1925–1943: Childhood and school days Pierre Boulez was born on 26 March 1925, in
Montbrison, a small town in the
Loire department of east-central France, to Léon and Marcelle (
née Calabre) Boulez. He was the third of four children: an older sister, Jeanne (1922–2018) and younger brother, Roger ( 1936) were preceded by another child called Pierre ( 1920), who died after a few months. Léon (1891–1969), an engineer and technical director of a steel factory, is described by biographers as an authoritarian figure with a strong sense of fairness, and Marcelle (1897–1985) as an outgoing, good-humoured woman, who deferred to her husband's strict
Catholic beliefs, while not necessarily sharing them. The family prospered, moving in 1929 from the apartment above a pharmacy, where Boulez was born, to a comfortable detached house, where he spent most of his childhood. From the age of seven Boulez went to school at the Institut Victor de Laprade, a Catholic
seminary where the thirteen-hour school day was filled with study and prayer. By the age of eighteen he had repudiated Catholicism; later in life he described himself as an agnostic. As a child, Boulez took piano lessons, played
chamber music with local amateurs and sang in the school choir. After completing the first part of his
baccalaureate a year early, he spent the academic year of 1940–41 at the Pensionnat St. Louis, a boarding school in nearby
Saint-Étienne. The following year he took classes in advanced mathematics at the Cours Sogno in
Lyon (a school established by the
Lazaristes) with a view to gaining admission to the
École Polytechnique in Paris. His father hoped this would lead to a career in engineering. Wartime conditions in Lyon were already harsh; they became harsher still when the
Vichy government fell, the Germans took over and the city became a centre of the
resistance. In Lyon, Boulez first heard an orchestra, saw his first operas (Mussorgsky's
Boris Godunov and Wagner's
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg) and met the soprano
Ninon Vallin, who asked him to play for her. Impressed by his ability, she persuaded his father to allow him to apply to the
Conservatoire de Lyon. He was rejected but was determined to pursue a career in music. The following year, with his sister's support in the face of opposition from his father, he studied piano and harmony privately with Lionel de Pachmann (son of the pianist
Vladimir de Pachmann). "Our parents were strong, but finally we were stronger than they", Boulez later said. In the event, when he moved to Paris in the autumn of 1943, hoping to enroll at the
Conservatoire de Paris, his father accompanied him, helped him to find a room (in the
7th arrondissement) and subsidised him until he could earn a living.
1943–1946: Musical education In October 1943, Boulez auditioned unsuccessfully for the advanced piano class at the Conservatoire, but he was admitted in January 1944 to the preparatory harmony class of
Georges Dandelot. He made rapid progress, and by May 1944 Dandelot was describing him as "the best of the class". in Paris, where Boulez lived from 1945 to 1958 Around the same time he was introduced to
Andrée Vaurabourg, wife of the composer
Arthur Honegger. Between April 1944 and May 1946 he studied counterpoint privately with her. In June 1944 he approached
Olivier Messiaen and asked to study harmony with him. Messiaen invited him to attend the private seminars he gave to selected students; in January 1945, Boulez joined Messiaen's advanced harmony class at the Conservatoire. Boulez moved to two small attic rooms on
Rue Beautreillis in the
Marais district of Paris, where he lived for the next thirteen years. In February 1945 he attended a private performance of
Schoenberg's
Wind Quintet, conducted by
René Leibowitz, the composer and follower of Schoenberg. The strict use of
twelve-tone technique in the Quintet was a revelation to Boulez, who organised a group of fellow students to take private lessons with Leibowitz. It was here that he also discovered the music of
Webern. He eventually found Leibowitz's approach too doctrinaire and broke angrily with him in 1946 when Leibowitz tried to criticise one of his early works. In June 1945, Boulez was one of four Conservatoire students awarded
premier prix. He was described in the examiner's report as "the most gifted—a composer". Although registered at the Conservatoire for the academic year 1945–46, he soon boycotted
Simone Plé-Caussade's counterpoint and fugue class, infuriated by what he described as her "lack of imagination", and organised a petition that Messiaen be given a full professorship in composition. Over the winter of 1945–46 Boulez immersed himself in
Balinese and
Japanese music and
African drumming at the
Musée Guimet and the
Musée de l'Homme in Paris: "I almost chose the career of an
ethnomusicologist because I was so fascinated by that music. It gives a different feeling of time."
