Nicolas Vérin (born 21 June 1958) is a French composer and professor of music. His many influences, from jazz to electronics, from American to French music, give him an unusual style, apart from the main trends of French contemporary music, combining energy and subtleness.[1][2]
While rooted in electroacoustic music and its approach based on composing with sounds rather than notes, he also wrote many instrumental pieces and specialized particularly in music mixing live performers and electronics, whether fixed sound or live processing.[3] At the basis of his work are the musical gesture and the life of sound and its morphology.[4] An improviser himself, his works often leave a creative space for performers, and he has collaborated on many occasions with famous improvisers.
Vérin received commissions from the French Ministry of Culture, Radio France, INA-GRM, Studios, Festivals and Conservatories. He was composer in residence in the Midi-Pyrénées region and was awarded the prize Villa Médicis hors les murs. His music, published by Éditions Jobert and Éditions François Dhalmann, has been performed and broadcast worldwide.
Life and work
Beginnings
Vérin was born 21 June 1958 in Saint-Omer, France. After initial studies with private professors of piano, at the Martenot School and the Brest Conservatory, he obtained his Diplôme de fin d'études from the Conservatoire National de Région de Saint-Maur in piano, studies in chamber music, harmony. At age 12 he started guitar and a year later founds and leads a pop music group. This was to be followed by jazz piano, which he learned mostly on his own, but also with teachers (Matias Pizarro, Jimmy Cheatham, François Couturier).
After his baccalauréat, he followed a summer workshop in Cordes, near Toulouse, by INA-GRM, during which he decided to become an electroacoustic composer. He then studied music and science at the Universities of Paris VI–Jussieu, Brest and Paris VIII–Vincennes, where he obtained a licence de musique (B.A.). During this time, he organized with a fellow student the first electroacoustic music concert in the city of Brest.[5][6] He later attended musical academies Acanthes (Aix-en-Provence 1982), and Darmstädter Ferienkurse (1992).[7]
Upon returning to France, Vérin collaborated as musical assistant with Pierre Henry, for studio work, recording original sounds, processing sounds, and concert performances in major Festivals in France and Germany. The pioneer of musique concrète invited him in his studio for a composition in 1988. Vérin is considered one of only two disciples of Pierre Henry.[11][12] and has performed his music in many occasions.[13][14]
In 1988, he was chosen by Jean-Claude Éloy to work at CIAMI (Centre d'informatique appliquée à la musique et l'image, Rueil-Malmaison) in charge of the MIDI studio and the cmusic/CARL environment.
In 1990, Vérin founded the association Ligys, which becomes a studio coop with composers Christine Groult and Jacqueline Ozanne, active in Paris for productions and a few concerts.[19] After the dissolution of Ligys, he founds in 2007 the association Impulsion.
In 1992 Vérin was appointed Professor of Electroacoustic music at the Conservatoire National de Région of Chalon sur Sâone (Burgundy), where he is tenured in 1998. From 2002 to the present, he is Professor of Composition and Electroacoustic Music at École nationale de musique et de danse d'Evry (Essonne).
From 1992 to 1995, he is composer-in-residence in the Midi-Pyrénées Region. This includes a residence at LIMCA (Lutherie Informatique et Musique Contemporaine à Auch), where he realizes two compositions.[20][21] He is appointed Musical Director for two editions of the Auch Danse/Musique Contemporaines Festival (in Gascony), involving the programming of 8 concerts, some in relation to dance companies. The residence also included studio work at GMEA (Groupe de Musique Electroacoustique d'Albi-Tarn), resulting in an electronic music piece, In vino musica,[22] given daily for the show Musique des Vignes from October through November 1992 at the Centre Culturel de l'Albigeois.[23]
In 2003–2004, Vérin is invited at IRCAM to do a new version of his work 11 avenue du Midi on the WFS system (sonic holography), installation presented at Nicéphore Days in Chalon 2004 (France), at IRCAM's Festival Résonance 2004[24] and in Leipzig in 2005.
