Vlastimir Trajković
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Vlastimir Trajković ( sr-Cyrl, Властимир Трајковић, ; 17 June 1947 – 4 January 2017) was a Serbian composer, and full-time professor of composition and orchestration at the
University of Arts in Belgrade The University of Arts in Belgrade ( sr-cyr, Универзитет уметности у Београду, Univerzitet umetnosti u Beogradu) is a public university in Serbia. It was founded in 1957 as the Academy of Arts to unite four academies. ...
.


Biography

Trajković was born in
Belgrade Belgrade is the Capital city, capital and List of cities in Serbia, largest city of Serbia. It is located at the confluence of the Sava and Danube rivers and at the crossroads of the Pannonian Basin, Pannonian Plain and the Balkan Peninsula. T ...
in 1947. The descendant of a family that has yielded three generations of musicians (his maternal grandfather was composer and musicologist
Miloje Milojević Miloje Milojević (Serbian Cyrillic: Милоје Милојевић; 27 October 1884, Belgrade – 16 June 1946, Belgrade) was a Serbian composer, musicologist, music critic, folklorist, music pedagogue, and music promoter. Biography T ...
), Trajković studied composition at the Faculty of Music (formerly the Academy of Music) under
Vasilije Mokranjac Vasilije Mokranjac (Belgrade, 11 September 1923 – Belgrade, 27 May 1984) was a Serbian composer, professor of composition at the Faculty of Music in Belgrade and a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. He was one of the most pro ...
. Upon graduating in 1971 and earning his master's degree in 1977, Trajković attended Andre Laporte and Witold Lutoslawski's international summer course in
Grožnjan Grožnjan (; ) is a settlement and a municipality in Croatia. It is part of Istria County, which takes up most of the Istrian peninsula. Around 36% of the municipality's population is Italian. History Early history In Grožnjan are found ancient ...
,
Croatia Croatia, officially the Republic of Croatia, is a country in Central Europe, Central and Southeast Europe, on the coast of the Adriatic Sea. It borders Slovenia to the northwest, Hungary to the northeast, Serbia to the east, Bosnia and Herze ...
. From 1977–78, he completed his specialisation with
Olivier Messiaen Olivier Eugène Prosper Charles Messiaen (, ; ; 10 December 1908 – 27 April 1992) was a French composer, organist, and ornithology, ornithologist. One of the major composers of the 20th-century classical music, 20th century, he was also an ou ...
at the
Paris Conservatoire The Conservatoire de Paris (), or the Paris Conservatory, is a college of music and dance founded in 1795. Officially known as the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris (; CNSMDP), it is situated in the avenue Jean Ja ...
. He secured his first teaching post in Stanković Music School in 1971, where he remained until 1975. Since then he has been teaching at the Faculty of Music in Belgrade (including the Theory of Music until 1978, and Composition and Orchestration thereafter) and acquired a full-time Professor of Composition and Orchestration position in 1993. He was also Head of Department of Composition and Orchestration from 1988–2007. Among other notable Serbian composers, Katarina Miljković,
Isidora Žebeljan Isidora Žebeljan (27 September 1967 – 29 September 2020) was a Serbian composer and conductor. She was a professor of composition at the Belgrade Music Academy and a Fellow of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. She won many national ...
, Ognjen Bogdanović, Anja Đorđević, Melinda Ligeti, Božo Banović and Aleksandar Sedlar Bogoev have all either graduated or earned their master's degree under Trajković's supervision; his student was also
Đuro Živković Đuro Živković, also rendered as Djuro Zivkovic ( Serbian Cyrillic: Ђуро Живковић; born 1975), is a Serbian-Swedish composer and violinist. He has lived in Stockholm, Sweden, since 2000. Biography Živković was born in Belgrade, ...
. In 2001 he was a member of the jury for the International Jeunesses Musicales Competition for
violin The violin, sometimes referred to as a fiddle, is a wooden chordophone, and is the smallest, and thus highest-pitched instrument (soprano) in regular use in the violin family. Smaller violin-type instruments exist, including the violino picc ...
and was elected a corresponding member of the
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts (; , SANU) is a national academy and the most prominent academic institution in Serbia, founded in 1841 as Society of Serbian Letters (, DSS). The Academy's membership has included Nobel Prize, Nobel la ...
, becoming a full-time member in 2009. Trajković's oeuvre has been performed in Serbia,
France France, officially the French Republic, is a country located primarily in Western Europe. Overseas France, Its overseas regions and territories include French Guiana in South America, Saint Pierre and Miquelon in the Atlantic Ocean#North Atlan ...
,
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, the
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,
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,
Hungary Hungary is a landlocked country in Central Europe. Spanning much of the Pannonian Basin, Carpathian Basin, it is bordered by Slovakia to the north, Ukraine to the northeast, Romania to the east and southeast, Serbia to the south, Croatia and ...
,
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,
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, the
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,
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and the
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. In the domain of musicology, and in collaboration with Slobodan Varsaković, he undertook to fully restore the bequest of his grandfather, Miloje Milojević, by classifying his numerous manuscripts, compositions and papers into a comprehensive catalogue. He died in Belgrade at the age of 69 on 4 January 2017.


