Yuri Khanon

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Yuri Khanon
Occupation(s)Composer
Instrument(s)Piano, voice
Years active1987–present
Websiteyuri-khanon.com (in Russian)

Yuri Khanon is a

Leningrad. In 1988, he became a laureate of the European Film Awards[2] (Felix Award), and in 1989, he won the Nika Award, a Russian cinematographic award. Due to his numerous concerts throughout Russia, as well as to TV and cinema appearances, Khanon reached the peak of his popularity in 1988–1992, but in 1993, decided to stop performing in public.[3]

Biography

In 1988, in spite of an opposition of his old-fashioned professors, Yuri Khanon managed to graduate from the Leningrad Conservatory, specializing in composition.[3]

Yuri Khanon is not just a composer; he is also a writer, a

Revolution of 1917.[4]

Khanon became famous in 1988–1991. During this period he composed soundtracks to three films, gave numerous concerts, had several appearances on TV and published a series of articles and

symphonic works of Khanon (as a Yuri Khanin): Five smallest orgasms
, A Certain Concerto for piano and orchestra and Middle Symphony.

Five Smallest orgasms, oc.29 (1986) were written as a direct response to Scriabin’s The Poem of Ecstasy. A Certain Concerto for piano & orchestra, oc.31 (1987) was written in the genre of "false concerto", concerto/deception, where the listener is constantly deceived, having his/her expectations crowned with emptiness. The theme of deception is one of the main features of Khanin’s creations. Middle Symphony, oc.40 (1990), with a text by the composer, is a large, quite extraordinary work with a rather unnatural and affected structure. It ends with a canon in which the three singers sing the same text backwards for 81 bars. The text is very abstruse, in fact almost absurd; it becomes necessary to overturn one’s impression of the whole symphony just listened to... Does this discussion exhaust the subject of this disc? I don’t know – I doubt it.[5]

After 1992 Khanon ceased his public and TV appearances, as well as interviews and concerts, and stopped publishing his music works. Instead he decided, in his own words, "...to work and live in his own company". Khanon never participated in any professional organizations and is notable for his independent ideas and reclusive way of life.[3]

... Beyond all doubts, Yuri Khanon came into the history of music as "the most closed and enigmatic composer". He was 23 when he won fame in Europe and made a sensation in Russia, but, after only three years of performing in public he stopped any public appearances contrary to the standards of a composer’s career. Metaphorically speaking, he stormed out and started a life of a recluse, thus having declared: "I’m done! You’d better think I exist no more!" And we, his contemporaries, have nothing to respond... – V. Tikhonov, "White Mask Empire" (Khangёre Simnun, Seoul, 2003).[6]

Alexei Ratmansky and Yuri Khanon, The Middle Duo, Mariinsky theatre, 24 November 1998

Among Khanon's works for theatre the most famous is The Middle Duo[7] ballet (the first part of his Middle Symphony), put on the stage in Mariinsky Theatre in 1998[8] and short-listed for the Golden Mask Theatre Award in 2000,[9] then put on the stage in Bolshoi Theatre[10] and in New York City Ballet theatre in 2006.[11] As a concert number The Middle Duo is performed around the world by almost all soloists of Russian ballet, though for 10 years Khanon's music has been used without his permission.[12]

From the very beginning of his career Khanon deliberately evaded calling himself a composer, a writer, or an artist.[3] Creative work is the least important for him, because, according to his ideas, there's more than enough composers and artists in our world. "It’s impossible to walk down the street without bumping into just another writer or composer", – Khanon ironically wrote in one of his articles in 1993. He viewed his main mission not in creating works of art, but in promotion of certain concepts put to life by the means of art.

...Yuri Khanon is a

Alexander Skriabin’s piano works for he sees them as his teachers, and he calls other composers "just some composers". He himself writes a lot of music which can be either "middle" or "extreme". ... Khanon is a unique personality of our (and probably, some other) times, a strange and interesting person... – Viktor Ekimovsky, Auto-mono-graphy[13]

Works

Passepied from opera-interlude
The Shagreen Bone

Khanon works almost in all sphere of academic music.

