Elliott Carter, who died Monday, won two Pulitzer Prizes and the National Medal of Arts.(Photo: 1960 AP file photo)
NEW YORK -- Classical composer Elliott Carter, whose challenging,
rhythmically complex works earned him widespread admiration and two
Pulitzer Prizes, died Monday at age 103.
His music publishing
company, Boosey & Hawkes, called him an "iconic American composer."
It didn't give the cause of his death.
In a 1992 Associated Press
interview, Carter described his works as "music that asks to be listened
to in a concentrated way and listened to with a great deal of
attention."
"It's not music that makes an overt theatrical
effect," he said then, "but it assumes the listener is listening to
sounds and making some sense out of them."
The complex way the
instruments interact in his compositions created drama for listeners who
made the effort to understand them, but it made them difficult for
orchestras to learn. He said he tried to give each of the musicians
individuality within the context of a comprehensible whole.
"This seems to me a very dramatic thing in a democratic society," he said.
While little known to the general public, he was long respected by an inner circle of critics and musicians. In 2002, The New York Times
said his string quartets were among "the most difficult music ever
conceived," and it hailed their "volatile emotions, delicacy and even,
in places, plucky humor."
Carter had remained astonishingly
active, taking new commissions even as he celebrated his 100th birthday
in December 2008 with a gala at Carnegie Hall.
"I'm always proud of the ones I've just written," he said at the time.
In 2005, his Dialogues, which had premiered the previous year, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in music. And in 2006, his Boston Concerto was nominated for a Grammy Award as best classical contemporary composition.
Carter won his first Pulitzer Prize in 1960 for his Second String Quartet; his second award was in 1973 for his Third String Quartet.
The Juilliard String Quartet chose to mark its 45th anniversary in 1991
with a concert of all four Carter string quartets. A fifth quartet came
out in 1995.
When the first National Medal of Arts awards were
given in 1985, Carter was one of 10 people honored, along with such
legends as Martha Graham, Ralph Ellison and Georgia O'Keeffe. The awards
were established by Congress in 1984.
The New Grove Dictionary of
American Music said that at its best, Carter's music "sustains an
energy of invention that is unrivaled in contemporary composition."
Carter
said he found Europeans more receptive to his works than his fellow
Americans because music in Europe is not purely entertainment but part
of the culture, "something that people make an effort to understand."
The lack of widespread attention didn't seem to bother him.
"I
don't think it means anything to be popular," he said. "When we see the
popular tastes and the popular opinion constantly being manipulated by
all sorts of different ways, it seems to me popularity is a meaningless
matter."
In 1992, Carter said his favorite piece of music was his Concerto for Orchestra, written in 1969. It was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic for its 125th anniversary season.
"It particularly expresses a picture of the United States as an evolving world of not only people but of nature," he said.
Among his early works were two ballets, The Minotaur and Pocahontas, and his First Symphony. His First String Quartet in 1951 started him on the road to greater critical attention.
Besides composing, Carter wrote extensively about 20th-century music. A collection of articles, The Writings of Elliott Carter: An American Composer Looks at Modern Music, was published in 1977.
Carter
as born in New York in 1908. As a young man he became acquainted with
composer Charles Ives, who encouraged his ambitions. He studied
literature at Harvard and then studied music in Paris under famed
teacher Nadia Boulanger, who also guided Leonard Bernstein, Aaron
Copland and Virgil Thompson.
As Carter turned 100, he recalled a
visit to the hall in 1924 to see the New York premiere of Igor
Stravinsky's revolutionary work The Rite of Spring.
"I
thought it was the greatest thing I ever heard, and I wanted to do like
that, too," Carter recalled. "Of course, half the audience walked out,
which was even more pleasant to me. It seemed much more exciting than
Beethoven and Brahms and the rest of them."
In 1939, he married sculptor Helen H. Frost Jones. They had one son. He is survived by his son and a grandson.
Associated Press