Tuesday, October 21, 2008

A French Eric Whitacre? The unaccompanied choral music of Pierre Villette

Some have called him a French version of Eric Whitacre. I'm not so sure about that, but I have briefly been exposed to Villete's music before.

At any rate, there is a new choral dissertation by Sean Michael Burton that explores the unaccompanied choral music of Pierre Villette.
The University of Nebraska (Lincoln) is a university that gives others access to their doctoral dissertations. I strongly applaud that spirit; sharing knowledge helps everyone.

For those interested, look here.

The abstract:
The conservative compositional style of French composer Pierre Villette (1926-1998) furthers a lineage through the music of Gabriel Faure, Claude Debussy, Francis Poulenc, Maurice Durufle, and Olivier Messiaen. His output of eighty-one compositions includes small-scale pieces for orchestra, chamber music, and choral works, including fifteen unaccompanied motets. At present, Villette's music remains relatively unknown in the United States and even in his native France. This is surprising and unfortunate as all fifteen of the composer's unaccompanied choral works are commercially recorded and fourteen of the fifteen motets remain available in published editions which enjoy international distribution. Based heavily on primary sources, this study examines all fifteen unaccompanied motets by Pierre Villette and includes documentation of the composer's personal attributes, discussion of text-music relationships, exploration of compositional style, and practical observations for performance. Beauty and accessibility unite in the choral music of Pierre Villette, making his motets relevant to myriad ensembles and a broad audience.

1 comment:

John Brough said...

With absolutely no offense to Eric Whitacre, I think Villette's music is far more profound than that of Whitacre. Closer to a French "Nysted". A great composer indeed!