Style

Trajković has been at the forefront of Serbian post-modernism. Ever since his earliest works (''Tempora Retenta'', 1971; ''Four Nocturnes'', 1972; ''Duo for Piano and Orchestra'', 1973; ''Bells for piano solo'', 1974), his rich erudition has been a logical journey towards a postmodern synthesis imbued with an exploration of the range of
avant-garde In the arts and literature, the term ''avant-garde'' ( meaning or ) identifies an experimental genre or work of art, and the artist who created it, which usually is aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically unacceptable ...
, and the spirit of 20th-century
French music ''French music'' may refer to: *Music of France, music of the French people in France ''French music'' may also refer to the music of French-speaking countries: * Music of Quebec, music of the French-Canadians in Canada, most often Québécois or ...
. ''Arion, Le Nuove Musiche Per Chitarra Ed Archi'' (1979) is regarded as the key achievement of this style's early phase in Serbian music; here the composer applies the postmodern repetitiveness to a chord progression originating in extended jazz modality, building a clear musical form in which quasi-improvisational guitar solos alternate with an extremely slow succession of chords introduced by the strings. It is the simplicity, contemporaneity and effectiveness of the piece that deeply impacted the Serbian music of the early 1980s. Throughout the following decades, Trajković was to continue and develop his creative play with styles and musical dialects, as well as his own interpretation of the history of music itself through works such as the Poulancesque Sonata for Violin and Piano (1982) and Concerto for Oboe and Orchestra (1996). ''Epimetheus'' (1977) for organ, is a recognisable nod to Messiaen, whereas ''Ten Preludes for Guitar'' (1980), composed in a contemporary jazz-neoclassical style, stand among the most popular pages of contemporary Serbian
guitar The guitar is a stringed musical instrument that is usually fretted (with Fretless guitar, some exceptions) and typically has six or Twelve-string guitar, twelve strings. It is usually held flat against the player's body and played by strumming ...
music. ''Duo for Piano and Orchestra'' (1973) and Sonata for Violin and Viola (1987) pay homage to musical expressionism, while the Sonata for Violoncello and Piano (1984) evokes his late romanticism. However, these simple commentaries are only a nod in the direction of the journey of travel of Trajković's curious musical spirit; he would more or less regularly combine, within a single piece, the basic eclectic ideas with popular music genres (most notably in his Violin Sonata and his Guitar Preludes), and, particularly, post-impressionism (Sonata for Flute and Piano, 1986; the Violoncello Sonata). The Concerto for Piano and Orchestra (1990) represents a huge synthesis of Trajković's oeuvre. It is a rich, personal vision of 20th-century music, supported, as it were, with two hidden music quotations - from De Falla's ''Nights in the Gardens of Spain'' and from Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto no. 4. Here, Trajković's fascination with certain styles or oeuvres of other authors is expressed by musical means, whereas other styles are renounced by being paraphrased in incongruous technique (the 2nd theme of the Concerto is a succession of dodecaphonic variations in a tonal setting, which is the secret ironic code relating to the Second Vienna School). Trajković's most recent body of work demonstrates a certain settling and "academisation" of the style accompanied by an exceptionally adroit profiling of expert technical treatments. ''Zephirus Returns'' (2001) recycles and, by means of post-modern stylisation, "disintegrates" the Franco-Italian flavour by hybridising Monteverdiesque patterns and post-impressionist expression. ''Cinq poèmes de Mallarmé'' (2003) are composed after the author's own translation of Mallarmé's poetry, following the rhythm and the accentuation of the French language in the strictest possible sense, in pursuit of the subtlest permutations of the verses and post-impressionist musical colouring. As a result, the identical vocal part can be performed in either the original French verse, or the corresponding Serbian translation.


The composer's own notes on selected works


Duo for Piano and Orchestra

As I was getting down to work on the piece, I remember feeling (and it was the feeling as such that brought me to my work, given that work is the consequence of inspiration, not the other way around)...therefore, I remember feeling that I could express "the marvellous" through music alone, by my own colours, my own tonal order....the "marvellous" being essentially warm and emotive, but in a modern way, a warm-and-emotive lyrical feeling experienced by every genuine scientist or physicist (not meta-physicist) in the face of the inexorable "accuracy"....and the primaeval power of the forces of Nature. And it is in that tale - the tale which tells itself alone, devoid of human presence - it is in that objectivism that the deflection from the old, romanticistic, anthropomorphic
sentimentality Sentimentality originally indicated the reliance on feelings as a guide to truth, but in current usage the term commonly connotes a reliance on shallow, uncomplicated emotions at the expense of reason. Sentimentalism in philosophy is a view in ...
lies.


