French composer, born 1948
Igor Wakhévitch |
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Born | (1948-05-12) May 12, 1948 (age 76) Gassin, France |
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Occupation | Composer |
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Years active | 1970s-present |
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Website | igorwakhevitch.com |
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Musical artist
Igor Wakhévitch (born 12 May 1948) is an avant-garde French composer. He released a series of studio albums in the 1970s and collaborated with Salvador Dalí in 1974.
Wakhevitch was born in Gassin, a small village on the French Riviera. His father is Russian-born French art director Georges Wakhévitch; his mother is the actress Marica Wakhévitch. Wakhevitch was a musical prodigy as a child, and studied piano under French composer Olivier Messiaen at the Conservatoire de Paris and classical pianist Marguerite Long.[1][2]
His compositions are heavily influenced by avant-garde music including Igor Stravinsky and psychedelic rock bands such as Soft Machine and Pink Floyd. He was one of the first composers to use electronic keyboards.[2]
In 1974, he composed the music for Salvador Dali's opera-poem Etre Dieu (To Be God), which included a libretto by Spanish writer Manuel Vazquez Montalban.[3]
Influence
Wakhévitch is one of the musicians named on the Nurse with Wound list of outsider and avant-garde music, which has come to be an important touchstone for those interested in the genre. His composition "Materia-Prima" is included on the compilation album Strain Crack & Break: Music from the Nurse With Wound List.[4]
Selected discography
- Logos (1970, Warner Bros.)
- Dr. Faust (1971, Parlophone)
- Hathor (1973, Parlophone)
- Nagual (1977, Warner Bros.)
- Kshatrya: The Eye of the Bird (2019, Transversales Disques)[5][6]
Notes
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