1946–1953: Early career in Paris and
Madeleine Renaud in 1952, by
Carl Van Vechten On 12 February 1946, the pianist
Yvette Grimaud gave the first public performances of Boulez's music (
Douze Notations and
Trois Psalmodies) at the Concerts du Triptyque. Boulez earned money by giving maths lessons to his landlord's son. He also played the
ondes Martenot (an early electronic instrument), improvising accompaniments to radio dramas and occasionally deputising in the pit orchestra of the
Folies Bergère. In October 1946, the actor and director
Jean-Louis Barrault engaged him to play the ondes for a production of
Hamlet for the new company he and his wife,
Madeleine Renaud, had formed at the
Théâtre Marigny. Boulez was soon appointed music director of the Compagnie Renaud-Barrault, a post he held for nine years. He arranged and conducted incidental music, mostly by composers whose music he disliked (such as
Milhaud and
Tchaikovsky), but it gave him the chance to work with professional musicians, while leaving time to compose during the day. His involvement with the company also broadened his horizons: in 1947 they toured to Belgium and Switzerland ("absolutely
pays de cocagne, my first discovery of the big world"); in 1951 they gave a season of plays in London, at the invitation of
Laurence Olivier; and between 1950 and 1957 there were three tours to South America and two to North America. Much of the music he wrote for the company was lost after the occupation by students of the
Théâtre de l'Odéon during the
civil unrest in May 1968. The period between 1947 and 1950 was one of intense compositional activity for Boulez. New works included the
first two piano sonatas and initial versions of two cantatas on poems by
René Char,
Le Visage nuptial and
Le Soleil des eaux. In October 1951, a substantial work for eighteen solo instruments,
Polyphonie X, caused a scandal at its premiere at the
Donaueschingen Festival, some audience members whistling and hissing during the performance. Around this time, Boulez met two composers who were to be important influences:
John Cage and
Karlheinz Stockhausen. His friendship with Cage began in 1949 when Cage was visiting Paris. Cage introduced Boulez to two publishers (
Heugel and Amphion) who agreed to take his recent pieces; Boulez helped to arrange a private performance of Cage's
Sonatas and Interludes for Prepared Piano. When Cage returned to New York they began an intense, six-year correspondence about the future of music. Their friendship later cooled as Boulez could not accept Cage's increasing commitment to compositional procedures
based on chance; he later broke off contact with him. In 1952 Stockhausen arrived in Paris to study with Messiaen. Although Boulez knew no German and Stockhausen no French, the rapport between them was instant: "A friend translated [and] we gesticulated wildly ... We talked about music all the time—in a way I've never talked about it with anyone else." In July 1952, Boulez attended the
International Summer Course for New Music in Darmstadt for the first time. As well as Stockhausen, Boulez was in contact there with other composers who would become significant figures in contemporary music, including
Luciano Berio and
Luigi Nono. Boulez quickly became one of the leaders of the post-war modernist movement in the arts. As the music critic
Alex Ross observed: "at all times he seemed absolutely sure of what he was doing. Amid the confusion of postwar life, with so many truths discredited, his certitude was reassuring."
1954–1959: Le Domaine musical In 1954, with the financial backing of Barrault and Renaud, Boulez started a series of concerts at the Petit Marigny theatre, which became known as the
Domaine musical. The concerts focused initially on three areas: pre-war classics still unfamiliar in Paris (such as
Bartók and Webern), works by the new generation (Stockhausen, Nono) and neglected masters from the past (
Machaut,
Gesualdo)—although the last category fell away in subsequent seasons, in part because of the difficulty of finding musicians with experience of playing early music. Boulez proved an energetic and accomplished administrator and the concerts were an immediate success. They attracted musicians, painters and writers, as well as fashionable society, but they were so expensive that Boulez had to turn to wealthy patrons for support. Key events in the Domaine's history included a Webern festival (1955), the European premiere of Stravinsky's
Agon (1957) and first performances of Messiaen's
Oiseaux exotiques (1955) and
Sept haïkaï (1963). Boulez remained director until 1967, when Gilbert Amy succeeded him. On 18 June 1955,
Hans Rosbaud conducted the first performance of Boulez's best-known work,
Le Marteau sans maître, at the ISCM Festival in Baden-Baden. A nine-movement cycle for alto voice and instrumental ensemble based on poems by René Char, it was an immediate, international success.
