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July 24, 2008

Lone voices - Jewish composers


This excellent new Harmonia Mundi release of music for viols played by Fretwork couples the loan voices of Jewish composers of the Tudor and Stuart courts with a distinctive contemporary voice. Although Jews were banished by edict from England in 1290 a presence remained in the form of marranos, or nominally converted 'New Christians', who traded between London, Antwerp and Lisbon. The practice of tolerating covert followers of the Jewish faith was further reinforced when Henry VIII recruited Venetian musicians from the Italian diaspora to form six-part consorts for his Private Music.

The Venetian composers of the music on this CD for viols from the Duarte, Lupo and Bassano families are now thought to have been Jewish. Their music from the Tudor and Stuart courts is interspersed in true mixing-it style with the three movements of contemporary composer Orlando Gough's klezmer-based Birds on Fire. Particularly noteworthy are the Two Sinfonias in 5 parts by Leonora Duarte, it is not often you come across women composers of the 17th century.

This is an imaginative mixture of ancient and modern in a rewarding seventy-five minute programe. Fretwork, as ever, produce a wonderful tone coupled with bouncy articulation in the klezmer rhythms, all captured in beautiful sound by Adrian Hunter. But just as Henry VIII's private musicians hid their true identity so does this fine CD. The cover (above) proclaims Production USA despite being recorded in darkest Suffolk and Deptford, England.

In a neat piece of synchronicity I bought Birds on Fire while reading a very thought-provoking novel about the conundrum of Jewishness. American author Ellen Feldman has made something of a speciality of mixing fact with fiction in her novels and I first came across her work in Scottsboro which is a fictional elaboration of the notorious trial of the same name. I must say I approached her earlier novel The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank with some trepidation but the cheesy-sounding sounding title fails to do justice to this thoughtful book.

As readers of Anne Frank's diary will know her companion in the secret annex in Amsterdam, Peter van Pels, also perished in a concentration camp after their discovery. But The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank re-engineers fact and in the novel van Pels survives and builds a successful career and marriage in America. The conundrum of Jewishness is the central theme but there are also very convincing descriptions of the blackness into which the marginalised can descend. Some of the most thought-provoking and moving fiction I have read for some time. The closing lines of the novel say it all - 'My God, have they no memory?'

Speaking of which, now I propose to tell you of Buchenwald ...
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Originally from On An Overgrown Path, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:46 PM | Comments (0)

"We are cleverly entertained during our descent."

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Chris Hedges—foreign correspondent and authorhas written an>the one essay that anyone concerned with the future of journalism should read. Opinion is not news, reporting is difficult and costly, and gossip and ideology are not going to inform anyone about anything.< ?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />>

"Newspapers, when well run, are a public trust. They provide, at their best, the means for citizens to examine themselves, to ferret out lies and the abuse of power by elected officials and corrupt businesses, to give a voice to those who would, without the press, have no voice, and to follow, in ways a private citizen cannot, the daily workings of local, state and federal government. Newspapers hire people to write about city hall, the state capital, political campaigns, sports, music, art and theater."

Read it twice.

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Originally posted by MarcGeelhoed from Marc Geelhoed: Deceptively Simple, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:45 PM | Comments (0)

Tanglewood Contemporary Festival: Return to an Abandoned Style? - New York Times


Tanglewood Contemporary Festival: Return to an Abandoned Style?
New York Times, United States - 18 hours ago
... books about Mr. Carter’s music — David Schiff (“The Music of Elliott Carter”), Jonathan W. Bernard (“Elliott Carter: Collected Essays and Lectures, ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:45 PM | Comments (0)

New, vintage works blend - Berkshire Eagle


New, vintage works blend
Berkshire Eagle, MA - Jul 22, 2008
By Richard Houdek, Special to The Eagle LENOX — A felicitous combination of the newer Elliott Carter oeuvre alongside a vintage milestone in the composer's ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:45 PM | Comments (0)

Composer saluted at Tanglewood - The Republican - MassLive.com


Composer saluted at Tanglewood
The Republican - MassLive.com, MA - 6 hours ago
LENOX - Tanglewood's current Festival of Contemporary Music is devoted to the music of American composer Elliott Carter, who will celebrate his 100th ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:45 PM | Comments (0)

