See Also: Stockhausen, Karlheinz(encyclopedia)

welwitschia (iou) and Stockhausen, Karlheinz (sh)


welwitschia (iou)



welwitschia noun. M19.
[mod. Latin (see below), from Friedrich Welwitsch (1806-72), Austrian botanist + -IA1.]
A gymnospermous plant, Welwitschia mirabilis, of desert regions in SW Africa, which has a dwarf, massive trunk, two very long strap-shaped leaves, and male and female flowers in the scales of scarlet cones.

Stockhausen, Karlheinz (sh)




born Aug. 22, 1928, M?drath, near Cologne, Ger.

German composer.

Orphaned during World War II, he supported himself with odd Jobs (including jazz pianist) before entering Cologne's State Academy for Music in 1947. After hearing Olivier Messiaen's Music at Darmstadt in 1951, he began studying with the composer and experimenting with serialism. His early works include Kontrapunkte and Klavierstucke I-IV (1952-53). He also became involved with musique concrete, a technique using recorded sounds as raw material; his remarkable Song of the Youths (1956) used a highly processed recording of a boy soprano mixed with electronic sounds. His extensions of serialism continued in pieces such as Zeitmasse (1956) and Gruppen (1957), and he became a leading avant-garde spokesman. His Momente (1964) influentially applied serialism to groups of sounds rather than single pitches, and he began incorporating aleatory (chance) elements as well. From the late 1960s he conceived ever grander schemes, some incorporating literature, Dance, and ritual, as in the Light series (from 1977).