Pascal Dusapin Residency – Pascal Dusapin, Jack Quartet
© Droits réservés
Full
- Prices
- €25 to €40
- Hours
- 8.30 p.m.
The Jack Quartet, recognised for its catalytic role in contemporary music since its founding in 2005, explores all that the string quartet can offer in innovation, experimentation and sheer audacity.
And there is certainly no lack of audacity in these four New York-based musicians, who have concocted a programme centred on contemporary reinterpretations of the French and Italian Renaissance, in which talented young composers engage in a vibrant dialogue between old and new, including Christopher Otto, violinist of the Jack Quartet. In parallel, the four musicians lend their bows to the fertile pen of composer-in-residence Pascal Dusapin, who presents the first performance of his String Quartet No. 8, commissioned by the Fondation.
Programme
- Christopher Otto
Angelorum Psalat, after Rodericus (2011 / c. 1390) - Nicola Vicentino
Musica prisca caput and Madonna, il poco dolce (c. 1555) - Juri Seo
Trois chansons imaginaires (2024) - Vicente Atria
Round-about (2024) - Christopher Otto
Miserere, after Nathaniel Giles (2023 / c. 1594) - Austin Wulliman
Dave’s Hocket (2024)
- Christopher Otto
Fumeux fume par fumée, after Solage (2018 / c. 1390) - Pascal Dusapin
Quatuor VIII (String Quartet No. 8)
World premiere, commissioned by the Fondation Louis Vuitton (2025)
Jack Quartet
Undeniably our generation’s “leading new-music foursome,” JACK Quartet’s “stylistic range, precision and passion have made the group one of contemporary music’s indispensable ensembles” (The New York Times). Comprising violinists Christopher Otto and Austin Wulliman, violist John Pickford Richards, and cellist Jay Campbell, JACK Quartet enters their third decade as a pioneering string quartet synchronized in their mission to create an international community through transformative, mind-broadening experiences and close listening. Founded in 2005, JACK Quartet operates as a not-for-profit organization dedicated to the performance, commissioning, and appreciation of 20th and 21st century string quartet music, delving deeply into challenging new compositions and musical practices from a staggering range of stylistic viewpoints.
JACK Quartet has been awarded an Avery Fisher Career Grant, Fromm Music Foundation Prize, Musical America’s 2019 “Ensemble of the Year” Award, Lincoln Center's Martin E. Segal Award, New Music USA's Trailblazer Award, CMA/ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming, 2024 Chamber Music America’s Michael Jaffee Visionary Award, and the Italian Music Critic's Prize as the Best Ensemble of 2024.
Among the highlights of their 2025-2026 U.S. season, JACK Quartet returns to NYC’s 92NY for a concert featuring new works by JACK Studio Resident Artists Kier GoGwilt, Ailie Ormston, and Jules Reidy and a world premiere by Tristan Perich for string quartet and electronics; a performance at Miller Theatre at Columbia University celebrating the 90th birthday of their musical mentor Helmut Lachenmann; a Cal Performances ensemble debut with a world premiere by Gabriella Smith; a multi-concert residency at The Metropolitan Museum of Art; collaborative work with Ellen Fullman and her long-stringed instrument commissioned by Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond; and an appearance at Big Ears Festival with soprano Barbara Hannigan.
International engagements include three concerts at Festival d’Automne (Paris), where JACK Quartet serve as the “Portrait Musicians” of the festival, performing European premieres by Natacha Diels and Ellen Fullman, as well as Georg Friedrich Haas’ In iij Noct, performed in absolute darkness; JACK Quartet’s annual three-concert day-long marathon at Wigmore Hall (UK); and appearances at Pierre Boulez Saal (Germany), Instituzione Universitaria dei Concerti (Italy), Musica Festival Strasbourg (France), Open Music Graz (Austria), Only Connect Oslo (Norway), and Hochschule der Künste Bern (Switzerland), among others.
JACK Quartet embraces close collaboration with the composers whose work they perform, yielding a radical embodiment of the technical, musical, and emotional aspects of their work. JACK Quartet has both self-commissioned and been commissioned to create new works with artists such as Philip Glass, Georg Friedrich Haas, Liza Lim, Caroline Shaw, and John Zorn, with upcoming and recent premieres by John Luther Adams, Ellen Fullman, Catherine Lamb, George Lewis, Andrew Norman, Terry Riley, Gabriella Smith, and Tyshawn Sorey.
Through intimate, long-standing relationships with many of today’s most creative voices, JACK Quartet has a prolific recording catalog and has been nominated for two GRAMMY® Awards, the most recent being Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance for John Luther Adams’ Waves and Particles. According to Musical America, “many of their recordings are must-haves, for anyone interested in new music.” Other albums include music by Zosha di Castri, Nick Dunston, Jason Eckardt, Helmut Lachenmann, Liza Lim, Christopher Otto, Austin Wulliman, Du Yun, Iannis Xenakis, the complete string quartets of John Zorn and an upcoming release of the complete quartets of Elliott Carter.
