Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 “The fact of knowing I had no father or mother” (1948–67)
- 2 “I want art to be a sacred act, the revelation of forces” (1967–71)
- 3 “To push my language further” (1971–72)
- 4 “A need to communicate with the rest of the cosmos” (1972–74)
- 5 “Something different is coming, something more precise, more clear” (1974–76)
- 6 “A journey into the depths of myself” (1976–77)
- 7 “Subtle musics / Filling my soul” (1977–79)
- 8 “A mystical enchantment” (1978–79)
- 9 “Oh beautiful child of the light” (1979–81)
- 10 “The passionate love for music that sometimes stops me from composing” (1981–82)
- 11 “It’s only in thinking about music, and about sound, that I can be happy” (1982–83)
- 12 “In Quebec people die easily” (1983–)
- Appendixes 1 Chronology of Compositions
- Appendixes 2 Selected Discography
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
11 - “It’s only in thinking about music, and about sound, that I can be happy” (1982–83)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 “The fact of knowing I had no father or mother” (1948–67)
- 2 “I want art to be a sacred act, the revelation of forces” (1967–71)
- 3 “To push my language further” (1971–72)
- 4 “A need to communicate with the rest of the cosmos” (1972–74)
- 5 “Something different is coming, something more precise, more clear” (1974–76)
- 6 “A journey into the depths of myself” (1976–77)
- 7 “Subtle musics / Filling my soul” (1977–79)
- 8 “A mystical enchantment” (1978–79)
- 9 “Oh beautiful child of the light” (1979–81)
- 10 “The passionate love for music that sometimes stops me from composing” (1981–82)
- 11 “It’s only in thinking about music, and about sound, that I can be happy” (1982–83)
- 12 “In Quebec people die easily” (1983–)
- Appendixes 1 Chronology of Compositions
- Appendixes 2 Selected Discography
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
Summary
In all probability Vivier arrived in Mitterrand’s France in a mood of optimism and even relief following the recent fruitless months in Montreal. A letter to the Canada Council a few weeks later thanks them for their grant “which saved me from a deep compositional crisis.” It was the third time he had left his native city for an extended period, but unlike previous times he was not traveling to terra incognita: by now he knew Paris fairly well. The most immediate problem, finding a place to live, he solved quickly. A card postmarked June 21, 1982, to Thérèse Desjardins says he has found a furnished apartment, three rooms, with phone, at 22 rue du Général-Guilhem, in the eleventh arrondissement between the avenue de la République and the boulevard Voltaire, for 2,000 francs per month (equivalent to roughly €630 today). “For the first time in my life I feel good in Paris!”
The nine months that Vivier spent in Paris are documented, in what for his biographer is luxurious detail, in a collection of correspondence with Desjardins. (Her letters to him, in contrast, seem not to have survived.) There are fourteen letters and two postcards, the earliest postmarked June 21, 1982, and the last dated February 12, 1983. This has the virtue of being the most substantial collection of letters we possess from Vivier to any one single correspondent, and is a testament to the role Desjardins now played in his life, as friend and confidante. The correspondence also allows us to follow his state of mind during these months, a period of time when his life, externally, was fairly uneventful.
A letter postmarked July 2 declares that he is already installed in the rue du Général-Guilhem and composing. He repeats what he had already told her last time, that this was “one of the rare times I’ve felt very good in Paris”; and thereafter he moves on to more reflective matters about music. “What is very strange musically is that the only music that can really inspire me now is my own music—and I think that’s perfectly normal.” He complains that “it’s hard here to get to know people,” also about how expensive Paris is; on the other hand, “I’ve found what I wanted: solitude and the space to think. … Soon my piano will arrive, because for composing I really need my instrument.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Claude VivierA Composer's Life, pp. 202 - 222Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2014