Please stop the music, my ears hurt - Sydney Morning Herald


Please stop the music, my ears hurt
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 19 hours ago
When I was 18, I bought a record called The New Music. It featured Kontra-Punkte by Karlheinz Stockhausen and Threnody For The Victims Of Hiroshima by ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:44 PM | Comments (0)

Growth on James Levine’s Kidney Is Seen to Be Cancerous - New York Times


Growth on James Levine’s Kidney Is Seen to Be Cancerous
New York Times, United States - 23 hours ago
Highlights include a concert version of Verdi’s “Simon Boccanegra,” the premiere of Elliott Carter’s Interventions for piano and orchestra with Daniel ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:44 PM | Comments (0)

Our critics choose some standouts - Ottawa Citizen


Our critics choose some standouts
Ottawa Citizen,  Canada - 1 hour ago
... percussion quintet makes its festival debut with pieces by Toru Takemitsu, John Cage, Steve Reich and others, as well as music from Zimbabwe and Ghana. ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:44 PM | Comments (0)

Austria's Salzburg Festival: musical club for the super-rich - AFP


Austria's Salzburg Festival: musical club for the super-rich
AFP - 17 hours ago
Among the concerts, conductors Pierre Boulez, Jonathan Nott, Riccardo Muti, Mariss Jansons and Esa-Pekka Salonen each take it turn to conduct five different ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:44 PM | Comments (0)

Anton Batagov — Passionate Desire to Be an Angel

Russian keyboardist and composer Anton Batagov is clearly influenced by the minimalist school of post-modern music but he has a highly individual style that borrows from several genres. His album Passionate Desire To Be an Angel has been released as a free and legal online album by the Electrosound net label and has four tracks of intense and emotional music. All of the four compositions are impressive but the first two, “Can You Feel The Rhythm?” and “Conjunctio” are simpl;y stunning. “Rhythm” start with electric guitarist Theophrastus belting out a punk riff that is soon overlapped by Batagov’s ascending piano lines. By the time trombone,. vibraharp and a soulful vocal emerges you have a mesmerizing mixture of modern classical, rock and soul. “Conjunctio” is a 28 minutes piano and organ piece that is very reminiscent of Terry Riley’s keyboard work and, like Riley, is influenced by Buddhist chants and philosophy. The other two tracks are also exceptional works of post-modern minimalism. “Opus Alchymicum” has a somewhat grand melody in which Batagov’s treatment teeters between Phillip Glass and Vangelis. I don’t know why but every time I hear it I think “Chariots of Fire”. “Umbra Solis” has spiritual overtones in its use of organ and chorale. Throughout the album guitarist Theophrastus and vibraphonist Peteris Shuniatis add excellent assistance. This is an unique and inspiring album.

Passionate Desire To Be an Angel is available in 320kbps MP3

Download

Originally posted by Marvin from Free Albums Galore, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:43 PM | Comments (0)

Old friends: Christian the lion remembers

In the vein of FRIENDS, in case you haven’t seen this, here is a video you’ll never forget.

Originally posted by Roger Bourland from rogerbourland.com, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:42 PM | Comments (0)

KQ + BBQ at Rancho Nicasio!

How often do you get a chance to lounge on a lawn and eat barbecue while listening to Kronos? Kronos performs this Sunday afternoon at 4 PM at Rancho Nicasio in Marin Co...

Originally from Kronos Quartet - MySpace Blog, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:39 PM | Comments (0)

All Rihm Program

First of all, don’t say “Rihm.” But having established the ground rules, everybody should read this article by Tony Tommasini in the Times. It’s a couple days old, I know, but I was in Vermont and I didn’t have Access. In it, Tommasini interviews Thomas Morris, an orchestra consultant:

Yet what exactly constitutes an adventurous program? The term is thrown around by critics who routinely prod stodgy American orchestras to be more challenging. Mr. Morris is probably right that in the public mind “adventurous” has become code for “contemporary music.” But the issue is more complicated.

Quite so. And, Tommasini goes on to articulate that programs of all contemporary music (All Rihm All The Time!) are actually less “adventurous,” because they don’t constitute, as it were, an exciting juxtaposition. I totally agree; I have to say that orchestral programs of entirely 21st century music are a little bit daunting to me; I like Classical Music because I like feeling the weight of all that history, both acknowledged and unacknowledged, lurking above and behind contemporary output. I wrote about this (and other issues) earlier this year for the National Performing Arts Convention’s Blog this year; it’s good to see these ideas in print every few months.

