with voices, piano and other instruments. Montvila himself remarked that "[in] all of my work I strive for a contemporary Lithuanianism, since that is the most beautiful part of my work [...] The basic goal of my work, without question, is the sutartinė, which interested me because of its archaic intonational structure and the great potential of its rhythm. In my works, I attempt to disclose not just the sutartinė’s playfulness and the keenness of its rhythm, but also its melodiousness and its lyrical nature."[10] Among Montvila's works are several dozen harmonized folk songs, as well as original works in the style of Lithuanian folk music.[11]

Until 1990, Montvila's works were published by Sovetskiĭ Kompozitor, the publishing arm of the Union of Soviet Composers, and Vaga, the official publishing house of the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, these editions have remained out of print, though many are available upon request from the Music Information Centre Lithuania. A handful of Montvila's works were also published by Karthause-Schmülling Verlag of Kamen, Germany, though these too are currently unavailable. Many of Montvila's works remain unpublished. His manuscripts are currently housed at the Lithuanian Archives of Literature and Art, fonds 117.

Selected works

Orchestral

Concertante

Chamber

Solo instrumental

Vocal

Music for folk instruments

Music for television

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nalivaikaitė . Paulina . Vytautas Montvila: Biography . MIC.lt . 2 January 2021.
  2. Encyclopedia: Karaška . Arvydas . Visuotinę lietuvių enciklopediją . Vytautas Montvila . Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos centras . Vilnius . 2020 . 1 January 2021 .
  3. Web site: Nalivaikaitė . Paulina . Vytautas Montvila: Biography . MIC.lt . 2 January 2021.
  4. Book: Janatjeva, Veronika . Lietuvos muzikos kontekstai (Lithuanian Music in Context) . 1 . Muzikos informacijos ir leidybos centras . 2011 . Vilnius . 97–98 . Lithuanian, English.
  5. Web site: Paulauskis . Linas . Vytautas Montvila: Black Pantomime . MIC.lt . 2 January 2021.
  6. Web site: Gruodytė . Vita . Epistemological Approach to Correspondence: Silent History of Intimate Spheres . 15 May 2019. vitagruodyte.wixsite.com . 3 January 2021.
  7. Web site: Kompozitorius Vytautas Montvila išėjo Amžinybėn . 15 July 2003 . tv3.lt . Lithuanian . 4 January 2021.
  8. Web site: Nalivaikaitė . Paulina . Vytautas Montvila: Biography . MIC.lt . 2 January 2021.
  9. Book: Paulauskis, Linas . Lietuvos muzikos kontekstai (Lithuanian Music in Context) . 1 . Muzikos informacijos ir leidybos centras . 2011 . Vilnius . 108 . Lithuanian, English.
  10. Gaidamavičiūtė . Rūta . Folk Songs in the Work of Lithuanian Composers . Lituanus: Lithuanian Quarterly Journal of Arts and Sciences . 52 . 2 . LITUANUS Foundation . Chicago . 2006 . English . 3 January 2021.
  11. Web site: Vytautas Montvila: Works . MIC.lt . 5 January 2021.
  12. Widstrand . Alex . Hidden Treasures from Northeastern Europe: An Exploration of Twentieth-Century Baltic Bassoon Music. Part 1: Bassoon Solos . The Double Reed . 43 . 3 . 167–168 .