JACK Studio was created by JACK Quartet in 2019 to support commissions, recordings, and workshops with emerging music artists who are interested in exploring and expanding the repertory for string quartet. In 2024, JACK Studio expanded to support commissions for string quartet by prominent composers, two-year paid residencies for emerging composers, and annual reading sessions of existing string quartets by emerging composers. By bringing together diverse groups of excellent and adventurous people to not only create new projects, but to contribute to the evolution of the JACK Studio project itself, JACK has created an artistic ecosystem that links the quartet with artists from around the world.
More than 40 composers have worked with JACK Quartet through JACK Studio thus far, hailing from Argentina, Belarus, Canada, Germany, Malaysia, Mexico, Myanmar, South Africa, Syria, and the United States. Their projects have been performed by JACK Quartet at venues including 92NY, TIME:SPANS, MoMA PS1, Ojai Music Festival, Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, Lucerne Festival, and Wigmore Hall, in addition to being recorded for professional releases.
JACK Quartet has performed to critical acclaim at venues such as Carnegie Hall (USA), Lincoln Center (USA), UChicago Presents (USA), Library of Congress (USA), Berlin Philharmonie (Germany), BBC Proms (United Kingdom), Royal Library (Denmark), Philharmonie de Paris (France), Kölner Philharmonie (Germany), Sydney Opera House (Australia), Salzburg Festival (Switzerland), La Biennale di Venezia (Italy), Suntory Hall (Japan), Bali Arts Festival (Indonesia), Festival Internacional Cervantino (Mexico), and Teatro Colón (Argentina).
JACK Quartet makes their home in New York City, where they are the Quartet-in-Residence at the Mannes School of Music at The New School and provide mentorship to Mannes’ Cuker and Stern Graduate String Quartet. They teach at summer music festivals such as the Lucerne Festival Academy, Banff Centre for the Arts and Creativity, Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, and New Music on the Point. JACK has a long-standing relationship with the University of Iowa String Quartet Residency Program, where they teach and collaborate with students each fall and spring.
Pascal Dusapin
There are many questions hidden within Pascal Dusapin’s music. Each listener will recognise the echoes of their own wonderings and the answers concealed in his writing, their emotions tuning into this uniquely organic, multifaceted music veering from volcanic to indescribable, rough to thoughtful, vital to stubborn. As the music moves from deep sadness to a cascade of triumphant laughter, from shrill fright to a fabulous avalanche that turns into a carefree fanfare, it fearlessly embraces every level of emotion.
Pascal Dusapin was born in Nancy, France, on 29 May 1955, and, at the age of 18, heard Arcana by Edgar Varèse at the University of Vincennes, a turning point in his life. Before then, he had a musical awakening after hearing a jazz trio while on vacation with his family, returning home with a longing to learn the clarinet. His father, however, insisted on piano lessons. When he was 10, the young Dusapin discovered the organ, an overwhelming passion that would buoy him through his chaotic and unconventional adolescence. Growing up in two environments – a small village in the Lorraine and a Paris suburb –, he embraced all genres with equal fervour, as enthusiastic about Bach as about The Doors, loving free jazz as much as Beethoven, quenching his artistic thirst on the music of the 1970s. But after his Arcana experience, he knew that he would devote all of his time and energy to composition. From 1974 to 1978, he loyally studied with Iannis Xenakis, whom he considered to be the modern descendant of Varèse. He believed that Xenakis was a master of thinking differently, broadening his horizons to include architecture and mathematics. This was his only true formal education, perhaps because Xenakis asked for nothing and gave him everything. Mr Dusapin’s first pieces, Souvenir du silence (1975) and Timée (1978), garnered the appreciation and support of two composers, Franco Donatoni and Hughes Dufourt. André Boucourechliev gave him precious advice and maxims that would stay with him throughout his career: “Never forget the instrument at the back of the orchestra” and “Sincerity is never a virtue in art.”
In 1977, Mr Dusapin won the Fondation de la Vocation prize and, in 1981, the Villa Médicis award, where he was resident for two years while he wrote Tre Scalini, Fist and his first quartet, Niobé. He returned from Rome more determined than ever to make a living from composing and to compose while living. In the summer of 1986, he wrote Assaï for Dominique Bagouet’s ballet company, a rich collaboration both personally and artistically, and the Assaï tour took him around the world for years.
