Peter Klatzow
Peter James Leonard Klatzow is a South African composer and pianist. He was the director of the College of Music and is an emeritus professor in composition at the University of Cape Town.Biography
Klatzow's earliest musical training was at the Roman Catholic convent of Saint Imelda in Brakpan.
After completing his schooling at St. Martin's School, Rosettenville, Johannesburg he briefly taught music and Afrikaans at the Waterford Kamhlaba School in Swaziland.
Klatzow moved to London in 1964 to study for a year at the Royal College of Music after being awarded a composition scholarship from the South African Music Rights Organisation composition scholarship which allowed him to go to the in London to study. His professors included Gordon Jacob, Kathleen Long, and Bernard Stevens. He won several prizes for composition while at the school. He later studied in Italy and then with Nadia Boulanger in Paris.
Klatzow returned to South Africa in 1966, where he worked for the SABC in Johannesburg as a music producer. In 1973 was appointed to the South African College of Music in Cape Town where he later became professor in composition and director.Works
Klatzow has composed choral works, including liturgical pieces, orchestral works, and ballet music.Music
- Still-life with Moonbeams Symphonic Poem
- Dances of Earth and Fire
- Chamber concerto for 7
- Inyanga: marimba solo
- Hamlet: The Ballet
- Ach, Bach: for Organ
- Six Concert Etudes for Marimba
- Music for 3 Paintings by Irma Stern
- Mass
- We, who are stars
- Sonata for cello and piano
- Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis
Recordings
- Fantasy on Japanese Woodprints, Op. 211
- A Programme of Piano Music from South Africa
- Towards the light – a selection of choral works recorded in Oxford by the Commotio choir, under the direction of Matthew Berry.
Books
Awards
- Joint winner of the 1977 International Composers' Competition
- Twice winner of the Helgard Steyn award: in 1994 for From the Poets and again in 2014 forLightscapes
- Doctor of Music awarded by UCT in 1999
- Huberte Rupert Music Prize by the Academy of Science of South Africa for his lifetime work in 2011