Beat Furrer

Biography

Beat Furrer was born in Schaffhausen in 1954 and received his first training (piano) at the music school there. After moving to Vienna in 1975, he studied conducting with Otmar Suitner and composition with Roman Haubenstock Ramati at the University of Music and Performing Arts. In 1985 he founded the Klangforum Wien, which he headed until 1992 and which he has been associated with as a conductor ever since. Commissioned by the Vienna State Opera, he wrote his first opera, “Die Blinden”, and his second opera, “Narcissus”, premiered in 1994 at the steirischer herbst at the Graz Opera. In 1996 he was composer in residence at the Lucerne Music Festival. In 2001 the music theater “Begehren” was premiered in Graz, in 2003 the opera “invocation” in Zurich and in 2005 the multi-award winning audio theater “FAMA” in Donaueschingen. Furrer has been full professor of composition at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Graz from 1991 to 2023. At the end of the 1990s, together with Ernst Kovacic, he founded “impuls” as an international ensemble and composer academy for contemporary music in Graz. From 2006 to 2009 he held a visiting professorship for composition at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Frankfurt. In 2004 he received the Music Prize of the City of Vienna, and since 2005 he has been a member of the Academy of Arts in Berlin.

In 2006 he was awarded the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale for “FAMA”. In 2010, his music theater work “Wüstenbuch” premiered at the Theater Basel. In 2014 he received the great Austrian State Prize. His opera “la bianca notte / the bright night” based on texts by Dino Campana was premiered in Hamburg in May 2015.

Since the 1980s, Furrer has created a broad repertoire ranging from solo and chamber music to works for ensemble, choir, orchestra and opera. In January 2019, his new opera “Violetter Schnee” (Violet Snow), to a libretto by Händl Klaus and based on a template by Vladimir Sorokin, was premiered at the Staatsoper Unter den Linden Berlin.

In August 2024, he was awarded the Roche Commission as part of the Lucern Festival. The world premiere of the opera “Das grosse Feuer” (text by Thomas Stangl based on the novel “Eisejuaz” by Sara Gallardo) is planned for 2025 at Zurich Opera House.

Beat Furrer received the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize 2018, he is a member of the Board of Trustees for the New Music Network appointed by the German Federal Cultural Foundation.

  • 1954Born in Schaffhausen, Switzerland, on December 6th
    1960Piano lessons at the Schaffhausen Conservatory
    1975 Moved to Vienna, where he studied conducting with Otmar Suitner and composition with Roman Haubenstock-Ramati at the Vienna School of Music and the Performing Arts
    1984Prizewinner at the "Young Generation in Europe" composition competition (Cologne, Venice, Paris)
    1985Founded the Vienna Klangforum, serving as its artistic director until July 1992
    1989Opera Die Blinden premièred at the "Wien modern" festival
    Prizewinner at the Young Composers Forum in Cologne
    1992Professor of composition at the Graz School of Music and the Performing Arts until 2023
    Grant-in-aid from the Siemens Foundation
    1993Music Prize of the City of Duisburg
    1994Opera Narcissus premièred at the Graz Opera during the Styrian Autumn Festival
    1996Composer-in-residence at the Lucerne Festival
    1999Premiere of the sound theatre piece Stimme allein [Solo voice] at the Bonn Opera
    2001Concert premiere of the music theatre piece BEGEHREN [Desire] in Graz at the Styrian Autumn Festival
    2003First staged performance of the music theatre piece BEGEHREN in Graz
    Premiere of the opera invocation at the Zürich Opera
    2004Music Prize of the city of Vienna 2003
    2005Premiere of the sound theatre piece FAMA in a specially-constructed acoustic room at the Donaueschingen Music Festival
    Appointed member of Academy of the Arts, Berlin, section music
    2006Golden Lion for FAMA at the Venice Biennale
    2006 - 2009guest professor in composition at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst [College of Music and Performing Arts] in Frankfurt am Main
    2010Premiere of the music theatre piece Wüstenbuch at Theater Basel
    2014Awarded the Great Austrian State Prize
    2015World premiere of the opera „la bianca notte/die helle nacht“ at the Hamburg State Opera
    2018Awarded the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize
    Furrer lives in Vienna
  • Essays (German)

    Beat Furrer, Zum „Narcissus-Fragment“, in: Nähe und Distanz. Nachgedachte Musik der Gegenwart, hrsg. von Wolfgang Gratzer, Bd. 2, Hofheim: Wolke 1997, S. 232–235.

    o. . [Beitrag zur Umfrage unter dem Titel Fortschritt, Avanciertheit, Avantgarde], in: Musik & Ästhetik 9 (2005), Heft 33, S. 74 .

