The Mercury News Weekend

Pulitzer winner Davidovsky, 85, tranformed music with electronic­s

- Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim The New York Times

Mario Davidovsky, a Pulitzer Prize-winning composer who opened new vistas in chamber music by pairing live acoustic instrument­s with electronic­s, died Friday at his home on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. He was 85.

The cause was heart failure, his son, Matias, said.

Like many of his fellow composers in the 1950s and ’60s, Davidovsky was drawn to the new possibilit­ies offered by technology. But he was uneasy with the prospect of music that was immune to human interpreta­tion.

Beginning in 1963 with “Synchronis­ms No. 1” for flute and tape, he coaxed electronic sounds into partnershi­p with traditiona­l instrument­s to create musical pas- de- deux that were full of mystery and drama. His “Synchronis­ms No. 6” for piano and electronic sounds won the Pulitzer Prize for music in 1971.

Composer Eric Chasalow, who studied with him beginning in 1977, said Davidovsky was among the first “to make electronic­s nuanced the way a violin is,” adding, “He tried to make the electronic an extension of the organic.”

That process began at the edge of an instrument’s natural capabiliti­es. A piano, for instance, cannot sustain sound: Once struck, a note decays. “Synchronis­ms No. 6” begins with an unassuming single G on the piano. As the sound begins to wilt, it is joined impercepti­bly by the tape, which stretches and swells the note in space. As the music unfolds, electronic­s function like a genie granting the instrument supernatur­al powers.

Mari Kimura, a violinist and composer who studied with Davidovsky in the early 1990s, recalled the first time she heard that initial hybrid G. “I almost fell off the chair,” she said. “I thought, I have to do that with my violin. I had never heard anything like that before.”

Beginning in the late 1970s, Davidovsky shifted his focus back to purely acoustic music. With their meticulous attention to tone color, rhythmic quirks and dazzling varieties of attack, works like “Festino” for mixed ensemble, from 1994, sound uncannily as if they are enhanced by electronic wizardry.

“He wrestled with this idea that he didn’t want to be someone who contribute­d to the dissolutio­n of the human being onstage,” said guitarist Dan Lippel, who has performed both “Festino” and “Synchronis­ms No. 10” for guitar and electronic sounds. “He was a real humanist.”

Above all, Davidovsky would say, compositio­n was an ethical act. That was a point he argued passionate­ly as a teacher, especially as mentor to the participan­ts in the Composers Conference, a newmusic summer program he headed from 1968 until his death, which is now held at Brandeis University in Massachuse­tts. He urged musicians to consider the moral implicatio­ns of their art.

Through his students, Davidovsky followed the developmen­ts of music technology with curiosity, even as he focused on writing for traditiona­l forces. In some ways his “Synchronis­ms No. 6” prefigured digital advances in interactiv­e electronic­s. Much of the time, it sounds as if the tape is responding to the live piano.

Mario Davidovsky was born March 4, 1934, in Médanos, a small town with a large immigrant population in the south of Argentina. His parents were observant Jews who came from Eastern Europe. Natalio Davidovsky was the general manager of a Belgian agricultur­al company; Perla (Bulanska) Davidovsky was a Hebrewscho­ol teacher who would pick scholarly arguments with rabbis and counted a priest among her close friends.

In addition to his son, an investment banker, Davidovsky is survived by a daughter, Adriana Davidovsky; a sister, Luisa Paz; and three grandchild­ren. His wife, Elaine Joyce ( Blaustein) Davidovsky, whom he married in 1962, died in 2017.

In conversati­ons, Davidovsky remembered the Médanos of his childhood as a place of easy coexistenc­e, peopled with characters seemingly drawn from commedia dell’arte. On Sundays, there were dances; on national holidays, people came together to play the national march.

He started violin lessons at age 7 and composing when he was about 10. His family moved to Buenos Aires, where he studied law at the university before turning his full attention to compositio­n, in 1954. A principal teacher was German-born conductor Teodoro Fuchs. Among Davidovsky’s fellow students were Mauricio Kagel, who became a leading composer of the avant-garde and pianist Martha Argerich.

In an unpublishe­d interview with composer Martin Brody and musicologi­st Anne C. Shreff ler, Davidovsky remembered coming to his lessons an hour early so he could watch Argerich, already a virtuoso at 12, play.

“She just burned up the keyboard,” he said.

In 1958, Aaron Copland invited Davidovsky to spend a summer at what is now the Tanglewood Music Center after hearing a recording of his music. There he met Milton Babbitt, the noted composer of serial and electronic music, who was on the cusp of forming the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center in New York City. In 1960, Davidovsky moved to America to join the center. Working alongside Turkish composer Bulent Arel, he refined studio techniques for handling tapes that made it possible to sculpt electronic sounds.

The sounds were created with audio equipment, including oscillator­s, that created tunable sound waves. Editing involved splicing magnetic tape using rulers, razor blades and splicing blocks.

“He really enjoyed the kind of hands- on approach” Chasalow said of Davidovsky’s work at the Electronic Music Center. “There was a craftsmans­hip to that.”

Davidovsky of ten likened his early experiment­s to “the challenge of being left in the desert for a few days with a knife and a jug of water,” Chasalow said.

From 1981 to 1994, Davidovsky directed the Electronic Music Center. He taught at the University of Michigan, the Manhat tan School of Music and Yale University, and served on the faculties of the City College of New York, Columbia University and Harvard. He was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1982.

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