It’s not hard to program adventurously, just as it isn’t hard to eat adventurously. It’s actually pretty easy. Even the New York Philharmonic is doing it! May 14 2009: Lutoslawski: Concerto for Orchestra, Szymanowski: Violin Concerto No. 1, Sibelius: Symphony No. 5! Rock it out! None of that is particularly outrageous, those are all classics, but I like the juxtaposition a lot.

I’m even excited for October 2, 2008: J.S. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 5, Bernard Rands: CHAINS LIKE THE SEA (World Premiere: New York Philharmonic Commission), Tchaikovsky: Suite No. 3. Bernard Rands, whose music I have heard piles of but never remember, wrote a piece for the Phil. On the season overview page, it is listed thus: Bernard Rands, chains like the sea. Then, on the specific concert page, it is listed in all caps, as we see above. What is up with the capitalization? Is it because it’s just a fragment of a Dylan Thomas line? People need to calm it down because inevitably it is not going to get listed right in one context or another, or it’s not going to fit into the design scheme of the presenting organization, or it’s going to look stupid in print. I know nothing about this Rands piece, for all I know, it’s the most genius thing since Caller ID, but I’m just worried that he gets his title printed in a way that is pleasing unto him.

The Phil is doing something slightly better with their website, too, even though the design scheme and copy still resembles a page of instructions for a suppository (”* Insert suppository (round end first) into the back passage * Wash hands”; “It is a season to remember. The kind for which Lorin Maazel and the New York Philharmonic are so justly renowned. A season like no other. And you’re invited.”) All kidding aside, pages like this are really, really good, with embedded wideo and more information than you’d need about the concert.

Anyway, I think what the Tommasini article is skirting around is that everybody is really excited for Alan Gilbert to come up in here and kick some ass vis à vis programming. It’s sort of an Obama-level Expectation, and while I’m sure it’s not going to please everybody, I’m totally excited.

Originally posted by Nico from Nico Muhly, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:39 PM | Comments (0)

Go French for Women's Day - Joburg


Go French for Women's Day
Joburg, South Africa - 1 hour ago
The requiem is an avant-garde composition, originally inspired by the plight of children orphaned by the Aids pandemic. Requiems are traditionally odes to ...

Originally from "contemporary classical" | "avant garde" music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 01:21 PM | Comments (0)

Leon Fleisher is 80 Today

Originally from The Collaborative Piano Blog, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 05:13 AM | Comments (0)

Piano as a Second Language

Originally from The Collaborative Piano Blog, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 05:13 AM | Comments (0)

The Complexity Issue

I'm going to try to clarify the musical complexity issue. What we have now, left over from the previous post, is what I'll call the Byrne argument: that a lot of incomprehensible, audience-alienating music has been written out of a kind of reverse elitism - and what I'll call the Nonken argument (after superb pianist Marilyn Nonken, who wrote in): that there's a lot of difficult, complex music that will never appeal to a wide audience, but it has its admirers, and they should be allowed to have it. On the face of it, these assertions both seem obviously true, and you'll notice they don't even contradict each other. But each of them comes with an assumed, unstated backside, a flipside, that is more questionable, and I'm going to see if I can dissociate those flip sides from the assertions themselves. I assure you I do this with malice toward none and charity toward all, so please don't write in with the intention of taking me down a peg for some supposed partisan advocacy on my part. 


If we can agree on two propositions, I have some faith that all the rest will fall into place. Let's posit a musical idiom that I think most of you have heard or can imagine: thorny, complex, difficult-to-understand. Proposition 1: not every thorny, complex, difficult-to-understand piece that's been written is a masterpiece, worth listening to over and over again. Some pieces in that late-20th-century idiom are merely tedious and unclear, confusing rather than profound. I hope everyone concerned (except for Frank Oteri, who prides himself on a Zenlike appreciation for every piece that's ever come into existence, simply for existing) can agree on this much. 