As performer
Besides his compositional work, Vérin has also performed electronic music and improvisation.[25][26][27] He founded Duo Alchemia with Julien Feltrin (recorder), touring in France. With the improvised music trio DSV (Cécile Daroux [fr]: flutes, Louis Sclavis: clarinets, Nicolas Vérin: electronics) he performed in France[28] (Festival Agora in 2002[29]), in Russia and United States.[30][31][32] Since the untimely death of Cécile Daroux, the group remains as a duo and renamed itself Ensemble Cécile. He performed with Vinko Globokar as electronic musician in the latter's magnum opus Laboratorium,[33] in concerts at UC San Diego, Witten, and Cologne.
Vérin appears also as improviser or electronic musician in several CDs (Xe symphonie by Pierre Henry, Préfixes by Michaël Levinas, Congruences by Michael Jarrell, Improvisations préparées with Mirtha Pozzi and Pablo Cueco) and performed with saxophonist Daniel Kientzy, actor Jean-Louis Jacopin, flutist James Newton, saxophonist Steve Coleman, pianist Anne-Marie Fijal.[34] He has performed the electronic part of mixed and acousmatic pieces by Pierre Henry[35] and many others.[36][37] As a pianist, Vérin was accompanist of choirs and singers, played in jazz groups (with François Moutin and Louis Moutin, Philippe Botta and others).
Awards
Prizes
Villa Medicis Hors les Murs (Institut Français, CulturesFrance, 2001 and 2010)[38]
selections in many competitions including Sond'Arte (Lisbon 2009),[40] Bourges (1998, 1997, 1996, 1994, 1990), Olympia (Athens, 1989),[41] Leonie D. Rothschild (USA), etc.
Vérin's catalog consists of more than 60 works, ranging from solo instrument to symphonic orchestra, through electronic music (fixed sounds or live), stage music for theatre, dance. Several of his pieces are published by Éditions Jobert-Lemoine (Paris) and Éditions François Dhalmann (Strasbourg).
Opus 7 Pleine Lune (26' – 1982) for electronics (four tracks) and projected images (by Dominique Piollet and Nicolas Vérin).
Opus 8 Solo violin piece II (6' – 1983)
Opus 10c Solo III (7' – 1998)
Opus 12 Petites variations pour piano (10' – 1985–2004)
Opus 13 Une nouvelle demeure pour Picasso (20', 1985) music for the documentary film by Edmond Agabra[48]
Opus 14 Cirios (12' – 1986) for 14 instruments (picc, fl, cl/b. cl. b, t. sax, trpt, 2 trb, el. guit, synth, perc, vn, viola, vc. and cb.)
Opus 15 La lueur et la fumée (1 hour – 1986–1993) Musical theatre for actor, synthesizer and 10 tracks to be mixed live on texts adapted from Charles Baudelaire's Le Spleen de Paris
Opus 16 Suite pour Minnie (18' – 1986) for wind ensemble (20 musicians)
Opus 17 Retornelo (8' – 1987) for wind quintet
Opus 18 Ombres chinoises (18' – 1988) for non-professional instrumental ensemble (2/2/0/0 1/0/0 4/4/3/2/1 or more)
Opus 19 Miroirs Déformants (11') for oboe and electronics (four tracks)
Opus 20 Péripéties (14'30 – 1989 – rev. 1995) for four flutes
Opus 21 Tulipes aquatiques (5' – 1990) music for the art film by Unglee[49]
Opus 22 Rhapsodie parisienne (28' – 1990) radiophonic piece (two-track tape) with Jean Dautremay, voice, Jean Pierlot, percussion, Nicolas Vérin, synthesizer.
