Enno Poppe

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Enno Poppe (born December 30, 1969 in Hemer / Sauerland ) is a German composer and conductor . He is one of the most important younger representatives of new music .

Life

His father, Rudolf Poppe, was a music and mathematics teacher at the Friedrich-Leopold-Woeste-Gymnasium in Hemer. Enno Poppe was already composing as a teenager and has won the “Youth Composed” competition several times. He studied composition and conducting at the Berlin University of the Arts , a. a. with Friedrich Goldmann , Gösta Neuwirth and Carl August Bünte . Further studies took him to the Center for Art and Media Technology in Karlsruhe.

Since 1998 he has directed the ensemble mosaik in Berlin, which specializes in the interpretation of new music . From 2002 to 2004 he was teaching at the Hanns Eisler Music Academy in Berlin . He has received composition commissions from the Salzburg Festival , the Berliner Festwochen , the Ensemble intercontemporain , the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie , the Ensemble Modern , the Klangforum Wien , the Ensemble musikFabrik , the WDR , the SWR for the Donaueschinger Musiktage and the Schwetzingen SWR Festival as well from BR .

Enno Poppe has been a member of the Akademie der Künste since 2008 and a member of the North Rhine-Westphalian Academy of Sciences and Arts since 2009 . In 2012 he took over the deputy chairmanship of the AdK music section.

Awards

Compositions (selection)

Vocal compositions, stage works

  • Bastard (1999) for soprano, baritone and prepared piano
  • Interzone (2002-04). Songs and pictures for six voices, ensemble and electronics. Text: Marcel Beyer . Video and stage: Anne Quirynen. Premiere 2004, Berliner Festspiele
  • Waspe (2005) for solo voice. Text: Marcel Beyer
  • Gold (2006) for 32-part mixed choir. Texts: Arno Holz . WP 2007 Stuttgart
  • Abend (2007) for four male voices and four trombones. Text: Marcel Beyer . Premiere 2007 Berlin
  • Three works for baritone, horn, piano and percussion (2007) Text: Marcel Beyer . Premiere 2007 Berlin
  • Work food apartment. Incidental music for 14 men (2006/07). Libretto : Marcel Beyer. Premiere 2008, Munich Biennale
  • IQ (2012). Libretto: Marcel Beyer. Premiere: April 27, 2012, Schwetzingen Festival

Chamber music, ensemble works

  • Family picture / piano concert (1993/99) for piano and ensemble
  • 17 Studies for the Violin , Volume 2 (1993)
  • 28.I.94 (1994) for piano and organ
  • Knabenträume (1995) for ensemble
  • 27.XI.95 (1995) for guitar
  • Theme with 840 variations (1993/97) for piano
  • Deleted songs (1996-99) for flute, clarinet, violin, cello and piano
  • Bone (1999/2000) for ensemble
  • Holz (1999/2000) for clarinet and small ensemble
    • Wood Solo (2000/04) for clarinet or bassoon
  • Shards (2000/04) for ensemble
  • Oil (2001-04) for ensemble
    • Oil 1 (2001) for ensemble
    • Wall (Oil 2) (2002/04) for ensemble
  • Herz (2002) for violoncello
  • Tier (2002) for string quartet
  • Rad (2003) for two keyboards
  • Shards (2004) for chamber ensemble
  • Trauben (2004) for violin, cello and piano
  • Salz (2005) for ensemble
  • Brot (2007/13) for five instrumentalists
  • Zug (2008) for seven brass instruments
  • Cabinet (2009) for nine musicians
  • Audio tape (2009) for two keyboard players, two percussionists and live electronics
  • Wald (2010) for four string quartets
  • Speicher I (2010) for a large ensemble
  • Speicher IV (2010) for a large ensemble
  • Suitcase (2011/12) for ensemble
  • Speicher III (2012) for ensemble
  • Speicher V (2012) for a large ensemble
  • Speicher II (2013) for a large ensemble
  • Speicher VI (2013) for a large ensemble
  • Speicher (2008-13) for large ensemble (cycle)
  • Tape (2008/13) for two percussionists, two keyboards and live electronics
  • Stoff (2015) for nine players
  • Fleisch (2017) for saxophone, electric guitar, keyboard and drum set
  • Rundfunk (2015–18) for nine synthesizers

Orchestral works

  • Cuneiform script (2005–2006) for orchestra
  • Obst (2006) for orchestra
  • Altbau (2008) for orchestra
  • Markt (2009) for orchestra, commissioned by the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie
  • Welt (2012) for string orchestra, commissioned by Musica Viva
  • Filz (2014) for viola and chamber orchestra
  • I can't remember anything (2005-15) for choir, organ and orchestra
  • Torf (2016) for orchestra
  • FETT (2018) for orchestra, commissioned by the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra , the Los Angeles Philharmonic Association , Musica Viva and Gustavo Dudamel

swell

  1. Since 2012 Deputy Director of the AdK Music Section
  2. villamassimo.de ( Memento from September 17, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  3. ^ Enno Poppe Academy of the Arts
  4. Press release, May 8, 2009: "The Academy calls a class of the arts"
  5. ↑ List of members of the Bavarian Academy of Fine Arts ( memento from January 18, 2011 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on July 17, 2010
  6. LWL awards the Hans-Werner-Henze-Prize to the composer and conductor Enno Poppe from Hemer at the Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe (lwl.org); Retrieved July 20, 2013
  7. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA and choir of the Bavarian Broadcasting Corporation with Susanna Mälkki. In: br-musica-viva.de. Bayerischer Rundfunk, accessed on July 8, 2019 .

Web links