The second proposition may be a little more difficult to get universal agreement on among non-musicians. Proposition 2: at least some thorny, complex, difficult-to-understand pieces are beautiful and profound, and those listeners who come to know them well derive immense pleasure from them. In short, within the wide world of thorny, complex, difficult-to-understand music, we're going to draw a theoretical line. On the profound side of this line, for instance, I would place Bruno Maderna's Grande Aulodia, which is like ear-candy for me, and also Luigi Nono's late string quartet Fragmente: Stille, an Diotima. On the confused and unrewarding side of that line I might place as example Charles Wuorinen's Concerto for Cello and Ten Instruments, which I excitedly bought a score of as a teenager, and which ever since has served me as an emblem of pretentious musical gobbledygook. But it doesn't matter which pieces, or even which percentage of pieces, you put on which side of that line - as long as you'll simply agree with me that there's a line, we can continue. 


All I'm asking you to do is dissociate the qualities complexity and quality. Complexity does not guarantee that a piece of music is great, nor does it guarantee that a piece of music is bad. Put that way, I don't think even our friend Frank can disagree. 


(Already now, though, two people have written to express suspicion that if I think some complex music is no good, then I must secretly think that all simple music, or all tonal music is good. Aside from such assertions being patently ridiculous, there would be no logic whatever in such a leap of thought. Like, "You don't like some kinds of chocolate? Then you must love everything that's vanilla!" But in general musicians are not very good at logic, and this is the kind of fallacy that these arguments of musical style get caught up in.) 


As is pretty clear, the Nonken argument does its level best to ignore Proposition 1 ("Vote NO on Proposition 1!"), and the Byrne argument ignores, or even disputes or refuses to acknowledge, Proposition 2. Yet to ignore either of them negates the deeply-felt experiences of large swaths of people. Of course there are thousands of musicians who have been deeply and positively affected by some thorny, complex, difficult-to-understand music that would have seemed opaque and unpleasant to my grandmother. Byrne's view (as he expressed it, and perhaps he doesn't believe it as simplistically as he said it, but he gave voice to a common formulation) is a cliché, the cliché of Evil Modern Music, but it is not a cliché that was made up out of whole cloth. Clearly a lot of people think music went off some kind of deep end in the 20th-century, and became (temporarily) self-delusional. As a critic, as a composer, as a person, I have an obligation to acknowledge both sets of opinions; I can't tell either my composing colleagues nor the musical audience I used to write for that their perceptions are totally neurotic - at least without losing credibility with one set or the other. Much of my life has been spent on this dividing line.


Let's take that opinion that classical music went off some kind of deep end in the 20th-century, and became self-delusional. There is absolutely no way to assess the sanity of this assertion without dividing the music alluded to into several repertoires with different reception histories:


Pre-WWII Modernism (early Stravinsky, Varèse, Schoenberg, Webern, Bartok, Ives, Messiaen, etc): This music certainly disturbed older members of the audiences who first heard it, and it became the first repertoire of music shunned by orchestras. It definitely represents a split, apparently irrecovable, in the classical repertoire. That music exploded into a lot of musical areas that had been previously off-limits, using dissonance, complex rhythms, and atonality to express violence, anxiety, machinism, and anger. Of course, as is widely documented, today when orchestras play that music, the older crowd who loves their Brahms and Dvorak get irritated or stay away, but thousands of new, younger listeners pour in. The movies have done a lot to inure the modern ear to dissonance and arrhythmia, and also to associate it with analogous emotional states. For my students in general, the traditional relationship is now reversed: 19th-century symphonies seem tedious and unthinkingly conventional, while early modernism is entertaining and energizing, like the audio analogue of a video game. Reception history suggests to me that the jury is in on early modernism: arguing that it was a wrong turn seems as pointless an argument as any Luddite could make. Let us say no more about it in this context.


European avant-garde of the 1950s and '60s: This, as the rainbow of reactions to Zimmermann's Die Soldaten shows, is more problematic territory. That music hit the recording world when I was in high school, primed and ready for it, and I glommed it up with hungry ears, reading everything about it I could get my hands on - and even to me, some of it doesn't make sense. That music, too, used dissonance, atonality, and arrhythmia - but not always to express violence or anguish, often just to play with sound forms. My students get a perennial kick from Stockhausen's Gruppen, but whether its fragmented textures could ever cease to suggest anxiety to the untrained ear is something I would not want to speculate about. A lot of that music's drive was theoretical, and it trailed off into a thousand dead ends, a thousand pieces more remarkable for the pompous psychology of their program notes than for their sonic aura. Nevertheless, a core repertoire of tremendously beautiful and original works emerged from all that experimentation: Boulez's Pli selon pli and Rituel, Zimmermann's Photoptosis and Monologe, Berio's Sinfonia and Corale, and, you can make up your own list. If I were called upon to justify Darmstadt serialism to a general audience, I'd say, "Wait a minute - which pieces am I justifying here? Because I'm sure as hell not going to go out on a limb for all of them." I insist that there are pieces on both sides of the line in that repertoire, some gorgeous and some merely confused, but they are so unified by idiom that a general audience has to be forgiven for finding it difficult to make distinctions. 


