|
Lejaren Hiller
BMHOF Class of 2006
Lejaren Hiller was born
in New York City on February 23, 1924. Early on in life Hiller
had an interest in music. He first studied composition with
Harvey Officer and oboe with Joseph Marx. Despite his interest
in music, he initially decided to enter the field of chemistry.
While studying chemistry
at Princeton, he studied theory and composition with Milton
Babbitt and Roger Sessions. Hiller received his Ph.D. in
chemistry from Princeton in 1947 at the age of 23, after
receiving both a B.A. and a M.A. in chemistry from the same
institution. He became a member of the chemistry faculty at the
University of Illinois in 1952. While teaching chemistry, Hiller
also worked towards a M.M. in composition, studying Hubert
Kessler. After receiving his M.M. in 1958, he transferred to the
music faculty in order to start the Experimental Music Studio.
In 1968 Hiller joined the faculty at the University of Buffalo
as a professor of composition. Hiller received two Fulbright
lectureships, the first of which was in 1973 to 1974 in Warsaw,
Poland. The second of these two lectureships was in Salvador de
Bahia, Brazil, in 1980.
Hiller married Elizabeth
Halsey in 1945. The Hillers adopted their first child, Amanda,
in 1964 and adopted their son David a year later. Elizabeth
Hiller was active in theatre, and was involved in many
productions for which her husband had supplied incidental music.
She played the part of the "Middle-Aged Virgin" in the original
production of Blue is the Antecedent of It and later directed it
in a production done in Buffalo, New York. In Cuthbert Bound she
played "Cressida Bound," and she also played roles in The Man
with the Oboe and Rage Over The Lost Beethoven. Mrs. Hiller had
also been involved on the tech side of the productions for Dream
Play and The Birds.
From 1947 to 1952 Hiller
worked as a research chemist for DuPont in Waynesboro, Virginia.
There his work on cellulose yielded a method for dying acrylic
fibers. While in Virginia, Hiller ran a small concert series,
and continued to write music despite the fact that none of his
music had been performed.
While Hiller started out
in pop music, he had written orchestral music by the time he was
sixteen. He was first exposed to the music of Charles Ives when
he was in high school. He had heard six songs of Ives on the
radio station WNYC, who also exposed him to VarE9se's Density
21.5. Hiller became interested in the music of Ives, and later
taught a course in Ives at the University of New York at
Buffalo.
Like Ives, Hiller was a
musically eclectic composer, often combining several different
types of techniques in the same piece.
"I just assume that
everything and anything can go into a piece if it is
appropriate. So, for example , I'll write tonal music if I want
to; I'll even insert key signatures if it is useful, something
which some people regard as provocative. . . . But I certainly
use tonal methods, serial methods, of course, chance methods,
charts, mathematical formulas like 46ibonacci series, eye music-
- you name it. And all of this with or without computers and
electronics. But again I say that I try all of them in what you
might call a total matrix of possibilities."
Hiller's musical thinking
was greatly influenced by information theory. He wrote a number
of articles on information theory, and its relationship to music
and computer music. In one article he analyzed four sonata
expositions by different composers (Mozart, Beethoven, Berg and
Hindemith). In this same Technical Report he also presented an
analysis that he did with Ramon Fuller of the first movement of
Webern's Symphony, Op. 21. Hiller thought of fluxes in the
amount of information related by a piece to be the essential
dramatic nature of music.
"When you talk about such things as Leonard Meyer's theories of
musical affect, you are really talking about order and disorder
in the most broad and general sense: A person becomes more
disturbed when the number of possibilities increase; disorder
increases and you build tension, and then resolutions come when
one arrives at more organized, more static situations. This is
what causes the ebb and flow of drama in a piece."
Information theory
influenced the way in which Hiller composed. Several of the
commands available in the computer composition language
MUSICOMP, which was written by Hiller and Robert A. Baker in
order to create their Computer Cantata, are designed with ideas
of information fluxes in mind. Also the first movement of
Hiller's Algorithms I is entitled, "The Decay of Information,"
as an indication of how it was composed.
Hiller was an
experimental composer in the strictest sense. In the mid
sixties, Hiller asserted that his, "objective in composing music
by means of computer programming is not the immediate
realization of an aesthetic unity, but the providing and
evaluating of techniques whereby this goal can eventually be
realized." In this sense Hiller was a forward looking composer,
in that each piece was an experiment that lead towards the next
piece.
|