The Laughing Symphony (November 2017, first and last performance)
  • Pseudo-religious works
    • "Missa sterilis" for five persons, (oc.61, 1996)
    • "The Inner Requiem", albigenian «Requiem internam» (oc.71, 1999)
    • the "Agonia Dei" mystery (oc.72, 2000)
  • Opuses for piano
    • "The average tempered clavier" (ос.39, 1990)
    • "Satisfactory pieces" for acoustic piano (ос.56, 1994, «Pieces Saties-faisantes»)
    • "24 exercises on account of Weakness" (ос.62, 1996, for those wishing to go deeper)
    • "50 etudes for fallen piano" (ос.64, 1997, for a fallen piano)
    • "Ossified preludes" for piano (ос.67, 1998, four-hour time for piano)... and many other pieces of
      symphonic, chamber, and piano music.[3]

...Although Khanon calls Satie and Skriabin his teachers, it is not the music of these composers that attracts him but their tendency to link – some would say subordinate – their music to an idea. According to Khanon, a composer is an ideologist with regard to his musical material. Elements of play (both

phonetic), paradox, the absurd and nonsense (word inversion and invention, pseudo-quotation and limerick) all lend Khanon's aesthetic a desire to outrage the listener... – Liudmila Kovnatskaya, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians[3]

Since 2006, Khanon switched to a special "reverse method" of creativity, when "one score is written forward, and the other is simultaneously back to its complete destruction". This is his hermetic answer: "This world is a criminal, it deserves nothing but ash..."[15]

Works for the cinema

Khanon worked for the cinema only for a short period between 1988 and 1991.[16] He composed his first soundtrack (for Days of Eclipse by Alexander Sokurov) already as a Saint Petersburg Conservatory student.

...Yuri Khanin, a young composer, this year a graduate of the Leningrad Conservatory managed to do everything about the orchestration, arrangement and choice of instruments in a very precise way. It was done with an ideal exactitude. Never before had I worked with composers so much, and I was really struck by his understanding. ... I think that sound, no less than the image, should produce not only emotional impact, but is to have an altogether independent semantic meaning. The spirituality of the film as if finds its expression through the sound. And spirituality would not emerge by itself. If you might sometimes fail to keep alive the memory of a visual image in your mind and in your heart the soul would never forget sounds... – Alexander Sokurov, from press-conference on September 26, 1988[17]

The film Days of Eclipse won the European Film Awards (Felix Award) of the European Film Academy in November 1988 in West Berlin in the Best Music special nomination.[18] In spite of his great success, after 1991 Khanon never returned to writing music for the cinema.

Filmography :

Literary works

Alexander Skriabin, St.Petersburg
, 1902.
Erik Satie, the draft of the grave bust (1913) from the book "Antedate memories"

Since 1983, Khanon writes fiction and non-fiction as an essayist and novelist. His most famous work is 700 pages long memoir novel Skriabin as a Face (1995) based on the 20 years long Khanon's close acquaintance with the great Russian composer

stylization
of literary and spoken language of the beginning of the 20th century.

...For the first time in the

philosopher, but Alexander Skriabin’s counterpart and colleague and in a way a person of no less originality and uniqueness. This must explain why the memoir is absolutely free of banalities and literary cliché. Even ten years after his death, Skriabin is still a bosom friend of the author, a neighbour, an internal brother-in-arms... – Annotation from the Faces of Russia[21]

In the year 2010, Center of Average Music and the publishing house Faces of Russia released another thick work of music history: Erik Satie, Yuri Khanon. Antedate memories. The book has a volume of 700 pages and it is not accidentally written in a provocative and free form. It includes all literary works, critical essays, notes and even notebooks of Erik Satie, as well as almost all the letters, more than sixty drawings and all his entire life, from birth to death. "This is the first book of Sati on Sati in Russian."[22]

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia of Cinema & Theatre (Bio) (in Russian)
  2. ^ European Film Awards, November 1988
  3. ^ .(subscription required)
  4. ^ Encyclopedie of Cinema, Bio (in Russian)
  5. ^ Yuri Khanon. Annotation: Olympia Compact Disc (OCD284), London, 1992.
  6. .
  7. YouTube
  8. ^ Mariinsky theatre: Ballets (in Russian)
  9. ^ "Golden Mask, 2000" (in Russian)
  10. ^ "Большой театр :: Репертуар". Archived from the original on June 30, 2009. Retrieved December 16, 2009. Bolshoy theatre: Ballets. (in Russian)
  11. ^ "Some Little Bits of Ballet Help a Company Start Its Busy Fall Season" by John Rockwell, 23 November 2006, The New York Times
  12. ^ "사단법인 한국발레협회 홈페이지". Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved December 16, 2009. Site of Korean ballet association
  13. .
  14. ^ "Os de Chagrin", VIP RU TV (in Russian)
  15. .
  16. ^ Encyclopedia of Cinema & Theatre, (in Russian)
  17. ^ From Alexander Sokurov’s press-conference on September 26, 1988. Journal Ars, no. 12, 1988. Latvia.
  18. ^ European Film Academy, 1988
  19. ^ Announce: "Days of Eclipse" (in Russian)
  20. ^ Encyclopedia of cinema.ru: "Save and Preserve" (in Russian)
  21. ^ Skriabin as a Face, Annotation from the Faces of Russia 1995, (in Russian)
  22. ^ "Erik Satie, Yuri Khanon. Antedate memories", (in Russian)

External links