    Musiktheater im Raum, in: Musik-Kulturen, hrsg. von Jörn Peter Hiekel, Saarbrücken: Pfau 2008 (= Darmstädter Diskurse 2), S. 161–166.

    Komponieren mit Sprache und Räumen, in: Neue Musik und andere Künste, hrsg. von Jörn Peter Hiekel, Mainz: Schott 2010, S. 298–304.


    Encyclopedia entries

    Art. Beat Furrer, in: Lexikon zeitgenössischer Musik aus Österreich. Komponisten und Komponistinnen des 20. ahrhunderts, hrsg. von Bernhard Günther, Wien: music information center austria 1997, S. 449–452.

    Wolfgang Hofer, Reinhard Schulz, Art. Beat Furrer, in Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, hrsg. von Ludwig Finscher, Personenteil, Bd. 7, Kassel: Bärenreiter 2002 , Sp. ???

    Christian Scheib, Beat Furrer, in : Komponisten der Gegenwart, München: text+kritik 1992 f.

    Sigrid Wiesmann, Art. Beat Furrer, in: The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, London: MacMillan 2001.

  • Narcissus-Fragment / Time out / A un moment de terre perdu / 1. Streichquartett
    Klangforum Wien, Dirigent Beat Furrer. Durian 096-2

    Die Blinden
    Oper nach Texten von Maurice Maeterlinck, Platon, Friedrich Hölderlin und Arthur Rimbaud
    Dirigent Beat Furrer. pan classics / 510 054

    Die Blinden
    Solisten, Klangforum Wien, Dirigent Beat Furrer. MGB 6150

    Narcissus
    Oper in sechs Szenen nach Ovids “Metamorphosen”
    Südfunk-Chor Stuttgart, Vokalensemble Nova, Dirigent Beat Furrer. Musikszene Schweiz / MGB CD 6143

    Face de la chaleur
    Ensemble Anton Webern, Dirigent Claudio Abbado. DG 437840-2

    still / presto con fuoco / nuun / poemas
    Klangforum Wien, Dirigenten Peter Eötvös, Sylvain Cambreling, Beat Furrer. Kairos / edel 1206

    Stimmen / Quartett
    Südfunk-Chor Stuttgart, Schlagquartett Köln. Kairos / edel 1220

    Stimmen / Quartett
    SWR-Vokalensemble Stuttgart, Schlagquartett Köln, Leitung Rupert Huber. Auf: Witten live! Konzertmitschnitte 1999. CD

    Stimmen / Face de la chaleur / Quartett / Dort ist das Meer
    Eva Furrer, Marino Formenti, Ernesto Molinari, Schlagquartett Köln, Wiener Konzertchor, RSO Wien. Kairos / edel 12272

    Aria / Solo / Gaspra
    Petra Hoffmann (Sopran), Lucas Fels (Violoncello), ensemble recherche. Kairos / edel 12322

    FAMA
    Isabelle Menke, Eva Furrer, Bernhard Zachhuber, Manfred Spitaler, Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart, Klangforum Wien, Beat Furrer. Kairos / edel 12562
    außerdem: Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart, Klangforum Wien, Beat Furrer. col legno / COL 20612

    Konzert für Klavier und Orchester / spur / lotófagos I / invocation VI / FAMA VI / retour an dich
    Nicolas Hodges (Klavier), WDR Sinfonieorchester Köln, Leitung Peter Rundel, Petra Hoffmann (Sopran), Eva Furrer (Bassflöte), Kammerensemble neue musik berlin, Isabelle Menke (Stimme), Tora Augestad (Sopran), Uli Fussenegger (Kontrabass). Kairos 0012842KAI

    Begehren
    Petra Hoffmann (Sopran), Johann Leutgeb (Erzähler), Vokalensemble NOVA, ensemble recherche, Leitung Beat Furrer, Reinhild Hoffmann (Regie). Kairos 0012792KAI (DVD)

  • A closed group: five people in a house, surrounded only by snow. They are cut off, thrown back simply on their existence. Something has happened, but they have no language for it. Their hell is the uncertainty. Without being able to talk about what has happened, what will become of them, they find themselves in freefall into the unknown. Their conversations display an absurd triviality, which overwhelms all the threatening scenarios with chatter. The only certain thing is the snow outside which becomes a fantastic projection surface. And there is a sixth person, Tanja, who only describes what she sees. Or is she a phantasmagoria, the memory of a deceased person?

