Michael Obst (born 30 November 1955) is a German
composer and
pianist.
Life
Obst was born in
Frankfurt am Main. He studied music education from 1973 to 1978 in Mainz, and from 1977 to 1982 studied piano with
Alfons Kontarsky and
Aloys Kontarsky at the
Hochschule für Musik Köln, where he sat his piano examination in 1982. At the same time, between 1979 and 1986, he studied composition with Hans Ulrich Humpert in the Studio for Elektronic Music of the
Hochschule für Musik Köln. From 1981 to 1992 he was the pianist and a founding member of the
Ensemble Modern, from 1986 to 1989 he worked as an interpreter with
Karlheinz Stockhausen, playing synthesizer in Stockhausen’s operatic cycle
Licht.[1]
He was invited to the Studios of Ghent (IPEM), Stockholm (EMS), Bourges (Groupe de musique expérimentale de Bourges), Paris (
IRCAM), and Freiburg (
SWF-Heinrich Strobel Stiftung) as well as to the Studio for Electronic Music of the
Westdeutscher Rundfunk in
Cologne. At IRCAM he realized the electronics for his chamber opera Solaris (to a libretto by
Stanisław Lem); the opera received its première at the
Munich Biennale in 1996. Since 1997 he has been professor of composition at the
Hochschule für Musik Franz Liszt in
Weimar.[1]
Le Merveilleuse Festival 2003, Cité de la Musique, Paris: "Nosferatu" (Murnau), music for the silent movie for ensemble, commission Ensemble InterContemporain
Gewandhaus Leipzig 2006: "Espaces sonores" (première) for Wind Quintett and Orchestra, commission from the Radio/TV – Orchestra Leipzig (MDR)
MainFranken Theater Würzburg 2010: "Die andere Seite" (Kubin) (première), commission from the
MainFranken Theater Würzburg
Festival cresc...Biennale für moderne Musik, Frankfurt 2013, "Die Befristeten", concertante radio play after the theatre piece of the same name by Elias Canetti
Landestheater Linz, 17 September 2016, Austrian première "Solaris", MD: Daniel Linton-France, SD: Hermann Schneider
Landestheater Linz, 21 May 2017, Austrian première "Die andere Seite", MD: Dennis Russel Davies, SD: John Dew
Discography
METAL DROPS ,Inside–metal drop music–Ye–Na–Je, electroacoustic music, CD Wergo WER SM 1043–2
CRYSTAL WORLD ,Crystal World I–III, electroacoustic music,CD Wergo WER 2011–50
MICHAEL OBST, Kristallwelt III–Fresko–Nachtstücke, EIC/IRCAM, CD Adès 205832
Diaphonia, SWF–Sinfonieorchester/Gielen, Donaueschingen 1995, CD col legno WWE 31898
Fábrica, electroacoustic music, composers of Nordrhein Westfalen (Germany), CD Koch–Schwann 3–5037–3
Oktett für Bläserensemble, Bläserensemble Sabine Meyer, EMI Records 7243-5-57084-2-7
Trio No 2 for Violin, Violoncello and Piano,
Abegg Trio, TACET Records 174
Television Productions
DR MABUSE, DER SPIELER Ensemble InterContemporain – Ann Manson, ZDF-ARTE 1996
SOLARIS Biennale München-Xsemble München – Musical Director: Peter Rundel Stage Director: Anja Sündermann, Bayerischer Rundfunk 1996
1980/81 Metal Drop Music, quadraphonic electronic music
1980/83 Piano Piece no. 3 for piano solo
1981 Resonanzen 1 for violoncello solo
1981/88 Traumlandschaften for 2 pianos
1981/82 Inside, quadrophonic electronic music
1982 YE-NA-JE stereophonic electronic music
1983 Visioni di Medea, quadrophonic electronic music
1983–85 Crystal World I, quadrophonic electronic music
1984 Crystal World II (Chorale), quadrophonic electronic music
1985/86 Crystal World III, quadrophonic electronic music
1985/86 Crystal World III for ensemble and tape
1987 Chansons for mezzo-soprano, 5 instruments, live-electronics, and tape
1987 Ende Gut, quadrophonic electronic music
1989 Poèmes for percussion solo and tape
1989 Miroirs for 6 vocalists
1990 Dr. Mabuse Der Spieler Part I: Der große Spieler for ensemble and live-electronics (film music for the restored complete version of the silent film "
Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler" by
Fritz Lang)
1990–92 Poèmes, "d'après des images en blanc et noir" for orchestra
1990 Nachtstücke for 7 instruments and live-electronics
1991 Fresko for 5 instruments
1991 Nuances for flute and percussion
1992–93 Dr. Mabuse Der Spieler Part II: Inferno for ensemble and live-electronics (film music for the restored complete version of the silent film "
Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler" by
Fritz Lang)
1993–94 Diaphonia for soloists, orchestra and live-electronics
1994 Fábrica I, stereophonic electronic music
1995 Fábrica II for 4 percussionists and tape
1996 Journey's End, quadrophonic electronic music
1997 Shadow (...of a Doubt), for percussion and ensemble
1998 Traces for oboe solo
1998 Suite for bass clarinet, accordion and double bass
2004–05 Espaces sonores, for wind quintet and orchestra
2006 Arcus for string quartet and electronic music
2006 Piano Trio no. 2
2009 Trois Rêves for ensemble
2009 Four Little Pieces for B-flat clarinet
2013 Die Befristeten, concertante radio play for speakers and ensemble after the theatre piece of the same name by
Elias Canetti (text adaptation by Ursula Ruppel)
2013–14 Variazioni for two trumpets and two ensembles
2014 Te Deum for six-part mixed choir
2016 Noctuelles for 11 instruments
Writings by Michael Obst (selection)
De nouveau critère pour apprécier la musique electroacoustique in: Esthétique et Musique Electroacoustique, Paris 1996, pp. 71–76
Neue Musik (-festival)? in: Festschrift 75 Jahre Donaueschinger Musiktage, Donaueschingen 1996, pp. 77–80
Fábrica – analyse structurelle in: Analyse en Musique Electroacoustique, Bourges 1997, pp. 155–159
Projection du son prise comme élément compositionnel, La fonction de l'électronique en direct dans mon opéra *Solaris in: Composition/Diffusion en Musique Electroacoustique, Bourges 1998, pp. 142–150
La musique – pourquoi? in: Musique Electroacoustique: expérience et prospective, Bourges 1999, pp. 116–117
References
^
abVisscher, Eric de. 2001. "Obst, Michael". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by
Stanley Sadie and
John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.
^Meph, Johannes. 1997. "Sight of Sound". The Musical Times 138, n. 1851 (May):44–5. p. 44.
Further reading
Thrall, Michael Voyne. 1997. "Review: Synthèse 96: The 26th International Festival of Electroacoustic Music". Computer Music Journal 21, no. 2 (Summer): 90–92.
Warnaby, John. 1996. "Donaueschingen and Stuttgart". Tempo new series, no. 196 (April): 50–51.