William Glock wrote: "even at a first hearing, though difficult to take in, it was so utterly new in sound, texture and feeling that it seemed to possess a mythical quality like that of Schoenberg's
Pierrot lunaire". When Boulez conducted the work in Los Angeles in early 1957, Stravinsky attended the performance; he later described the piece as "one of the few significant works of the post-war period of exploration". Relations between the two composers soured the following year over the first Paris performance of Stravinsky's
Threni for the Domaine musical. Poorly planned by Boulez and nervously conducted by Stravinsky, the performance broke down more than once. In January 1958, the
Improvisations sur Mallarmé (I et II) were premiered, forming the kernel of a piece which grew over the next four years into a large-scale, five-movement "portrait of
Mallarmé",
Pli selon pli. It received its premiere in Donaueschingen in October 1962. Around this time, Boulez's relations with Stockhausen deteriorated as (according to the biographer
Joan Peyser) he saw the younger man supplanting him as the leader of the avant-garde.
1959–1971: International conducting career In 1959, Boulez left Paris for
Baden-Baden, where he had an arrangement with the
Southwest German Radio Symphony Orchestra to work as composer-in-residence and to conduct some smaller concerts. He also had access to an electronic studio where he could work on a new piece (
Poésie pour pouvoir). He moved into, and eventually bought, a large hillside villa, which was his main home for the rest of his life. During this period, he turned increasingly to conducting. His first engagement as an orchestral conductor had been in 1956, when he conducted the
Venezuela Symphony Orchestra while on tour with Barrault. His breakthrough came in 1959 when he replaced the ailing Hans Rosbaud at short notice in demanding programmes of twentieth-century music at the
Aix-en-Provence and Donaueschingen Festivals. This led to debuts with the
Amsterdam Concertgebouw,
Bavarian Radio Symphony and
Berlin Philharmonic orchestras. in 1957 In 1963 Boulez conducted his first opera, Berg's
Wozzeck at the
Opéra National de Paris, directed by Barrault. The conditions were exceptional, with thirty orchestral rehearsals instead of the usual three or four; the critical response was favourable and after the first performance the musicians rose to applaud him. He conducted
Wozzeck again in April 1966 at the
Oper Frankfurt in a new production by
Wieland Wagner. Wieland Wagner had already invited Boulez to conduct Wagner's
Parsifal at the
Bayreuth Festival later in the season, and Boulez returned to conduct revivals in 1967, 1968 and 1970. He also conducted performances of Wagner's
Tristan und Isolde with the Bayreuth company at the Osaka Festival in Japan in 1967, but the lack of adequate rehearsal made it an experience he later said he would rather forget. In 1965, the
Edinburgh International Festival staged the first large-scale retrospective of Boulez as composer and conductor. In 1966, he proposed a reorganisation of French musical life to the minister of culture,
André Malraux, but Malraux instead appointed the conservative
Marcel Landowski as head of music at the Ministry of Culture. Boulez expressed his fury in an article in the
Nouvel Observateur, announcing that he was "going on strike with regard to any aspect of official music in France". In March 1965, Boulez had made his orchestral debut in the United States with the
Cleveland Orchestra. In February 1969 he became its principal guest conductor and, on the death of
George Szell in July 1970, assumed the role of music advisor for two years. In the 1968–69 season, he also made guest appearances in Boston, Chicago and Los Angeles. Apart from
Pli selon pli, Boulez's only substantial new work to emerge in the first half of the 1960s was the final version of Book 2 of his
Structures for two pianos. Midway through the decade, he produced several new works, including
Éclat (1965), a short and brilliant piece for small ensemble, which by 1970 had grown into a substantial half-hour work,
Éclat/Multiples.
