Nikos Skalkottas

Nikos Skalkottas (Greek: Νίκος Σκαλκώτας) was born on March 8, 1904 in Halkis (island of Eubea, Greece). His great- grandfather, Alexander Skalkottas, from Pyrgos (island of Tinos) was a renowned folk singer, violinist and composer; his father, Alexander Skalkottas, was a flutist. A child prodigy himself as a violinist, Nikos pursued his studies first in his home town with his uncle Costas, later at the Athens Conservatory, graduating with the First Prize Gold Medal in 1920. In 1921, on a series of scholarships, he left for Berlin where he stayed until 1933, first taking violin master courses with Willy Hess, then in the winter of 1923-24 turning definitely to composition, for which his main teachers were Philipp Jarnach (1925-27) and Arnold Schoenberg (1927-31). Both teachers thought highly of him. He composed prodigiously, in a personal atonal idiom, using the 12-tone system rather seldom and somewhat reluctantly at that time. When the mounting wave of Nazism made life for exponents of new music difficult, Skalkottas returned to Athens in May 1933, the same month Schoenberg left Germany. In Greece, unfortunately, Skalkottas met with a lot of incomprehension and enmity, and was obliged to accept a position as one of the last violins in the State Orchestra of Athens. He isolated himself, refusing to talk about music to all but a few people who, he thought, appreciated contemporary music, all the while composing feverishly until his death on September 19, 1949 in Athens, as a result of a neglected constricted hernia. Practically his entire output remained unknown, unpublished and unperformed during his lifetime, and was actually discovered only after his death. In 1935 he turned to a new, quite complex but highly concise version of the twelve-tone system of his own invention, which he used extensively until his death, parallel with, beginning around 1938, a non- serial method that sounds only slightly different from the other technique. His main innovations consist of creating entirely new sound worlds by developing formal structures operating at multiple concurrent levels, and by the intensity and directness with which he used harmony, counterpoint, rhythm, articulation, etc. to serve maximum expressive purposes. In his 25-year long creative career, Skalkottas composed more than 170 works, often short, but sometimes of “gigantic” dimensions and of remarkable sophistication and complexity. Manuscripts for over 110 works are gathered at the Skalkottas Archives in Athens, representing more than 80% of his work (since the missing ones are generally quite short). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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The Sea, AK 14: VII. Nocturne
The Sea, AK 14: I. Prelude
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: III. Ipirotikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: I. Tsamikos, An Eagle
Double Bass Concerto, AK 27: II. Andantino
I. Allegro giocoso
36 Greek Dances for Orchestra, AK 11, Series 1: No. 5, Critikos (Allo choro den cherome)
5 Greek Dances, AK 11b (Arr. for String Orchestra by Walter Goehr and Nikos Skalkottas): No. 5, Kleftikos. Allegro vivo
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: II. Critikos
The Sea, AK 14: IV. The Trawl
The Sea, AK 14: III. Dance of the Waves
4 Images, AK 13: No. 3, The Vintage
Dance Suite from The Gnomes, Pt. 1: III. Majestic Dance
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: IV. Peloponnissiakos
The Sea, AK 14: II. The Child of the Sea
The Sea, AK 14: V. The Little Fish
The Sea, AK 14: VI. The Dolphins
The Sea, AK 14: VIII. The Preparation of the Mermaid
The Sea, AK 14: IX. Dance of the Mermaid
The Sea, Ak 14: X. The Tale Of Alexander The Great
The Sea, AK 14: XI. Finale, Hymn to the Sea
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: V. Critikos, I Enjoy No Other Dance
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: X. Macedonikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: VIII. Kalamatianos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: VII. Sifneikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: I. Syrtos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: VI. Kleftikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: No. 3. Epirotikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: XI. Oh Friends, Who Threw This Apple?
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: XII. Thessalikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: II. Sifneikos, At Saint Marcella
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series I: IX. Dance of Zalongo
4 Images, AK 13: I. The Harvest
The Sea Suite, AK 14 (Excerpts) [Version for Chamber Orchestra]: III. Dance of the Waves
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series III: III. Kleftikos
Kleftikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: III. Critikos, Early At Dawn I Will Rise
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: V. Vlachikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: Vi. Black Sash
Berceuse for piano
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: Iv. Nissiotikos, A Woman From Mylopotamos
4 Images, AK 13: III. The Vintage
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: No. 2. Kretikos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: Vii. Kathistos
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: IX. Tsamikos
32 Pieces, AK 70: I. Klavierstuck
32 Pieces, AK 70: II. Kinder-Tanz
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series II: VIII. Chiotikos
Piano Concerto No. 2, AK 17: I. Allegro Molto Vivace
36 Greek Dances, AK 11, Series 1: Series III: IX. Kiss Under A Bitter-orange Tree

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