Death of a Bartók authority, 75

Death of a Bartók authority, 75

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norman lebrecht

January 13, 2018

From the musicology webchat site:

 

The faculty, staff and students of the Butler School of Music mourn the death of Professor Elliott Antokoletz, who passed away unexpectedly on December 20, 2017. A member of the music faculty at the University of Texas at Austin since 1976, Dr. Antokoletz was a prolific and internationally recognized scholar of twentieth-century art music and a dedicated teacher who enthusiastically shared his expertise and passions with generations of music students at UT.

Born in Jersey City, New Jersey on August 3, 1942, Elliott Antokoletz earned a B.S. degree in violin performance at the Juilliard School in 1964, having studied with the renowned pedagogues Dorothy Delay and Ivan Galamian, and he remained active as a violinist and chamber musician for a number of years thereafter. His interest in musicology led him to earn the MA from Hunter College (1970) and the PhD from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (1975), for which he wrote a dissertation under the supervision of George Perle on pitch organization in the Fourth String Quartet of Béla Bartók.

In at least two ways, the dissertation set the tone for Antokoletz’s future work. On the one hand, he would go on to become one of the world’s leading Bartók scholars, publishing a monograph on Bartók’s tonal language (California, 1984), a research guide to Bartók now in its third edition (Garland, 1988; 32011) and numerous articles and essays on Bartók’s work in periodicals and edited collections. On the other hand, the dissertation established an elegant theory of pitch organization based on interval cycles and symmetrical partitioning of the octave. Antokoletz would go on to expand these theoretical insights in studies devoted to Bartók; of particular interest to Antokoletz in this regard was the way that Bartók developed his modernist-nationalist style through extrapolation of tonal and rhythmic properties that he observed in peasant musics of Hungary and other lands. But Antokoletz also showed the applicability of his theories to the music of other twentieth-century composers such as Debussy, Stravinsky and Georg von Albrecht. His two textbooks on twentieth-century music (Prentice-Hall, 1992; Routledge, 2013) made his analytical insights available to music students not just in the USA but also, thanks to translations into Polish and Chinese, to students elsewhere. Among his other writings are a book on symbolist operas of Debussy and Bartók on which he collaborated with his wife, Juana Antokoletz, and a co-authored monograph on De Falla.

Apart from his own writings, Elliott Antokoletz was an indefatigable editor. He edited a collection of essays on Georg von Albrecht (Scarecrow, 2004), the International Journal of Musicology, and the book series Sources and Studies in Music History from Antiquity to the Present (both published by Verlag Peter Lang); he also co-edited the collected essays in Bartók Perspectives (Oxford, 2000) and Re-Thinking Debussy (Oxford, 2011), the latter the outcome of one of two major conferences that he organized in the early 2000s at UT. He worked closely with Benjamin Suchoff and Peter Bartók to organize the Bartók archives in the U. S. He lectured extensively at home and abroad, and he frequently worked with professional musicians, particularly string quartets tackling the quartets of Bartók.

In the classroom Elliott Antokoletz was an inspirational and unforgettable presence for thousands of students fortunate to have studied with him. Blessed with a fantastic memory (rumored to have been photographic in nature), Antokoletz astounded students with the brilliance of his musical insights and his sovereign mastery of repertory and bibliography. His classes were demanding, as he stressed theoretical and stylistic analysis as the basis for music-historical understanding, and he was firm in his conviction as to the centrality of the Western classical tradition for the education of music students, a belief that sometimes put him at odds with his younger colleagues. He also had a large repertory of jokes and humorous anecdotes that kept things from getting too serious. Kind towards students and generous with his time, he supervised innumerable treatises and lecture-recital documents; several of his advisees went on to publish work that they had started under Antokoletz. He never turned students away from his organized courses, no matter how full the enrollment already was; he loved speaking to an audience.

Naturally, Elliott Antokoletz’s achievements did not go unrecognized. He received a Teaching Excellence Award from the University of Texas, the PhD Alumni Award from the City University of New York, and the Bela Bartók Memorial Plaque and Diploma from the Hungarian government.

Elliott Antokoletz’s tragic death leaves a gaping hole in the fabric of the Butler School of Music, and though new faculty will come and teach some of the same courses, no one will ever truly take his place. His legacy will endure, however, in his writings, the teaching of his own students, and the memories of those who were able to call him friend and colleague.

 

Comments

  • Jack Burt says:

    Dr. Antokoletz was an inspiring classroom teacher. Regardless of how technical his analysis of a piece of music might sometimes be – his intellect was astonishing – his love and enthusiasm for music as music – something to be listened to and enjoyed – never wavered. Student flocked to his classes because of his infectious energy in the classroom, even though they were very demanding and required much study, listening and research. I took his legendary 20th Century Seminar (the greatest single music class I ever took) and his Bartok Seminar. I am grateful for that time with him.
    He will be missed.

  • Murray Citron says:

    Sorry to hear of this…Elliott was a classmate of mine at Hunter College, and I
    attended his dissertation defense at City University of New York; a good friend
    and a nicer person you couldn’t imagine.

  • Paolo Susanni says:

    Elliott Antokoletz taught me everything I know about music. He was also one of the nicest human being one could wish to meet.

  • Edward Saint-Ivan says:

    God Bless You for this outstanding article. Hungarian music is a narrow niche so I’m thrilled someone cares about Hungarian music beside Hungarians.

  • Daniel Cohn says:

    While listening to the Beethoven “Emperor”, I suddenly thought of Elliot, whom I hadn’t seen since our days together at The High School of Music and Art in NYC. I am grieved to discover he’s gone, along with so many of our distinguished class. Though we were not close, I remember Elliot for his seriousness, his sincere dedication to music and to his art. If there’s an orchestra in heaven, and I’m admitted to a performance, I hope we might meet again. Good bye, classmate.

  • Michael Ewer says:

    How well I recall our days on the fifth-floor orchestra rehearsal at the High School of Music and Art, where Elliott was up in front of the first violins, while I played second fiddle way back–all with Alexander Richter giving us guidance. We had a wonderful group back then. We socialized or went to concerts, often as a group. After graduation we went our separate ways and lost touch. Both of us wound up at the University of Texas, I in Houston, he in Austin. We spoke only once since high school, yet I remember him–one of only a hand full that I recall from those youthful days now sixty years ago. How sad to have lost one of our little group of high school kids. May his legacy of work, and the minds of young musicians he influenced live on and perpetuate what he knew and loved. Elliott, thank you for all the wonderful memories.

  • Marty Dubow says:

    Elliott was one of my best friends in high school. He was a year ahead of me so we didn’t have any classes together, except for Senior Orchestra, and ate lunch together every day. We formed a string quartet with my sister (who is presently a violinist with the NY Phil) and brother (another violinist) and performed quite a bit. Elliott mainly played viola after college, and an excellent violist he was indeed. That string quartet could have gone places but life, alas, got in the way.

    Some years ago I wrote an amusing little anecdote and posted it on Quora. Elliott played a starring role in that little piece of prose; if interested, you can find it here —

    https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-funniest-thing-that-ever-happened-during-a-classical-music-performance/answer/Martin-Dubow

    RIP Elliott. I may be seeing you soon.

  • Esmail Khalili says:

    I took undergraduate music history with him in the late 90s at UT. He truly was a genius and rightfully regarded as one of the foremost scholars of Bartok. May he rest in peace.

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