Concerto for Oboe and Orchestra

If Duo is the anti-concerto (which it is) - then the Oboe Concerto in F Major is the "real"
concerto A concerto (; plural ''concertos'', or ''concerti'' from the Italian plural) is, from the late Baroque era, mostly understood as an instrumental composition, written for one or more soloists accompanied by an orchestra or other ensemble. The ...
. The objectivism of it, the serenity undisturbed by any subjectivist engagement, the image of one "perfect world" unshaken by the human and the too-human, is perhaps (neo)classical, with all the recognisable topography of the four-movement sonata cycle. However, a certain James Bondian activism of the even movements.....as well as the Ravelian and the Gershwinian soul of the odd ones, point this concerto-divertimento in a specific and distinctly modern direction.


Cinq poèmes de Mallarmé

Five poems by Mallarmé make up the poetic template for the work, and have been personally translated into Serbian by the composer. Many solutions and inventions of Kolja Mićević, the most famous translator of Mallarmé's poetry...have proved useful, and have therefore been accepted occasionally by the composer, in his ambition to not only achieve a translation that is both accurate and plausible from the
semantic Semantics is the study of linguistic Meaning (philosophy), meaning. It examines what meaning is, how words get their meaning, and how the meaning of a complex expression depends on its parts. Part of this process involves the distinction betwee ...
, poetic and metric view points, but also to accomplish an adaptation which would follow the melodic line derived from the original, French verse, with virtually no changes to the structure of the vocal phrase.


Awards and prizes

* The
Stevan Hristić Stevan Hristić ( sr-cyr, Стеван Христић; 19 June 1885 – 21 August 1958) was a Serbian composer, conductor, pedagogue, and music writer. A prominent representative of the late romanticist style in Serbian music of the first half ...
Award (for ''Tempora Retenta''), 1971 * The Award of the Composers' Association of Serbia, 2nd Prize (for ''Five Nocturnes''), s.a. * The Award of the Composers' Association of Serbia, 2nd Prize (for Sonata for Violoncello and Piano), s.a. * The International Review of Composers Award, 3rd Prize (for Concerto for Viola and Orchestra), 1994 * The
Stevan Mokranjac Stevan Stojanović ( sr-Cyrl, Стеван Стојановић, ; 9 January 1856 – 28 September 1914), known as Stevan Mokranjac ( sr-Cyrl, Стеван Мокрањац, ) was a Serbian composer and music educator. Born in Negotin in 18 ...
Award (for Concerto for Piano and Orchestra), 1995 * The April Award of the City of Belgrade (for ''Cinq poèmes de Mallarmé''), 2006


Notable works

* ''Tempora Retenta'', a Study for Full Orchestra op. 2, 1971 * ''Four Nocturnes'' (Quatre nocturnes) for Oboe, French Horn, Harpsichord and String Quartett op. 3, 1972 * ''Duo for Piano and Orchestra'' op. 4, 1973 * ''Bells'', Music for Piano (Cloches, musique pour piano) op. 5, 1974 * ''The Day'', Four Hymns for Orchestra (Le jour, quatre hymnes pour orchestre) op. 6, 1976 * ''Arion, Le Nuove Musiche Per Chittara Ed Archi'' (Arion, New Music for Guitar and Strings )op. 8, 1979 * ''Ten Preludes'' for Guitar op. 10, 1980 * Sonata for Violin and Piano in C-sharp major op. 11, 1982 * Sonata for Violoncello and Piano in C minor op. 14, 1984 * ''The Defence Of Our City'', an Ode for Tenor solo and Full Orchestra op. 16, 1984 (after the verses of M. Pavlović) * Sonata for Flute and Piano in E-flat major op. 18, 1986 * Sonata for Violin and Viola in D major op. 20, 1987 * Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in B-flat major op. 21, 1990 * Concerto for Viola and Orchestra in G minor op. 23, 1993 * Concerto for Oboe and Orchestra in F major op. 24, 1996 * ''Zephirus Returns...or Zefiro torna'', Three Live Images of Mythological Scenes for Flute, Violin and Piano op 25, 2001 * ''Jugs and Stoups'' (D’aguieres et d’alcarazas), Five Music Engravings for Cor Anglais and Viola op. 27, 2002 * ''Cinq poèmes de Mallarmé'' for Voice, Flute and Piano op. 28, 2003 * ''Cinq poèmes de Mallarmé'' for Voice and Orchestra op 29, 2003


