Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Neue MusikThe Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Neue Musik (SGNM; French Société Suisse de Musique Contemporaine, SSMC; Italian Società Svizzera per la Musica Contemporanea, SSMC; English. ISCM Switzerland) is a national section of the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM). It is organised as an association and has its legal domicile in Lausanne.[1] HistoryThe IGNM Switzerland was founded in October 1922 on the initiative of the Winterthur patron Werner Reinhart as one of the world's first ISCM country sections. Reinhart, as 1st ISCM Secretary General, had already been instrumental in the founding of the umbrella organisation in June 1922. The founding president of IGNM Switzerland was the composer and conductor Volkmar Andreae from Zurich.[2][3][4][5] From 1946 until 2001, on an initiative of Paul Sacher, IGNM Switzerland shared the secretariat together with the Swiss Tonkünstlerverband .[6] In 1995, at the Künstlerhaus Boswil , the IGNM Switzerland was renamed the Swiss Society for New Music (SGNM/SSMC). Its aim is the promotion Neue Musik. The Swiss IGNM local groups in Basel, Bern, Lausanne, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Lucerne, Central Switzerland, St. Gallen and Valais as well as various festivals and ensembles for New Music are members of the SGNM.[7] To date, the association has hosted the ISCM World Music Days a total of six times: 1926 (Zurich), 1929 (Geneva), 1957 (Zurich), 1970 (Basel), 1991 (Zurich) and the ISCM World Music Days 2004 under the direction of Mathias Steinauer with the motto "Trans it".[8] The annals of the World Music Days in Switzerland include several world premieres of music-historical significance, among them the highly acclaimed 1926 premiere of Anton Webern's 5 orchestral pieces op. 10 under his direction,[9] and in 1957 in Zurich, the staged premiere of Arnold Schoenberg's opera fragment Moses und Aron.[10] In 1957 - also in Zurich - electronic music was played for the first time in the history of the ISCM World Music Days.[11] List of presidentsVolkmar Andreae (1922, until 1928 in personal union with the STV Presidium), Hans Ehinger (1934, ad interim), Paul Sacher (1935, from 1946 in personal union with the STV Presidium), Samuel Baud-Bovy (1955, in personal union with the STV Presidium), Paul Müller-Zürich (1960, in personal union with the STV Presidium), Constantin Regamey (1963, in personal union with the STV Presidium), Hermann Haller (1968, in personal union with the STV Presidium), Julien-François Zbinden (1973, in personal union with the STV Presidium), Francis Travis (1974), Fritz Muggler (1978), Jean-Luc Darbellay (1995), Max E. Keller (2007), Nicolas Farine (2010), Javier Hagen (2014).[12] (Year of inception in brackets) Further reading
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