With the encouragement of Rolf Lieberman, he began composing his first opera in 1986, Roméo & Juliette, a work written in close collaboration with French writer and poet Olivier Cadiot. The opera is unconventional in plot and genre, a musical-literary revolution in which every word is chosen for its sound and rhythm, to then be woven with wholly unconstrained music. The work premiered simultaneously at the Opéra de Montpellier and the Festival d’Avignon in July 1989 before touring abroad. From that moment on, Pascal Dusapin would incorporate his love of literature into his operatic works. Cases in point: Medeamaterial, based on the work by Heiner Müller, first performed in 1991 at the Royal Theatre of La Monnaie in Brussels; To Be Sung, based on Gertrude Stein’s work, a fantastic adventure in which he involved the major mixed-media artist and light designer James Turell, and which premiered at the Théâtre des Amandiers in Nanterre in 1994; and, in 2003, Perelà, Uomo di fumo, based on Aldo Palazzeschi’s Il codice di Perelà (Man of Smoke), opened at the Opéra Bastille in Paris. Mr Dusapin went on to write the librettos for his two next operas, Faustus, The Last Night, which opened at Berlin’s Staatsoper Unter den Linden in 2006, and Passion, inspired by the myth of Orpheus, which premiered at the Festival d’Aix-en-Provence in 2008. Continuing his mise en abyme of heroes of old, he took on Heinrich von Kleist’s famed work for his opera Penthesilea, which premiered in March 2015 at La Monnaie in Brussels, from which he took a suite for soprano and orchestra, Wenn du dem Wind…, which premiered at the Suntory Hall in Tokyo in August 2014 and was performed again at the Philharmonie de Paris in March 2015.
Throughout the writing of his operas, various other works were born, including seven string quartets (the sixth with orchestra), and various vocal works such as La Melancholia, Granum Sinapis, Dona Eis and Disputatio. He also wrote Sept études pour piano, A Quia concerto for piano and seven solos for orchestra: Go, Extenso, Apex, Clam, Exeo, Reverso (premiered by the Berliner Philharmoniker and Simon Rattle) and Uncut. This cycle of seven orchestral forms, composed between 1991 and 2009, is a long symphonic tale of life and of human emotions and artistry. A new cycle for orchestra was in development, inspired by nature. Morning in Long Island would be the first component, suggested by the shapes of the wind. It premiered in 2010 by the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France conducted by Myung-Whun Chung. Amongst his more recent works are a violin concerto, Aufgang, commissioned by violinist Renaud Capuçon, his piece for piano and six instruments, Jetzt genau! and a cello concerto, Outscape, written for Alisa Weilerstein that premiered in May 2015, performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. His double concerto At Swim-two-birds, written for violinist Viktoria Mullova and cellist Matthew Barley, saw its premiere on 30 September 2017, played by the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, followed by Gewandhaus Leipzig, the Orchestre National de France, the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the Seattle Symphony Orchestra.
Pascal Dusapin has been the recipient of numerous prizes and awards, including the Cino del Duca prize in 2005, and the Dan David Price in 2007. Also in 2007 he was granted the title of Academician at the Bayerische Académie in Munich and became Artistic Chairman at the Collège de France, only the second composer after Pierre Boulez to hold the position. He has published a book based on his experiences and his conferences entitled Une musique en train de se faire (“Music in the Making”, published by Seuil). In 2010 and 2011, he was Guest Professor at Musikhochschule in Munich.
Mr Dusapin’s interests and passions are many, from morphogenesis to philosophy (with a particular interest in Deleuze), from photography to architecture, from the theatre of Samuel Beckett to the work of Flaubert and others. All of these contribute to his freedom of invention and allow multiple layers of meaning, understanding and emotion in his works. He has collaborated with many different artists, combining his multidisciplinary talents with theirs: Sasha Waltz, James Turell, Peter Mussbach, Laurence Equilbey, The Accroche Note Ensemble, the Berlin Philharmonic, Simon Rattle and the Arditti Quartet. New projects have also brought him into the realm of electronics on a grand scale in such exceptional venues as the Grand Palais for the Monumenta by Richard Serra or the beach at Deauville for the city’s 150th anniversary. In November 2011, he directed his own piano and baritone cycle on poems by Nietzsche, O Mensch!, at the Paris Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord. In October 2014, he imagined a visual and sound installation for the Donaueschingen Festival, “Mille Plateaux” that would then travel to other locations; in 2015, the installation was shown in the Lieu Unique, Nantes, France.
Mr Dusapin, a singular artist, continues his musical journey – formal and yet never dogmatic –, offering his fiercely emotional music through a great diversity of forms.
In 2019, Pascal Dusapin unveiled Lullaby Experience, his first work in collaboration with the IRCAM, a French institute dedicated to the research of music and sound, during its Festival ManiFeste. In the summer of that year, he was the guest of the Salzburg Festival, which devoted Time with Dusapin to him, a unique tribute to the artist internationally synonymous with the vitality of French musical composition. In September, his new opera Macbeth Underworld staged by Thomas Jolly premiered at the Théâtre de la Monnaie in Brussels.
On 11 November 2020, French President of the Republic Emmanuel Macron commissioned him to write the musical part of the work created for the Panthéon entombment of Maurice Genevoix. In February 2021, he was honoured at the Radio France Festival Présences.
His music is published by Editions Salabert / Universal Classical Music.