    A painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder illustrates both an idyll and threat at the same time: “The Hunters in the Snow” was painted in 1565, when the temperatures sunk throughout central Europe in what is called the Little Ice Age, and winter meant an existential fight for survival. Shortly before that a thinker at the beginning of the modern period wrote about the light of reason. Bruegel depicts winter in many small episodes, depicts the life-threatening cold: at the centre is a bird trap into which the small creatures are lured with bait so they can be killed, or he portrays hunters who have just caught a fox, or the house with a chimney on fire which must be extinguished in order to save the protective shelter. Bruegel paints the bird’s eye perspective, the pursuits in the bitter winter in their perfect ambiguity, the pleasure of skating, of curling, the feeling of lightness.

    The libretto of “Violetter Schnee” by Händl Klaus after Vladimir Sorokin is about a fantastic plunge into the unknown. Beat Furrer’s composition powerfully draws the listener into this scenario: into an event of total transformation, into the confused experiences of five people whose world turns into an all-enveloping strangeness. Their behaviour meanders between euphoria and fearful visions, between banality and isolation. At the end a strange light, a moon, the snow glows violet: promise, redemption, decline?

    Silvia, Natascha, Jan, Peter and Jacques could be components in the painting. Trapped in a house, surrounded by infinite expanses of snowdrifts, they talk around their actual situation, recounting mostly dreams which reflect their threat. The motifs of their tales recur repeatedly: Peter, for example, who dreams how he has to experience powerlessly that he will be rescued from the ice, but that his frozen body will be warmed too quickly, Silvia, in whose viola a hornet grows during a concert which makes the instrument hum, then causes it to burst. Or a contemplation by Jacques about “dark matter”, floating almost humorously like a drunken vision. “The listener reacts like the observer of Bruegel’s painting, which is a place of theatre. It offers him a situation in which the whole divides into individual episodes, and yet things sit together like a story. Jacques’ aria about dark matter, for example, comes softly out this and intensifies dramatically, but there too, there is no apocalyptic scenario. But it is about the whole, in this aria too, it could be interpreted as drunkenness, but of course there is more to it than that, it is always ambiguous.” (Furrer) It begins to hover between what is real, and what is a vision. Jacques encounters Tanja and sees his dead wife in her. Her story remains obscure, is suggestive, can be put together in the head of the listener. His language changes in its musical setting, the sound approaches speaking, in the lowest dynamic range, microtonal steps emerge. “He must sing like you speak to a bird”, the instructions say.

    “The music narrates the disintegration of what people have known, have loved. It corresponds to something on another level, to what happens to the strange sun, with the light. It is the trusted which has become strange and puts us existentially in question”, according to Beat Furrer. Musically, a tendency to an ever more splintered sonority takes place, to increasingly abrupt contrasts, the continuities burst, fall apart. What is still a continuous harmonic-tonal development in the prologue is increasingly mixed with collaged, cut-up structures.

    From the beginning of the prologue an exuberant mobile totality of sound draws through with force into this cosmos of the uncertain. Everything develops out of two musical motifs: the first is the continual modulation and glissandi of the harmonies which later leads to a constant colouring of the parts. The second are the cuts in which disparate elements crash into each other. In the last ensemble before the “violette Vision” there are only scraps of conversation “fallen stürzen gehen …” [to fall to plunge to go].

    Furrer: “I believe it is important that an apocalyptic tone does not dominate here, scored in a clicheed way and associated with very particular images. Here we find ourselves in a freefall which demands to be portrayed. In this uninhabited situation, humanity is released into the cosmic cold, it is important that people really freeze, it is truly cold. It is about the passage into an unknown terrain where no-one knows what comes next.”

    Marie Luise Maintz
    (from [t]akte 2/2018) – translation: Elizabeth Robinson)

