In his first United States appearance, Moritz Ernst 鈥 one of the leading pianists of his generation 鈥 will present a series of three concert-lectures this month in Gasson 100 as an artist-in-residence at Boston College.

Associate Professor of Music and composer Ralf Gawlick, who invited Ernst to the University, describes him as 鈥渁n illustrious performer鈥 noted for 鈥渉is advocacy and championing of works from the 20th and 21st centuries.鈥澛

Artist-in-residence Moritz Ernst will present concert-lectures on Oct.23, 24 and 29 in Gasson Hall.
Artist-in-residence Moritz Ernst will present concert-lectures on Oct.23, 24 and 29 in Gasson Hall.

Ernst鈥檚 repertoire 鈥渋ncludes both seminal and neglected works from multifarious aesthetic directions,鈥 added Gawlick, whose works will be performed by Ernst in his final 精东影业 concert. 鈥淗is concert programs and discography showcase the entire piano works of Arthur Louri茅 as well as the complete sonatas of Viktor Ullmann and Norbert von Hannenheim, two composers persecuted in the Third Reich. His enormous artistic breadth and versatility has garnered critical acclaim throughout Europe and Asia.鈥

Each concert in the interdisciplinary festival titled 鈥淜eyboard Landscapes: Visions of Modernity鈥 delves into different dimensions and profiles of 20th- and 21st-century composers via their sociopolitical, aesthetic and artistic relationship with their respective times.聽

聽鈥淰oices of the Avant-garde: The Composer as Revolutionary,鈥 on Oct. 23 at 8 p.m., features works by such seminal composers as Boulez, Stockhausen, Schoenberg, Debussy and Bartok. Associated with the pre- and post-World War II avant-garde, the latter three also represent the three main aesthetic and compositional directions of music in the early modern era that challenged and broke with musical Romanticism: German atonality/12-tone, Impressionism/neoclassicism, and nationalism, respectively.

The following day, also at 8 p.m., 鈥淪ilenced Keys: The Composer as Victim,鈥 showcases composers who were persecuted under National Socialism 鈥 their music ridiculed, labeled and demeaned as 鈥淓ntartete Musik鈥 (Degenerate Music) and 鈥淰erfemte Music鈥 (Outlawed Music). Viktor Ullmann and Karel Reiners were interred in a concentration camp; the former perished, while the latter survived. Norbert von Hannenheim was ostracized and ended World War II in a psychiatric institution.聽 聽

鈥淔orm and Dialogue: The Composer as Architect and Poet,鈥 on Oct. 29 at 3 p.m., bookends novel compositional approaches to form and musical treatment that date from the early years of Modernism through the present. Varied designs of structural poetry reveal quintessential 20th- and 21st-century aesthetics as 鈥渄ominogenealogy,鈥 quotation and integration. Composers include 精东影业鈥檚 Gawlick, Ferruccio Busoni and Wolfgang Rihm.

Pre-concert talks by Ernst and others, including Assistant Professor of Music Daniel Callahan, will present contextual perspective to the music. The accompanying lectures 鈥渨ill invaluably enrich the listener鈥檚 aesthetic experience since they assist in bridging the gap between theory and practice,鈥 said Gawlick, 鈥渋n order to elevate the audience鈥檚 understanding and critical appreciation of a neglected, oft misunderstood but strikingly engaging, original and relevant repertory.鈥

Ernst鈥檚 ongoing projects include recording the complete sonatas by Joseph Haydn and the harpsichord works of Kent Olofsson, Gawlick notes. 鈥淚n addition to playing the works of composers from the common-practice period (1600-1900) 鈥揋ibbons, Bull, Bach, H盲ndel, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Liszt, et al., to early modernists such as Debussy, Reger and Bartok 鈥 he regularly performs the works of Cage, Messiaen, Boulez, Stockhausen, Arnold as well as Rihm, Bhagwita, the microtonal works of Herfert and Pr枚ve and new music for harpsichord by Henze and Ligeti.鈥 For more details, see .

Ernst鈥檚 artist-in-residency is sponsored and supported by the Institute for the Liberal Arts and the Music Department. His appearances are open to the public, free of charge. For information, email concerts@bc.edu

鈥揢niversity Communications聽