Dimitrios Levidis

{{Short description|Greek composer}}

Dimitrios Levidis ({{langx|el|Δημήτριος Λεβίδης}}; 8 April 1885 or 1886, Athens - 29 May 1951, Palaio Faliro) was a Greek composer, later naturalized French (1929).

Background

He descended from an aristocratic family with Byzantine roots in Constantinople.

Levidis studied in Athens, Lausanne and Munich. His teachers included Friedrich Klose, Felix Mottl and Richard Strauss, the latter being his composition teacher from 1907 to 1908. Levidis won the Franz Liszt Prize for his Piano Sonata op.16. After a short period in Greece he settled in Paris (1910–1932), served in the French Army during World War I and took French nationality in 1929.{{Cite web|url=http://www.worldcat.org/identities/viaf-35383356/|title=Lèvidis, Dimitry 1886-1951|website=worldcat.org }}

Career

He wrote abundantly, in many genres, with a refined technique combining Straussian harmony and Ravelian impressionism,The New Grove Dictionary Of Music and Musicians. Macmillan 1980 also exploiting Greek modes, in an appealing style of greater homogeneity than that of many of his Greek contemporaries. Levidis was more impressed by Debussy's harmonic brevity as shown in his last works.The Music Review, Geoffrey Newton Sharp. 1940 He was a notable experimenter with novel combinations and new instruments: His interest in new sounds led him to be among the first to write for the Ondes Martenot (his Poème symphonique, a modernistic Symphonic Poem for Electrical Instrument and Orchestra, (op.43-B) was given on the occasion of the first public appearance of the instrument, premiered on 20 April 1928, at the Paris Opéra) and conducted by Rhene-Baton. The soloist was Maurice Martenot, performing for the first time in public on an electronic device of his own invention.Musical Times , winter 2001 Following its impressive debut, the conductor Leopold Stokowski brought Martenot to the United States to perform the Levidis work with the Philadelphia Orchestra. This led to a tremendous flurry of composition for the device.T B Holmes, Electronics and Experimental Music:Pioneers in Technology and Composition. p.68, 2002

After his return to Greece in about 1932, Levidis was appointed to the Ministry of Education to teach at the Hellenic Conservatory and at the Music Lyceum. In 1934, he founded the Phaleron Conservatory, later subsumed into the Hellenic Conservatory, and he was president of the Union of Greek Composers (1946–1947). He was in Paris again from 1947 to 1948.{{Cite news|url=https://windycitygreek.com/greek-history-may/|title=Greek History: May {{!}} WindyCity Greek|work=WindyCity Greek|access-date=2018-08-26|language=en-US}}

Work list

(List not Complete)

  • Menuet (1898)
  • Tristesse (1899)
  • Piano Impromptus (1902)
  • Erste Griechische Romantische Piano Sonate op.16 (1908)
  • Preludes In d. minor (1910)
  • Divertissent Orch. (1911)
  • 4 Persian Rubajats (1912–1914)
  • Chant payen for oboe and strings
  • Divertissement op.25 (1911)
  • Patre et Nymphe (1924) Ballet
  • Poeme Symphonique, pour solo d'Ondes Musicales et Orchestre, op.43-B (1928)
  • De Profundis (1929)
  • 4 tableaux en un acte op.45(?)
  • L' illiade, Orch. Oratorio. (1942–1943)
  • La Terre dans l'Espace. Symphonic Poem for Orchestra
  • The Talisman of The Gods op.41 ballet. (incomplete) (1925–1945)

References

{{Reflist}}

  • Phonoarchive.org
  • Everyman's dictionary of music p. 321
  • The Oxford Companion to Music
  • P.K. Bouboulidis: Neohellines moussourgoi: I. Dimitrios Levidis: symvoli eis tin historian tis neohellenikis moussikis (Athens, 1949)
  • S.K. Spanoudi: ‘Levidis, Dimitrios’, Helios, xii (Athens, c1950), 168 only
  • G. Sklavos: ‘Dimitrios Levidis’, Helleniki dimiourgia, viii (1951), 67–8
  • A.S. Theodoropoulou: ‘Dimitrios Levidis’, Nea estia, xlix (1951), 819 only
  • F. Anoyanakis: ‘I moussiki stin neoteri Hellada’, in K. Nef: Eisagogi eis tin istorian tis moussikis (Athens, 1958), 590–92 [Gk. edn of Einführung in die *Musikgeschichte]
  • Nicolas Slonimsky: NEW MUSIC IN GREECE Musical Quarterly.1965; LI: 225–235
  • G. Leotsakos: ‘O Dimitrios Levidis ke to aenigma tis “Mikris fantasias”’ [Dimitrios Levidis and the riddle of the ‘Little Fantasia’], foreword to D. Levidis: *Little Fantasia (Athens, 1982) [in Gk. and Eng.]; repr. in Moussikologhia, no.1 (1986), 9–25
  • The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music

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Category:1880s births

Category:1951 deaths

Category:National and Kapodistrian University of Athens alumni

Category:Musicians from Athens

Category:Greek classical composers

Category:French composers

Category:French male composers

Category:Greek emigrants to France

Category:French military personnel of World War I

Category:20th-century French male musicians

Category:19th-century Greek musicians

Category:20th-century Greek musicians