Performances

composer_first_namecomposer_last_nametitledateorchestraconductorlocationspecial
CharlotteSeitherNeues Werk für Stimme und Klavier 05.07.2025Dietrich Henschel (Bariton), Anne Le Bozec (Klavier)Bad Kissingen (Kissinger Sommer, Liederwerkstatt)Uraufführung
PhilippMaintzchoralvorspiel XIX (wie schön leucht uns der morgenstern) für orgel solo18.07.2025Georg Gottschlich (Orgel)Berlin (St. Marien Friedenau)
Andrea LorenzoScartazzini Enigma für Orchester18.07.2025Jenaer PhilharmonieSimon GaudenzToblach (Mahler Festwochen)
Beat FurrerProphezeiungen – für Alt, Kontrabassklarinette und Akkordeon 19.07.2025Helena Sorokina (Alt), Marco Sala (Kontrabassklarinette), Krassimir Sterev (Akkordeon), Cantando AdmontCordula BürgiSalzburg (Salzburger Festspiele, Kollegienkirche)
ManfredTrojahnStreichquartett Nr. 326.07.2025Kuss QuartettHitzacker (Sommerliche Musiktage)
Beat FurrerProphezeiungen – für Alt, Kontrabassklarinette und Akkordeon 27.07.2025Helena Sorokina (Alt), Marco Sala (Kontrab.klarinette), Krassimir Sterev (Akk.), Cantando AdmontCordula BürgiOssiach (Carinthischer Sommer, Stiftskirche)
CharlotteSeither„ahnst du“ für Orchester, Chor und Vokalensemble02.08.2025Orchester, Chor und Vokalensemble der Musikakademie der StudienstiftungMartin WettgesBruneck (Intercable Arena)
PhilippMaintzchoralvorspiel XXXVII (so nimm denn meine hände) choralvorspiel XXXVII (so nimm denn meine hände)07.08.2025Leo van Doeselaar (Orgel)Kampen (Bovenkerk)Niederländische Erstauff.
PhilippMaintzchoralvorspiel XXXVIII (schmücke dich, o liebe seele)13.08.2025Anna-Victoria BaltruschTrier (Konstantinbasilika)
PhilippMaintzchoralvorspiel XXXVIII (schmücke dich, o liebe seele)17.08.2025Anna-Victoria BaltruschFulda (Dom St. Salvator)
PhilippMaintzchoralvorspiel III (die nacht ist vorgedrungen) für orgel solo22.08.2025Angela Metzger (Orgel)Berlin (Internationaler Orgelsommer, Dom)
DieterAmmannViola Concerto „No templates“30.08.2025Tabea Zimmermann (Viola) Lu­cerne Festival Contemporary OrchestraDavid RobertsonLuzern (Lucerne Festival)
Bernd AloisZimmermannMusique pour les soupers du Roi Ubu31.08.2025Deutsches Symphonieorchester BerlinAnja BihlmaierBonn
Beat FurrerKlavierkonzert Nr. 203.09.2025Francesco Piemontesi (Klavier), Orchestre de la Suisse RomandeJonathan NottGenf (Victoria Hall)Urauff., auch 4.9. Genf
DieterAmmannViolation für Violoncello und Orchester14.09.2025Sol Gabetta (Violoncello), Lucerne Festival Contemporary OrchestraRiccardo ChaillyLuzern (Lucerne Festival)
Matthias Pintscher NUR für Klavier und Ensemble26.09.2025Conrad Tao (Klavier), Konzerthausorchester Berlin Matthias PintscherBerlin (Konzerthaus)auch 27.9.
BeatFurrerPHAOS für Orchester28.09.2025Basel SinfoniettaTitus EngelBasel (Stadtcasino)Schweizer Erstauff.
PhilippMaintzchoralvorspiel IX (erbarm dich mein, o herre gott) für orgel solo06.10.2025Henry Fairs (Orgel)Berlin (Maria unter dem Kreuz, Vierter Orgelzyklus)
PhilippMaintzenglouti, haché11.10.2025Angela Metzger (Orgel) Madrid (Auditorio nacional de Música)Span. Erstauff.
DieterAmmannViola Concerto „No templates“16.10.2025Nils Mönkemeyer (Viola), Münchener KammerorchesterBas WiegersMünchen (Prinzregententheater)
ManfredTrojahnHerbstmusik - Sinfonischer Satz23.10.2025Tiroler SymphonieorchesterGerrit PrießnitzInnsbruck (Congress)auch 24.10.
BeatFurrerStudie III für Klavier solo02.11.2025Filippo Gorini (Klavier)Hong Kong (City Hall)Uraufführung
Beat Furrer PHAOS für Orchester02.11.2025Basel SinfoniettaTitus EngelEssen (Philharmonie)
Andrea LorenzoScartazziniEarth für Orchester (Neues Werk zum 200. Jubiläum der Bremer Philharmoniker)02.11.2025Bremer Philharmoniker Marko LetonjaBremen (Die Glocke)Urauff., auch 3.11.
GiselherKlebeDas Mädchen aus Domrémy23.11.2025Alexander Hannemann, Regie: Michael DissmeierDetmold (Hochschule für Musik)
Lubica CekovskáToy Procession or orchestra28.11.2025Houston Symphony OrchestraJuraj ValcuhaHouston (Jones Hall)Uraufführung
PhilippMaintzjag die hunde zurück! für sechs soprane und sechs schlagzeuger 29.11.2025N. Senatskaya/S. Bódi/I. Balzer-Wolf/C. Vélez Murcia/H. Kim/M. Viera (Soprane), Christoph SietzenWien (Festival Wien Modern, Konzerthaus)Österr. Erstaufführung
PhilippMaintzhaché für orgel solo, englouti für orgel solo09.12.2025Angela Metzger (Orgel)München (musica viva, Herkulessaal der Residenz)
PhilippMaintzchoralvorspiel II (rorate cæli desuper) für orgel solo14.12.2025Andreas Sieling (Orgel)Berlin (Dom)Uraufführung
BeatFurrer„Ira-Arca“ für Bassflöte und Kontrabass20.01.2026Kammerensemble Neue Musik Berlin Berlin (Konzerthaus)