Opus 23 Projections obliques (23' – 1990–1991) for solo flute and clarinet, live electronics and ensemble (Midi keyboard, tpt, trb, perc., vn, cb)
Opus 24 Métalmorphose (16' – 1990) for percussion and electronics[50]
Opus 25b De très près ou de très loin... (9'45 – 2001) for fixed sounds
Opus 26a Chassé-croisé Ia (8' – 1991) for clarinet (+ bass cl.) and viola + adaptations Ib for clarinet (+ bass cl.) and cello and Ic for clarinet (+ basset horn) and viola[51][52]
Opus 27 In vino musica (19' – 1992) electronics (six tracks) with optional wine-tasting installation[53]
Opus 29 Instabile (17' – 1992, rev. 1996) for ensemble (fl, oboe, cl/b. clar, F horn, 2 perc., pno/el. kbd., vn, vc) and live electronics[54][55]
Opus 32a Di un temporale... (22' – 1994) for orchestra (2 fl (+ picc + alto fl), 2 oboe (+ E.H.), 2 cl (+ b. cl.), 1 bn, 1 cbn, 2 F. H., 2 tpt, 1 tbn, 1 tuba, 2 perc, 1 hrp, strings (min. 6/6/4/4/3) and electronics
Opus 32b Temporale che non c'è (17'30) for orchestra (2 fl (+ picc + alto fl), 2 oboe (+ E.H.), 2 cl (+ b. cl.), 1 bn, 1 cbn, 2 F. H., 2 tpt, 1 tbn, 1 tuba, 2 perc, 1 hrp, strings (min. 8/6/4/4/3)
Opus 33 Suite en mouvement (12' – 1995) 3 pieces for clarinets and electronics, for students 1st to 3rd cycle
Opus 34 11, avenue du Midi (13' – 1995) radiophonic piece
Opus 35 una rosa... una rueda... (23' – 1995) for speaker, ensemble (fl, 2 cl, sax, tpt, tb, perc) and electronics, on Federico Garcia Lorca's poem "Oda a Salvador Dali"
Opus 36a Mariposa clavada que medita su vuelo (17' – 1996) for flute and electronics (four tracks)[56]
Opus 36b Thyrcis (9'50 – 2002) for solo flute
Opus 38 Chassé-croisé II (8' – 1997) for violin and piano[57]
Opus 39a Khamsin (20' – 1997) for drum kit and electronics[58]
[7] Miroirs déformants, Métalmorphose, Mariposa clavada que medita su vuelo, P'hioni. Nicolas Vérin – Four works for soloists and electronics. INA-GRM 475122. CD. 2005.[63]
[8] Solo Violin Piece II, Espejito, Chassé-Croisé Ic, Petites Variations pour Piano, Thyrcis, Chassé-Croisé II, Péripéties. Chassés-croisés, Duos and solos by Nicolas Vérin. NVCD01. CD. 2003. re-issued on cdbaby [9]
^Congruences (1989) de Michael Jarrell, Elements d'analyse technique, by Nicolas Vérin, Francis Courtot, Michael Jarrell, IRCAM (Research institute : France) ed. IRCAM, 1990 (41 pages)
^Levinas, Michaël and Castanet, Pierre-Albert (2002). "Le Compositeur Trouvère : écrits et entretiens (1982–2002)", pp. 94–97. L'Harmattan, Paris. ISBN2747528162
^Levinas, Michaël (1994). "Transients of Attack and Hybrid Sound: Toward a New Mixity", pp. 13–15. Leonardo Music Journal, vol. 4. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
^Dallet, Sylvie, and Veitl, Anne (2001). "Du sonore au musical: cinquante années de recherches concrètes (1948–1998)", p. 43. L'Harmattan, Paris. ISBN2747503402[1]
^Pistorio, Elisabeth."Croisements chorégraphiques et musicaux en Gascogne". Révolution [fr] no. 723, pp. 48–49, 6 January 1994
^Wernert, Marie-Laurence. Sud Ouest, 4 October 1993
^Thion, Michel. Révolution, no. 673, p. 40. 21 January 1993
^Giral, Espérance. "Musique des vignes – le goût des sens". La Dépêche du Midi, 8 November 1992
^Lalitte, Philippe (2012). "Histoire d'un brise-glace : le festival Why Note et son public" in Festivals et sociétés en Europe XIXe-XXIe siècles, sous la direction de Philippe Poirrier, Territoires contemporains, nouvelle série – 3 -[5]