Alain Louvier
Alain Louvier is a French composer of contemporary classical musicBiography
Born in Paris, Louvier studied from 1953 to 1967 at the headed by Marcel Landowski, then from 1967 to 1970 at the Conservatoire de Paris with Henriette Puig-Roget, Olivier Messiaen, Tony Aubin, Robert Veyron-Lacroix, Norbert Dufourcq and Manuel Rosenthal. In 1968, he won the 161st and last annual Prix de Rome for musical composition. He then headed the École Nationale de Musique of Boulogne-Billancourt. From 1986 to 1991, he was the director of the Conservatoire de Paris. From 1991 to 2009, he taught music analysis and orchestration at the CNSMDP in Paris. From 2009 until 2013, he was again director of the Boulogne-Billancourt Conservatory
Louvier has composed pieces for piano, harpsichord, chamber music and orchestra. He is particularly known for his invention of a new piano technique centered around the "Aggressors": the 10 fingers, 2 palms, 2 fists and 2 forearms, treated individually. He forged a precise gestural vocabulary, and an adapted graphic syntax, involving these different elements.Works
- Études pour agresseurs I & II for piano
- Études pour agresseurs III for modern harpsichord
- Études pour agresseurs IV for two pianos
- Études pour agresseurs V for harpsichord, loudspeaker and strings
- Quintette de cuivres
- Sonata for two pianos
- Chant des limbes for orchestra
- Quatre Préludes pour cordes 1970 for one or several pianos
- Chimère for harp, premiered in 1975
- Sempre più alto for viola and piano
- Concerto pour orchestres for orchestra and computer synthesized soundtrack
- Envols d'écailles for flute, viola and harp
- Concerto for viola and orchestra
- Solstices, 5 short pieces for high voices and piano, composed in 2004 and premiered on May 20, 2008