Works



























  •  


    Auf Anfrage / In Vorbereitung

    Sechs Gesänge für Vokalensemble und Orchester
    nach Texten von Sara Gallardo. BA 11712, Aufführungsmaterial leihweise
    Besetzung: Vokalensemble (SSSAAATTTBBB) – 2 Flöten (2. auch Piccolo und Bassflöte), 2 Oboen, 2 Klarinetten, Bassklarinette (auch Kontrabassklarinette), Sopran- und Baritonsaxophon, 2 Fagotte (2. auch Kontrafagott), 4 Hörner, 3 Trompeten, 3 Posaunen, Tuba, Akkordeon, Klavier, Schlagzeug (3 Spieler), Streicher (10, 10, 8, 6, 4) – Dauer: ca. 25 Minuten.
    Uraufführung: 6.5.2022 Amsterdam, Concertgebouw Orkest, Cantando Admont, Leitung: David Robertson








  •  


    Auf Anfrage / In Vorbereitung

    Enigma V
    für Chor a cappella (SSAATTBB) nach einem Text von Leonardo da Vinci (italienisch) (2012). ca. 16’30 Minuten. BA 11029, in Vorbereitung
    Uraufführung am 26. Oktober 2012 in Paris: Les Cris de Paris, Leitung: Geoffroy Jourdain

    spazio immergente II
    für 2 x 16 Stimmen und 2 Schlagzeuger. Text von Lukrez (lateinisch) aus De rerum natura (2015). BA 11077, in Vorbereitung / ca. 25 Minuten
    Uraufführung am 6. Februar 2016 in Stuttgart (Eclat): SWR Vokalensemble, Franz Bach, Daniel Hilger (Schlagzeug), Christoph Grund (Klavier), Leitung: Marcus Creed

    Herbst
    für zwei gemischte Chöre a cappella. Text von Lukrez (lateinisch) aus De rerum natura (2015), in Vorbereitung. / ca. 5 Minuten
    Uraufführung am 2. Oktober 2015 in Dortmund (Chor.com): SWR Vokalensemble, Leitung: Ruper Huber








  •  


    Auf Anfrage / In Vorbereitung

    Ira-Arca
    für Bassflöte und Kontrabass (2012). ca. 15 Minuten. BA 11044, in Vorbereitung
    Uraufführung am 3. November 2012 in Wien: Eva Furrer (Bassflöte) und Uli Fussenegger (Kontrabass)

    In’s Offene
    für Saxophon, Klavier und Schlagzeug (2022), ca. 15 Minuten. BA 11483, in Vorbereitung
    Uraufführung 8. Mai 2022 Witten: Trio Accanto – Marcus Weiss (Saxophon), Nicolas Hodges (Klavier), Christian Dierstein (Schlagzeug)

    intorno al bianco
    für Klarinette und Streichquartett (2016). ca. 26 Minuten. BA 11083, in Vorbereitung
    Uraufführung 14. September 2016. Florenz: Bernhard Zachhuber (Klarinette), Mitglieder des Klangforum Wien

    Klavierquartett
    (2020) ca. 20 Minuten. BA 11442, in Vorbereitung
    Uraufführung 7. Mai 2022, Wien: Trio infernale, Anton Gerzenberg




  •  


    In Vorbereitung

    Kaleidoscopic memories
    für Kontrabass und Elektronik, BA 11078, in Vorbereitung
    Uraufführung 8. Juni 2016 Paris (IRCAM, „Manifeste“): Uli Fussenegger (Kontrabass)

    angelus descendens
    für Orgel solo. BA11431, in Vorbereitung.
    Uraufführung 5.6.2022 Kassel (St. Martin, BRANDNEU – Internationaler Orgelsommer), Bernhard Haas (Orgel)

