Jury
Jean Binet
Sten Broman
Luigi Dallapiccola
Guillaume Landré
André Souris
Concerts
Friday, 23 June 1950 at the studios of the Nationaal Instituut voor de Radio-omroep (N.I.R.)
Hanns Eisler (East Germany, b. 1898; d. 1962): Chamber Symphony, op. 69 for 15 solo instruments (1940) [17′];
Marius Flothuis (Netherlands, b. 1914; d. 2001): Concerto for Piano and Small Orchestra, op. 30 (1946-48) [15′] performed by Maria Stroo;
Alan Rawsthorne (United Kingdom [England], b. 1905; d. 1971): Concerto for String Orchestra (1949) [22′] conducted by the composer;
+ Anton Webern (Austria, 1883-1945): Cantata No. 2 [Hildegard Jone], op. 31, for soprano, bass, chorus and orchestra (1941-43) [13′] [world premiere, in memoriam].
Saturday, 24 June 1950 at N.I.R.
Peter Racine Fricker (United Kingdom [England], b. 1920; d. 1990 in the United States): String Quartet in One Movement, op. 8 (1947) [15′] performed by the Amadeus Quartet;
Camillo Togni (Italy, b. 1922; d. 1993): Salmo 127, Piccola Cantata Sacra, op. 30 for soprano, mezzo-soprano, bass and string trio (1949);
Constantin Regamey (Switzerland, b. 1907 in Ukraine; d. 1982): String Quartet (No. 1) (1948) [22′];
Eunice Katunda (Brazil, b. 1915; d. 1990): Homenagem a Schoenberg for clarinet, viola, violoncello, and piano (1949);
Wolfgang Fortner (Germany, b. 1907; d. 1987): Sonata for violoncello and piano (1946-48) [16′];
Arnold van Wyk (South Africa, b. 1916; d. 1983): String Quartet No. 1 (1946-47).
Sunday, 25 June 1950 – Orchestral concert of the Belgian Radio Orchestra presented by the ISCM Belgian Section and the INR at N.I.R.
Flor Alpaerts (Belgium [Flanders], b. 1876; d. 1954): James Ensor, Suite (1931) [22′];
Marcel Poot (Belgium [Flanders], b. 1901; d. 1988): Allegro Symphonique (1936) [8′];
Fernand Quinet (Belgium [Wallonia], b. 1898; d. 1971): Trois Mouvements Symphoniques (1931);
Albert Huybrechts (Belgium [Wallonia], 1899-1938): Chant funèbre for violoncello and orchestra (1926) [10′] featuring Edmond Baeyens;
Jean Absil (Belgium [Wallonia], b. 1893; d. 1974): Symphony No. 2, op. 25 (1936) [21′].
Tuesday, 27 June 1950 at N.I.R.
Shukichi Mitsukuri (Japan, b. 1895; d. 1971): Bashō kikō-shū Sakuhin daihachi no ni (10 Haiku of Basho) for voice and chamber orchestra (1931, orchestrated 1947) [7′];
Ingvar Lidholm (Sweden, 1921; d. 2017): Laudi for unaccompanied chorus (1947) [10′];
Pierre Froidebise (Belgium [Wallonia], b. 1914; d. 1962): Cinque Comptines (5 Nursery Rhymes) for voice and 11 instruments, op. 1 no. 2 (1947) [6′];
Karel Goeyvaerts (Belgium [Flanders], b. 1923; d. 1993): Tre Lieder per Sonare a Venu Sei (1949) for 26 instruments including an ondes martenot performed by the composer [withdrawn];
René Leibowitz (France, b. 1913 in Poland; d. 1972): L’explication des métaphores [text: Raymond Queneau] for narrator, 2 pianos, harp, and percussion (1947) [10′] conducted by the composer [world premiere];
Roman Palester (Poland, b. 1907; d. 1989): The Vistula [text: Stefan Żeromski] for narrator, chorus and ensemble (1948-49; subsequently revised) [20′] [world premiere].
Wednesday, 28 June 1950 concert featuring the Belgian Radio Orchestra and Chorus at N.I.R.
Klaus Egge (Norway, b. 1906; d. 1979): Symphony No. 2, a.k.a. Sinfonia Giocosa, op. 22 (1947) [19′];
Artur Malawski (Poland, b. 1904; d. 1957): Toccata and Fugue in the Form of Variations for piano and orchestra (1949) [8′];
André Jolivet (France, b. 1905; d. 1974): Psyché (1946) conducted by the composer;
Giacinto Scelsi (Italy, b. 1905; d. 1988): La Nascita del Verbo for chorus and orchestra (1948) [32′].
Thursday, 29 June 1950 at N.I.R.
Hilding Hallnäs (Sweden, b. 1903; d. 1984): String Quartet, op. 32 (1949) [20′];
Conrad Beck (Switzerland, b. 1901; d. 1989): Sonata No. 2 for violin and piano (1949) performed by violinist Carlo van Neste;
Marcel Quinet (Belgium [Wallonia], b. 1915; d. 1986): Wind Quintet (1949);
Darius Milhaud (France, b. 1892; d. 1974): Les rêves de Jacob, Dance Suite for oboe, violin, viola, cello and double bass, op. 294 (1949) [17′];
Karel Husa (France, b. 1921 in Czechoslovakia; d. 2016 in the United States): String Quartet No. 1 (?) (1948) [23′].
Friday, 30 June 1950 concert featuring the Belgian Radio Orchestra at N.I.R.
Karl Amadeus Hartmann (Germany, b. 1905; d. 1963): Symphony No. 4 (1947-48) [33′] for string orchestra, most likely conducted by Franz André (rescheduled from the previous year’s festival);
Hans Henkemans (Netherlands, b. 1913; d. 1995): Flute Concerto (1946) [16′] featuring Johann Feldkamp;
Niels Viggo Bentzon (Denmark, b. 1919; d. 2000): Chamber Concerto No. 1, op. 52, for three pianos and 8 Instruments (1948); [19′] featuring the composer, Georg Vásárhelyi, and Herman D. Koppel performing on the pianos;
Harald Sæverud (Norway; b. 1897; d. 1992): Symphony No. 5 (Quasi una fantasia) (1941) [25′].
Other significant interpreters
Singers: Ilona Steingruber, Otto Wiener, Mariette Martin-Metten, Lina Dauby, Maurice De Groote, Germaine Teugels, Ellen Adler, Georges Génicot.
Piano: Marie-Louise Marichal, Marcelle Mercenier, Naum Sluzny.
Ensembles: Amsterdamer Quartett, Ivan Ericson-Quartett, Bläservereinigung Bruxelles, Haydn-Quartett.
Conductors: Herbert Häfner, Léonce Gras, Daniel Sternefeld, Edgard Doneux, René Mazy, Øivin Fjeldstad, Lavard Friisholm, Olav Kielland.
Sources
Alan Frank, “The I. S. C. M. Festival at Brussels,” The Musical Times, Vol. 91, No. 1290 (August 1950), pp. 318-319 (available online via JStor).
Anton Haefeli, Die Internationale Gesellschaft für Neue Musik (IGNM), Ihre Geschichte von 1922 bis zur Gegenwart (Atlantis Musikbuch-Verlag, 1982), pp. 504-505 [in German].
Nicolas Slonimsky, Music Since 1900, Sixth Edition edited by Laura Kuhn (Schirmer Reference, 2001), p. 438.
(annotated by Frank J. Oteri, in progress)