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Bo Nilsson (1 May 1937 – 25 June 2018) was a Swedish composer and lyricist.


Career

Bo Nilsson was born in
Skellefteå Skellefteå (, locally ) is a city in Västerbotten County, Sweden. It is the seat of Skellefteå Municipality, which had 73,246 inhabitants in 2021. The city is historically industrial, with mining being a large part of that industry, especiall ...
, and first drew notice as a composer at the age of 18 when his ''Zwei Stücke'' (Two Pieces) for flute, bass clarinet, percussion, and piano were performed in a 1956 West German Radio (WDR) “Musik der Zeit” concert in
Cologne Cologne ( ; german: Köln ; ksh, Kölle ) is the largest city of the German western state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) and the fourth-most populous city of Germany with 1.1 million inhabitants in the city proper and 3.6 millio ...
. He had taught himself composition by listening to the radio, having previously had only basic training from a local music teacher and some experience as a jazz pianist. Though his early style owes much to
Pierre Boulez Pierre Louis Joseph Boulez (; 26 March 1925 – 5 January 2016) was a French composer, conductor and writer, and the founder of several musical institutions. He was one of the dominant figures of post-war Western classical music. Born in Mon ...
and
Karlheinz Stockhausen Karlheinz Stockhausen (; 22 August 1928 – 5 December 2007) was a German composer, widely acknowledged by critics as one of the most important but also controversial composers of the 20th and early 21st centuries. He is known for his groundb ...
, it also displays a number of personal features: the use of bright percussion sounds behind finely wrought vocal or flute (usually
alto flute The alto flute is an instrument in the Western concert flute family, the second-highest member below the standard C flute after the uncommon flûte d'amour. It is the third most common member of its family after the standard C flute and the ...
) lines, a “nervous” fluttering of tonal nuances, and a feeling for miniature, calculated forms. Because he has chosen to live in the small town of Malmberget, he received the journalistic epitethet "the genius from Malmberget". By 1957 Nilsson remained largely unknown in his own country, but had attracted considerable attention in Germany with a succession of small chamber-music compositions characterised by their refined and unusual instrumentation. The best-known of these is ''Frequensen'' (German: ''Frequenzen'', 1957) for piccolo, flute, vibraphone, xylophone, electric guitar, double bass, and percussion.


Electronic music

In the late 1950s Nilsson composed a twelve-page score for his first electronic work, ''Audiogramme'', with only radio broadcasts and the published score of Stockhausen's ''
Studie II ''Studie II'' () is an electronic music composition by Karlheinz Stockhausen from the year 1954 and, together with his ''Studie I'', comprises his work number ("opus") 3. It is serially organized on all musical levels and was the first published ...
'' as sources upon which to draw, since he did not have access to electronic equipment at that time. He submitted the score to the electronic-music studio at WDR in the hopes of having it produced there, and Gottfried Michael Koenig agreed to take on the role of "interpreter", even while expressing doubts about the composer's reliance on the "established style" of Stockhausen's ''Studien''. By the time the realisation was completed in 1958 Nilsson, without yet having heard the results of his first essay in the medium, had completed another electronic piece and was planning a third. That second work, titled ''Würfelspiel'' (Dice Game), was also realised at WDR, while there is some doubt whether the third piece, ''Zellen'' (1958), was ever brought to completion.


Style and technique

During the 1950s, critics assumed that Nilsson employed the serial techniques of the composers whose style he was imitating, and whose notational devices his scores borrowed. In 1961, however, he created a scandal in Sweden and Germany when he published an article in which he admitted that he had been "bluffing", and had merely used his ear to create music in the so-called Darmstadt style. Despite this public confession, he is still sometimes described in reference works as a "serialist", and even as "one of the first to serialize open-form and chance techniques". Nilsson had encouraged the assumption that serialism was used in his compositions, in part by peppering his scores with numbers. Complicated rhythms were designated by numerical proportions (e.g., 4:5, 7:8, 8:9, 3:16), and dynamics were sometimes specified numerically, as when he introduced a dynamic scale of 1.0 to 10.5 in ''Quantitäten'' for piano. Another method of perpetuating this myth was by providing mathematical formulas claimed to be the basis of aspects of the music. When
Wolfgang Steinecke Wolfgang Steinecke (22 April 1910 – 23 December 1961) was a German musicologist, music critic, and cultural politician. In Darmstadt, he revived cultural life after World War II, especially by initiating the Darmstädter Ferienkurse, which ...
quoted one of these claims in a radio program, the German newspapers picked it up and spread the story. In fact, Nilsson had simply copied out formulas related to the integrals of rational functions, often with errors, from books belonging to his uncle Oka, a great lover of mathematics. Beginning with ''Entrée'' for orchestra and tape (1962), Nilsson turned to a style akin to late Romanticism, and later in the 1960s he wrote film and television scores, for example '' Hemsöborna'' (1966) and ''Röda Rummet''. ''Entrée'' was commissioned by Swedish Radio for the last concert in the 1962–63 season of Nutida Musik, a concert that also served to open the Stockholm Festival (hence the work's title). Symbolic also of the beginning of a new phase in Nilsson's work, ''Entrée'' explores extremes. It includes a variety of musical styles and dynamics ranging from extremely soft to extremely loud, using an orchestra with a greatly expanded percussion section including oil drums, steel discs, marble plates, pots, pans, and bottles. There are just two short insertions of electronic music, which were realised with the assistance of Karl-Erik Welin. They are overlaid with sparse orchestral music played live, and consist of vague, almost deliberately colourless sounds.


Compositions

Amongst his most important works are ''Quantitäten'' for solo piano (1957), ''Ett blocks timme'' for soprano and chamber ensemble after a text by
Öyvind Fahlström Öyvind Axel Christian Fahlström (December 28, 1928 – November 9, 1976) was a Swedish multimedia artist. Biography Fahlström was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil, as the only child to Frithjof Fahlström and Karin Fahlström. In July 1939 he was ...
, ''Brief an Gösta Oswald'' (a trilogy of cantatas composed 1958–62, consisting of ''Ein irrender Sohn'' for alto voice, alto flute, and chamber ensemble, ''Mädchentotenlieder'' for soprano voice, alto flute, and chamber ensemble, and ''Und die Zeiger seiner Augen wurden langsam zurückgedreht'' for alto or soprano voice and orchestra), ''Drei Szenen'' for orchestra (1960–61), ''Entrée'' for orchestra (1962), and ''Fatumeh'' for reciter, choir, rock-group, and symphony orchestra (1971).


Honours and awards

Bo Nilsson received an honorary doctorate from the Luleå University of Technology. On this occasion, the University commissioned a portrait of Bo Nilsson, painted by artist Echi Åberg.


Writings

*"Aktuella kompositionsproblem". ''Nutida musik'' 1, n. 2 (1957–58), 6–7. *''Spaderboken''. Stockholm: Bonnier, 1966. *''Missilen eller Livet i en mössa''. Gällivare: Gellivare sockens hembygdsfören, 1994. .


References

* Footnotes


Further reading

* * * * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Nilsson, Bo 1937 births 2018 deaths 20th-century classical composers 21st-century classical composers People from Skellefteå Municipality Swedish classical composers Swedish male classical composers Swedish film score composers Male film score composers 20th-century Swedish male musicians 20th-century Swedish musicians 21st-century Swedish male musicians