  • Universal Edition, Wien

    1982
    Frau Nachtigall für Vc

    1983
    Ensemble für 4 Klar, 2 Klav, Vib, Marimbaphon

    1984
    Poemas für MezS, Git, Klav und Marimba
    Sinfonia per archi für Streichorchester
    1. Streichquartett
    Tiro mis tristes redes für Orchester
    Und irgendwo fern, so fern für 2 Klav

    1985
    Duo für 2 Vc
    Illuminations für Sopran und Kammerensemble
    Trio für Fl, Ob oder Sax und Klar
    Music for Mallets für Xylorimba, Marimba und Vibraphon

    1985/86
    Dort ist das Meer – Nachts steig’ ich hinab für Chor und Orchester
    Wie diese Stimmen für 2 Vc

    1986
    Retour an Dich für V, Vc und Klav
    Chiaroscuro für großes Orchester (1983/1986)
    Voicelessness. The Snow has no Voice für Klav
    … y a una canción desesperada für 3 Git

    1987
    In der Stille des Hauses wohnt ein Ton für Kammerensemble

    1987/88
    Ultimi cori für 4st gemChor und 3 Schlagzeugspieler

    1988
    Epilog für 3 Vc
    Gaspra für Ensemble
    Risonanze für Orchester in 3 Gruppen
    2. Streichquartett

    1989
    Die Blinden. Kammeroper in einem Akt nach Texten von M. Maeterlinck, Platon, F. Hölderlin und A. Rimbaud

    1989/90
    Studie – Übermalung für Orchester

    1990
    a un moment de terre perdu für Ensemble

    1991
    Aer für Klav, Klar und Vc
    Face de la chaleur für Fl, Klar, Klav und in vier Gruppen geteiltes Orchester
    Für Alfred Schlee. Für Streichquartett
    Schleedoyer I. Werke für Streichquartett

    1992
    Madrigal für Orchester

    1993
    Cold, calm and moving für Fl, Hfe, V, Va und Vc
    Lied für V und Klav
    Narcissus-Fragment für 26 Spieler und 2 Sprecher

    1994
    Narcissus. Oper in sechs Szenen nach Ovids “Metamorphosen” (1992/1994)

    1995
    Quartett für 4 Schlagzeuger
    Time out 1 für Fl, Hfe und Str (4 V, 2 Va, 2 Vc)

    1995/96
    Time out 2 für Fl, Hfe und Str (4 V, 2 Va, 2 Vc)
    Nuun für 2 Klav und Ensemble (26 Spieler)

A portrait of Beat Furrer

The Drama of Listening

Anyone who wants to get to know Beat Furrer’s music should head directly to the starting point of his tonal fantasy: to the dramatic moment in which the outrageous happens. At the heart of his output lies music theatre work – most recently “Wüstenbuch” (world premiere, Basel 2010), preceded by “FAMA” (Donaueschingen, 2005), “Invocation“ (Zurich, 2003) and “Begehren” (Graz, 2003), as well as “Narcissus” (Graz, 1994) and “Die Blinden” (Vienna, 1989). Around the dramatic work, and closely interwoven with it, are his instrumental works. The compelling power of Beat Furrer’s compositions results from the precision and consistency with which he creates musical symbols for those elementary constellations which stand at the centre of the drama.

Beat Furrer’s music theatre works give audible expression to incredible events. The outrageous instant, the moment of sudden change in a plot is the initial moment and gravitational field for sound and structure: the opera “Invocation” takes as its starting point a cry which cuts into a child’s piano lesson and reveals a murder. In “Fama” it is the distress of a young woman who is forced into prostitution in order to pay her father’s debts. In the original source, Schnitzler’s novella “Fräulein Else”, events culminate in an unparalleled sensation in which Else poisons herself and exposes herself in front of a hotel gathering. At the centre of his first music theatre work, “Die Blinden” after Maeterlinck, comes the shocking moment of realisation that the only sighted person, the leader, lies dead in the middle. Narcissus perishes from the unattainability of the utopian image in the mirror.