Published scores

* The author: all opuses * Composers’ Association of Serbia: Arion, Le Nuove Musiche Per Chittara Ed Archi op. 8; Sonata for Violin and Piano in C-sharp major op. 11 * Max Eschig, Paris: Duo for Piano and Orchestra op. 4 * Edizione Berben, Ancona: , Op.10 * Radio Belgrade: The Defense Of Our City, an Ode for Tenor solo and Full Orchestra op. 16; Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in B-flat major op. 21


Recordings

* Guitar Music, LP 2340011, Stereo, PGP RTB, 1983 (''Ten Preludes for Guitar; Arion, Le Nuove Musiche Per Chittara Ed Archi; Duo for Piano and Orchestra'') * Anthology of Yugoslav Piano Music (Vladimir Krpan, piano), 2LP 1739, Jugoton 1984 (''Bells'') * CD ''New Sound'' 104/105, SOKOJ, 1995 (Concerto for Viola and Orchestra) * Vlastimir Trajković - Selected Works, 1971-1990 CD 204, SOKOJ, 1995 - Late 20th Century Serbian Music (''Duo for Piano and Orchestra;'' Sonata for Violin and Viola; Sonata for Flute and Piano; Concerto for Piano and Orchestra) * CD ''New Sound'' 109, SOKOJ, 1997 (''Bells'') * Sonja Radojković, piano CD 430275 PGP RTS, 1997 (''Bells'') * The World Premiere CD 430459, PGP RTS, 1997 (Concerto for Oboe and Orchestra). * Vlastimir Trajković, CD 431 081 PGP RTS, 2001 (''Ten Preludes'' for Guitar; ''Arion, Le Nuove Musiche Per Chittara Ed Archi; Duo for Piano and Orchestra;'' Piano Impromptu op. 12 no. 4; ''The Defence of Our City'') * CD ''New Sound'' 121, SOKOJ, 2002 (''Jugs and Stoups: Five Music Engravings'') * CD ''New Sound'' 128, FMU 2005 (''Cinq poèmes de Mallarmé'' for Voice and Orchestra) * CD ″Piano Recital″ Vladimir Gligoric - piano, Three Impromptus Opus 12 bis, Three Piano Pieces Opus 19, FMU/SOKOJ CD 012 Belgrade 2014


Essays

*
Zoran Erić Zoran Erić (, ; 6 October 1950 – 20 January 2024) was a Serbian composer based in Belgrade. He taught composition, orchestration, theater and film music at the Faculty of Music, University of Arts in Belgrade, Serbia. Biography Zoran E ...
's Konzertstück for Violin and Orchestra, ''Zvuk'', Zagreb 1989 * The key opuses in the work of Miloje Milojević, ''The Composership of Miloje Milojević'', Collection of Papers, Institute of Musicology of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 1998 * Beyond the Boundary Modern - Post-Modern - Concerto for Piano and String Orchestra by Jugoslav Bošnjak or Reliance on the Principle of Musicality, International Magazine for Music ''New Sound'' no. 15, 2000 * Dedicated to the memory of Dragutin Gostuški (''Musicology'', no. 1, 2001) * Thinking the Rethinking (of the Notion) of Modernity in Music, ''Rethinking Musical Modernism'', Collection of Papers, The Institute of Musicology of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2007


Literature

* New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians * Group of authors, ''Istorija srpske muzike'' (The History of Serbian Music), Zavod za Udžbenike, Beograd, 2008 * Mirjana Veselinović, ''Stvaralačka prisutnost evropske avangarde u nas'' (The Creative Presence of the European Avant-guarde in Our Midst), University of Arts, 1983 * Ivana Komadina, ''Nagoveštaji i ostvarenja postmoderne u stvaralačkom opusu Vlastimira Trajkovića'' (Post-Modern Thinkings and Accomplishments in the Works of Vlastimir Trajković), 1986 (unpublished) * Marija Masnikosa, The Incommunicable, The International Magazine for Music ''New Sound'' no. 4/5, 1995 * Zoran Erić. Vlastimir Trajković's Piano Music, The International Magazine for Music ''New Sound'' no. 9, 1997 * Borislav Čičovački, Jugs and Stoups - Searching for the Musical Digs, The International Magazine for Music ''New Sound'' no. 21, 2002 * Ana Stefanović, Vlastimir Trajković's Five Poems by Mallarmé, The International Magazine for Music ''New Sound'' no. 28, 2006 * Ana Stefanović, Vlastimir Trajković's Concerto for Oboe, ''Muzički talas'' no. 2-4, 1998


External links


Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts - Biography
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trajkovic, Vlastimir 1947 births 2017 deaths Serbian composers Members of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Academic staff of the University of Arts in Belgrade Musicians from Belgrade