1971–1977: London and New York Boulez first conducted the
BBC Symphony Orchestra in February 1964, at
Worthing, accompanying
Vladimir Ashkenazy in a
Chopin piano concerto. Boulez recalled: "It was terrible, I felt like a waiter who keeps dropping the plates." His appearances with the orchestra over the next five years included his debuts at the
Proms and at
Carnegie Hall (1965) and tours to Moscow and Leningrad, Berlin and Prague (1967). In January 1969 William Glock, controller of music at the BBC, announced his appointment as chief conductor. Two months later, Boulez conducted the
New York Philharmonic for the first time. His performances so impressed both orchestra and management that he was offered the chief conductorship in succession to
Leonard Bernstein. Glock was dismayed and tried to persuade him that accepting the New York position would detract both from his work in London and his ability to compose but Boulez could not resist the opportunity (as Glock put it) "to reform the music-making of both these world cities" and in June the New York appointment was confirmed. His tenure in New York lasted between 1971 and 1977 and was not an unqualified success. The dependence on a subscription audience limited his programming. He introduced more key works from the first half of the twentieth century and, with earlier repertoire, sought out less well-known pieces. In his first season, he conducted Liszt's
The Legend of Saint Elizabeth and
Via Crucis. Performances of new music were comparatively rare in the subscription series. The players admired his musicianship but regarded him as dry and unemotional compared to Bernstein, although it was widely accepted that he improved the standard of playing. He returned on only three occasions to the orchestra in later years. Boulez's time with the BBC Symphony Orchestra was happier. With the resources of the BBC behind him, he could be bolder in his choice of repertoire. but for the most part he worked intensively with the orchestra on the music of the twentieth century. He conducted works by the younger generation of British composers—such as
Harrison Birtwistle and
Peter Maxwell Davies—but
Britten and
Tippett were absent from his programmes. His relations with the musicians were generally excellent. He was chief conductor between 1971 and 1975, continuing as chief guest conductor until 1977. Thereafter he returned to the orchestra frequently until his last appearance in an all-
Janáček programme at a 2008 Prom. In both cities, Boulez sought out venues where new music could be presented more informally: in New York he began a series of "Rug Concerts"—when the seats in
Avery Fisher Hall were taken out and the audience sat on the floor—and a contemporary music series called "Prospective Encounters" in
Greenwich Village; in London he gave concerts at the
Roundhouse, a former railway turntable shed which
Peter Brook had also used for radical theatre productions. His aim was "to create a feeling that we are all, audience, players and myself, taking part in an act of exploration". In 1972,
Wolfgang Wagner, who had succeeded his brother Wieland as director of the Bayreuth Festival, invited Boulez to conduct the
1976 centenary production of Wagner's
Der Ring des Nibelungen. The director was
Patrice Chéreau. Highly controversial in its first year, according to Barry Millington by the end of the run in 1980 "enthusiasm for the production vastly outweighed disapproval". It was televised around the world.
1977–1992: IRCAM In 1970 Boulez was asked by President
Pompidou to return to France and set up an institute specialising in musical research and creation at the arts complex—now known as the
Centre Georges Pompidou—which was planned for the Beaubourg district of Paris. The
Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique / Musique (IRCAM) opened in 1977. Boulez's model was the
Bauhaus, which had been a meeting place for artists and scientists of all disciplines. IRCAM's aims included research into acoustics, instrumental design and the use of computers in music. The institution was criticised for absorbing too much state subsidy, Boulez for wielding too much power. In 1979, Boulez conducted the world premiere of the three-act version of Berg's
Lulu at the
Paris Opera in
Friedrich Cerha's completion of the work, left unfinished at Berg's death. It was directed by Chéreau.—although he also renewed his links in the 1980s with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. Boulez composed significantly more during this period, producing a series of pieces which used the potential, developed at IRCAM, electronically to transform sound in real time. The first of these was
Répons (1981–1984), a 40-minute work for soloists, ensemble and electronics. He also radically reworked earlier pieces, including
Notations I-IV, a transcription and expansion for large orchestra of tiny piano pieces (1945–1980), and his cantata on poems by Char,
Le Visage nuptial (1946–1989). From 1976 to 1995, he held the Chair in
Invention, technique et langage en musique at the
Collège de France. In 1988 he made a series of six programmes for French television,
Boulez XXe siècle, each of which focused on a specific aspect of contemporary music (rhythm, timbre, form etc.)