The composed glance backwards: “Begehren” [“Desire”]
“Begehren” contains the moment of Orpheus’s ascent from Hades, the realm of darkness, and his fateful turning round. The first scene sets the rushing, sibilant sound of “shadows” in instrumental and vocal sounds, a complex collective of orchestra and chorus performs the movement of ascending in lines layered one on top of another, ascending lines which transform tonally from dark to light and which are projected rotating into the space. The spellbinding reminder “Und wandte mich um” [And I turned around] cuts into the action as a turning point, repeated several times. Several layers of text and language are present: alongside “Der Untröstliche” (The inconsolable) by Pavese there are tales by Ovid and Virgil. The sound is generated from the physicality of the various languages as well as the span between speaking and singing. The poles are personified by the two main figures HE (spoken) and SHE (sung), their sonority meeting only in one, whispered scene. The insuperability of the separation through death is not cancelled out in Begehren: SHE formulates the conclusion: “I can speak to you as if you were here, and yet night lies between us… separation insurmountable more conclusive with every hour…”

Beat Furrer composes the idea of the story condensed into a moment in a complex musical matrix. Its component parts are superimposed over each other and presented or faded out through filters; it is, as it were, projected into space and time. A dramatic conception of simultaneity results which Furrer develops from the narrative in retrospect. By memorising, a story is complete, with development and resolution present, and corresponding with this, the whole drama is already present musically in the opening scene of “Begehren”.

Beat Furrer has developed this process following on from instrumental works such as “nuun” (for two pianos and ensemble, 1996) and still (for ensemble, 1998). In “Begehren” he used it for the first time in combination with a music theatre work. Instrumental works such as “andere stimmen” for violin and orchestra (2003) and “PHAOS” for orchestra (2006) develop these materials further.

The drama of listening: FAMA
A metaphor for the existence of the composer is listening to Fama, the mythical figure whose house is made “entirely from sounding brass” and who is described “with overwhelming sensuousness” by Ovid: “everywhere it reverberates, throws sounds back and repeats what it hears”. According to Beat Furrer, the composer goes through this world and attempts by listening to comprehend events and to analyse their sound. Stories such as those of Orpheus, of Narcissus, of Else, of Anne are those which can resonate in the house of Fama.

In Beat Furrer’s sound theatre piece “FAMA”, the theatrical idea of a place where stories coincide became the starting point for an architecture which is at the same time the listening room (auditorium) and the stage: a cube of moving panels, reflecting or absorbing surfaces around the listener makes it possible to thematise the presence of the sounds, that is the nearness and the distance, the inner and the outer. The voice and language of an actress enter a space in relation to the instrumental and sung vocal sound, which gradually becomes the inner space of the main figure. The text material is Schnitzler’s novella “Fräulein Else”, augmented by Lucretius and Carlo Emilio Gadda. Else’s restless soliloquy is a human fate which resounds in the house of Fama – as a cry, as a despairing whisper, as a breathless stammering. This figure, which is only thought, language, oscillates between being lost in a dream and the entrapped present. Else has been sent into the refined world of a hotel in the Dolomites. She has a despairing matter-of-fact feeling for the path this society prescribes for her, in which women are wearing pearl necklaces like a leash. “If I get married one day, I’ll probably do it more cheaply” – marriage is just another form of prostitution. Else has to get hold of money for her father in debt. The sponsor demands a price which drives her to self-destruction, a further “victim on the altar of a world of total reification” (Furrer). – “How strange my voice sounds” – the voice and its changing sonority draws ever closer in the course of the piece, until it is close-up and united tonally with the instrumental sound – and finally with the loss of the voice: Fama leads into an instrumental aftershock which follows the catastrophe.

“The drama has already happened” – only the moment of the incomprehensible can be recapitulated. Beat Furrer’s pieces are not accounts, they do not relate narrative threads, but seize their stories at the core of the cathartic moment, circle around them illuminating through scenes which develop aspects of the events – from distant utopia to the entrapped present: shaped temporality aimed at the present.

On the search for the alien: “Wüstenbuch” [“Desert book”]
With his sixth music theatre “Wüstenbuch” the simultaneity of all occurrences, one could also say, the eternal, which Beat Furrer composes in the overlaying of textual and tonal layers, is given a new visual presence. The desert is the symbol for everything which is not, a negative object of projection and equally a vanishing point.

In “Wüstenbuch” the confrontation with the all-pervading strangeness, emptiness, isolation, timelessness and absence of history or past, of the closeness of death, becomes the dramatic concept. The desert as a place of nothing is simultaneously an object of projection, full of history. In “Wüstenbuch” Beat Furrer approaches the idea of a drama without a plot, a setting of the pure state of being. Faced with this placeless place, the person is thrown back on himself. In his music theatre work Beat Furrer creates a dramatic construction in which the state referred to is loaded with history.

