Thierry Escaich
Biography
Renowned organist and improviser
Thierry Escaich continues to play a prominent role in
the creation of contemporary music. Since 1990, when he ended his studies at the
Paris Conservatoire having received eight first prizes, his first works have
been rewarded with the Franco-American Florence Blumenthal Foundation prize,
awarded unanimously by a jury made up of such figures as Elliott Carter, Henri Dutilleux and Maurice Ohana.
More prizes have followed - awarded
by the French Institute and SACEM (including the Grand Prix de la musique symphonique
in 2004) after he was awarded the
Grand Prix des Lycéens
in 2002 en route to receiving the 2003 Victoires
de la Musique Composer
of the Year award.
His musical universe has been
described as one “of rare expressive density” (Télérama), “in
which are combined breathless or impassioned elans
and rhythmic motors that are often violent and obstinate, readily drawing from
the sources of Gregorian plainchant” (Le Monde). This universe, “made up of dramatic frothing strained to exhaustion and the often-brutal
confrontation of opposing sound worlds” (Grégoire
Hetzel), is embodied in such works as Le Chant des Ténèbres
(1992) and his Organ Concerto (1995) as well as Résurgences
for trumpet and orchestra (2002) and his oratorio Le Dernier Evangile (2000).
His orchestral
works feature in the repertoires of various leading European orchestras such as
the Orchestra of the Beethovenhalle (Bonn), the
Monte-Carlo Philharmonic, l’Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio-France (Paris), and l’Orchestre National de Lille where Thierry Escaich was in
residence between 2003 and 2005. His
vocal and chamber music is performed all over the globe by such ensembles as
the BBC Singers, A Sei Voci,
the Ludwig Quartet, Olivier Latry and the Wanderer Trio… His CD of orchestral works
(Accord/Universal) was awarded the Diapason
d’Or de l’année in 2002.
Organist at St-Etienne-du-Mont in Paris since 1997 (where he succeeded
Maurice Duruflé),
Lastly, his
passion for the cinema has motivated him to improvise on the piano and the
organ, and to compose for silent film as demonstrated in his musical accompaniment
of Frank Borzage’s L’Heure suprême, commissioned by the Louvre in
1999.
Thierry Escaich has been professor of composition and improvisation
at the Paris Conservatoire since 1992.
He is represented in the
Current as of January 2008