Jos Kunst
50 top tracks
Jos Kunst
50 top tracks
Albums

Electronic Panorama: Paris, Tokyo, Utrecht, Warszawa
Jos Kunst

Anthology of Dutch Electronic Tape Music Vol. 2 - 1966-1977
Jos Kunst

Electronic Panorama
Jos Kunst

Anthology Of Dutch Electronic Tape Music (Volume 2: 1966-1977)
Jos Kunst

Anthology of Dutch Electronic Tape Music Volume 2 (1966-1977)
Jos Kunst

Electronic 2000
Jos Kunst

Electronic Panorama - UTRECHT
Jos Kunst

Any Two, No Time-Cycle, Solo Identity, No Time at All, No Time, Exchange for Fire, Concertino
Jos Kunst

Anthology Of Dutch Electronic
Jos Kunst

Electronic Panorama: Utrecht
Jos Kunst

Anthology Of Dutch Electronic Tape Music - Volume 2: 1966-1977
Jos Kunst

Bass Clarinet Identity
Jos Kunst
Biography
Jos Kunst was born in 1936 in Roermond, The Netherlands, and began his music studies, after completion of his study of French Language and Literature at the State University of Groningen, when he was 27 years of age, first with Joep Straesser (1963-1966) and then with Ton de Leeuw. He was awarded the Encouragement Prize for his piece Insecten for 13 strings at the 1967 International Gaudeamus Competion. At the 1969 Gaudeamus Competion he was awarded the First Prize for his orchestral work Arbore...Read more on Last.fm
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Jos Kunst was born in 1936 in Roermond, The Netherlands, and began his music studies, after completion of his study of French Language and Literature at the State University of Groningen, when he was 27 years of age, first with Joep Straesser (1963-1966) and then with Ton de Leeuw. He was awarded the Encouragement Prize for his piece Insecten for 13 strings at the 1967 International Gaudeamus Competion. At the 1969 Gaudeamus Competion he was awarded the First Prize for his orchestral work Arboreal. He graduated from the Amsterdam Conservatory in 1970 and was awarded the Prize for Composition. Besides his activities as a composer he worked as a teacher of French literature, and at the conservatories of Zwolle and Amsterdam as a teacher of contemporary music and composition.
In 1975 he decided, for reasons I am not able to express better than he himself did in his curriculum vitae, to stop composing; in 1976 he succeeded Rudolf Escher as lecturer in 20th century music at the department of Musicology of the State University of Utrecht. In 1978 he obtained his doctorate with the dissertation Making sense in music: an enquiry into the formal pragmatics of art. A few years later, in 1982, he published a collection of poems. His musicological theories are formulated in colloquial style in his book Filosofie van de muziekwetenschap [Philosophy of Musicology], published in 1988. He considered this book to be his farewell to academic musicology: in 1988 he seized the opportunity to retire early.
From 1989 onward he took up composing again, but, contrary to before, he kept well away from organized musical life. He also started work on a second dissertation, about hermetic and neo-platonic texts from the beginning of the christian era, a project he kept working on until he died, but which he was unable to complete. A chapter of this work can be read here. On January 18, 1996, a few weeks after his sixtieth birthday, he died unexpectedly in his home in Utrecht as a result of a gastric bleeding, leaving everyone who knew him bemused and bereaved.
For more info, go to: http://joskunst.net <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Jos+Kunst">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