In “Wüstenbuch” the story of a journey into the desert is composed of different layers of text: scenes from Ingeborg Bachmann’s fragment of the same name, combined with a text and scenario by Händl Klaus and further texts by Lucretius, Machado, Valente, Apuleius and from the Papyrus Berlin 3024. The starting points for Furrer’s work on “Wüstenbuch” were ancient Egyptian texts, brought to the composer’s attention by the Egyptologist Jan Assmann. Finally, the famous Papyrus Berlin 3024 is introduced into the composition, the “Dispute between a man and his Ba”. The worldly soul, Ba, which accompanies a person during his life and leaves him in death, has a dialogue with itself, reporting in the greatest despair of his loneliness, and reconciles it with the idea of death. The dialogue leads into a highly poetic vision of death as a homecoming. “Death stands before me today, as if a sick man recovers from illness …” The question about death, which had the same significance for the Egyptians as forgetting, and about everything alien, is one layer of the composition. The fear of forgetting led to that advanced civilization whose monuments are still visible for us today – the realm of death, established by the Egyptians on the west side of the Nile.

In a bundle of papers entitled “Wüstenbuch”, Ingeborg Bachmann compiled scenes from a journey to Egypt in 1964. They became part of her major novel project “Todesarten”. In it, the “cases” of women are presented who are destroyed by their partners in an apparent protection of a marriage or a relationship. Bachmann travelled as a sick, disabled woman, humiliated and almost destroyed following her break up with Max Frisch. Her journey into the desert had the characteristics of a purification and return to life.

“On the search for the alien, which actually no longer exists,” is how Beat Furrer summarizes the theme of Wüstenbuch. “The neighbour is the stranger who lives near you. But the stranger in the sense of an inhabitant of the other space no longer exists. The desert is the disintegration of this structure, the placelessness. The sense of place is dissolved by today’s constant travelling. The desert is a metaphor for this placelessness, for the breaking up of social structures. It was already like this with the ancients, so that they saw the placelessness, death, on the other side of the Nile in the desert. For us it is the absolute forgetting of social responsibility and structures, the destruction of the space … Again and again the attempts to remember. In this desert there are a few fragments of a bygone stable culture, which knew nothing of this frenzy and speed. These are only fragments which we attempt to decipher. The protagonists attempt to decipher something, to read something which is no longer comprehensible.”

As a kind of inner scenario of “Wüstenbuch”, we can see a journey in twelve stages. People on the search for the alien, for the origins of culture, encounter the ghostly figures of the past. The composition takes place as a development to the very extremes of oblivion: it culminates in exposure in the desert and the loss of all memory and in the disintegration of the feeling of identity. The subject is obliterated, a part of an abstract cosmos in which physical particles perform a dance of attraction and rejection. In the farewell, the distant utopia appears from a mere living together, humanity.

Double characters and phantoms belong to the cast of “Wüstenbuch”, thematicised musically in the area between the singing voice and spoken voice. One of the central musical themes of “Wüstenbuch” is the synthesis of music and spoken language. In some parts the score leaves open spaces for spoken text, and in others, speech is transformed into the musical structure. The encounters with the voice, the perception of one’s own voice as something foreign beyond hearing, the obliteration of the voice through language are variants on this synthesis. The musical process is a development of the spoken, and the instrumented sung, that is to say of the absence of the voice, via the combination of many and diverse vocal forms up to pure solo singing.

If the image of the journey into the desert implies a formal process of flux and motion, so the scenes appear like windows which open onto an action. Time, the succession of events, is, as it were, spatialised.

Drama and development
The story of Furrer’s composing led to a turning point after “Wüstenbuch”: his “Studie für Klavier” (2011) and “Enigma V” for chorus a cappella (2012) are works about the creation of a process of flux and motion. The sequence of breathing in and breathing out gave the title to “Ira – Arca” for bass flute and double bass (2012). And in “linea dell’orizzonte” for ensemble (2012) the process of the approaching and polarisation of sound textures is composed. Form and reflection, repetition and distortion are the musical themes of this group of works from 2011 onwards. A musical principle has connotations with an intellectual content: “The phenomenon of doubling, but also of the distortion into a shadow interested me, and the creation of the process-related resulting from this intersecting of voices into each other”, Beat Furrer says, describing his choral work “Enigma V”, which sets text by Leonardo da Vinci about the appearance of shadows and reflections. Finally, regular repetition and distortion, or espressivo, are juxtaposed as two principles. “One will see forms and shapes of people and animals which simply follow these animals and people wherever they flee to”, as Leonardo da Vinci said. The content becomes the technique, becomes the structure, developed further from work to work.

Marie Luise Maintz

(English translation: Elizabeth Robinson)

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