1992–2006: Return to conducting In 1992, Boulez gave up the directorship of IRCAM and was succeeded by Laurent Bayle. He was composer in residence at that year's
Salzburg Festival. The previous year he began a series of annual residencies with the Cleveland Orchestra and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. In 1995 he was named principal guest conductor in Chicago, a post he held until 2005, when he became conductor emeritus. His 70th birthday in 1995 was marked by a six-month retrospective tour with the London Symphony Orchestra, taking in Paris, Vienna, New York and Tokyo. In 2001 he conducted a major Bartók cycle with the Orchestre de Paris. and
Théâtre du Châtelet, Paris); and Schoenberg's
Moses und Aron (1995,
Dutch National Opera and
Salzburg Festival). In 2004 and 2005 he returned to Bayreuth to conduct a controversial new production of
Parsifal directed by
Christoph Schlingensief. His two most substantial compositions from this period are
...explosante-fixe... (1993), which had its origins in 1972 as a tribute to Stravinsky and which again used the electronic resources of IRCAM, and
sur Incises (1998), for which he was awarded the 2001 Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition. Boulez continued to work on institutional organisation. He co-founded the
Cité de la musique, which opened in La Villette on the outskirts of Paris in 1995. In 2004, he co-founded the
Lucerne Festival Academy, an orchestral institute for young musicians, dedicated to music of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. For the next ten years he spent the last three weeks of summer working with young composers and conducting concerts with the Academy's orchestra.
2006–2016: Last years Boulez's last major work was
Dérive 2 (2006), a 45-minute piece for eleven instruments. He left several compositional projects unfinished, including the remaining
Notations for orchestra. In April that year, as part of the Festtage in Berlin, Boulez and
Daniel Barenboim gave a cycle of the
Mahler symphonies with the
Staatskapelle Berlin, which they repeated two years later at Carnegie Hall. In late 2007 the Orchestre de Paris and the Ensemble intercontemporain presented a retrospective of Boulez's music and in 2008 the
Louvre mounted the exhibition
Pierre Boulez, Œuvre: fragment. In late 2011, when he was already quite frail, he led the combined Ensemble intercontemporain and Lucerne Festival Academy, with the soprano
Barbara Hannigan, in a tour of six European cities of his own
Pli selon pli. His final appearance as a conductor was in Salzburg on 28 January 2012 with the
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra and
Mitsuko Uchida in a programme of Schoenberg (
Begleitungsmusik zu einer Lichtspielscene and the
Piano Concerto), Mozart (Piano Concerto No.19 in F major K459) and Stravinsky (
Pulcinella Suite). Thereafter he cancelled all conducting engagements. In mid-2012 Boulez was diagnosed with a neurodegenerative disease, probably a form of
Parkinson's. Later that year, he worked with the Diotima Quartet, making final revisions to his only string quartet,
Livre pour quatuor, begun in 1948. In 2013 he oversaw the release on
Deutsche Grammophon of
Pierre Boulez: Complete Works, a 13-CD survey of all his authorised compositions. He made his last public appearance on 30 May 2013 at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris, discussing Stravinsky with Robert Piencikowski, to mark the centenary of the premiere of
The Rite of Spring. From 2014 he scarcely left his home in Baden-Baden. His health prevented him from taking part in the many celebrations held across the world for his 90th birthday in 2015, which included a multi-media exhibition at the
Musée de la Musique in Paris, focusing on the inspiration he had drawn from literature and the visual arts. Boulez died at home on 5 January 2016. He was buried on 13 January in Baden-Baden's main cemetery following a private funeral service at the town's Stiftskirche. At a memorial service the next day at the
Saint-Sulpice in Paris, eulogists included Barenboim,
Renzo Piano, and Laurent Bayle, then president of the
Philharmonie de Paris, whose large concert hall had been inaugurated the previous year, thanks in part to Boulez's influence. ==Compositions==