Comparing the reception history of this music with that of the next category is complicated by the fact that Europe and the U.S. have such different musical cultures. In Europe an immense festival culture grew up around serialism, which gave a convincing appearance that there was more public support for the music over there. Some Americans, like Rzewski, came to write more opaque music after expatriating to Europe, as though that had more success there, and it probably did. Nevertheless, I always think of the parents I once met of an exchange student at my son's elementary school. They were from Graz, Austria, and I mentioned that I was aware of a prestigious contemporary music festival there. They said, "Oh, the music they play there is terrible, all this horrible modern stuff. We go every year."


Academic 12-tone music of the 1970s and '80s: You may deny, if you wish, that in the period in question, thousands of student composers were encouraged by their professors, or perhaps pressured simply by their peers or the environment, to write abstract music of exploded textures in a 12-tone idiom, or something resembling it. Go ahead and deny it: an army of survivors will rise up to contradict you. Dissonance, arrhythmia, complexity, had, if you wanted, become completely dissociated from any specific emotional expression; it was often all just about pitch sets and sound structures. There is no need to demonize this period, which simply resulted from the collision of European serialism with an explosive expansion (in both size and influence) of academia in the directions of composition and analysis. But neither let us whitewash the fact that the "contemporary music concert" nurtured by academic culture became, for awhile, something of a chore. Even my fellow students and I, thoroughly indoctrinated into this culture, couldn't believe how bad most of the music was, semester after semester. Something was clearly wrong, and later that something got fixed to a certain extent. Just to take one example, student composer concerts I've heard in the last ten years are so infinitely better than student composer concerts of the '70s that someone should write a book about that phenomenon alone.


Whether you agree with my characterizations here is really not important. What's important is that contemporary classical music got a terrible public reputation in the mid-20th century, and while composers at first defended the music, at some point, even many of us began to concede that something had gone wrong. Where one draws the line that got crossed over (1945, 1970, serialized rhythm, pitch-set analysis) is immaterial. Certainly recent reception history suggests that some of that bad rep was unfair - and some, Frank, will argue that all of it is unfair, but many composers of my generation, myself included, cannot not go that far. Camus wisely said, "You are what other people think you are," and Morton Feldman's grandmother used to tell him, "When three people tell you you're drunk, lie down." There is a factual basis to the Byrne argument that it simply does not do us any good to ignore. At the same time, we need the Nonken argument so that we don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. In fact, those two arguments complete each other. We can't accurately describe the 20th century without both of them.


One of the arguments that composers bring up over and over again to buttress the Nonken argument is that all composers write the way they do from deep inner compulsion, and so there's nothing they (or you) can do about it. I simply don't buy this. It does not accord with my experience. It's true of some composers, and maybe they're the ones saying it, or perhaps it is a romanticization of the creative artist by their enablers. I've seen too much evidence to the contrary. I had a brilliant, ambitious student once who studied scores by composers who won prizes - thinking that if he could write the way they did, maybe he could win prizes too. I've known composition teachers who told their students, "Here's how you write a piece of music," and the student followed instructions and got in the habit of composing that way - often being well rewarded for doing so because the teacher, pleased with their obedience, afterward helped them get awards and commissions. Even I myself have been known to depart from my usual stylistic inclinations in order to accommodate the sensibilities of the people who gave the commission, who might want something more "classical-sounding" and emotive (or possibly just easier to perform) than my usual fare. 


Much music, much good music, is written the way it is because the composer has gotten so excited about hitherto underused ramifications of the musical structures she's found in other people's music that she sees a wonderful creative opportunity to take music in a new direction based on those ramifications. That's probably the core paradigm (or at least, it's the more professionally realistic version of the composer "having something deep within her soul to express"). But a composer's idiom is influenced by a hundred forces, some unconscious, some carefully calculated, some financial, some vain, some noble, some inspired, some in habitual response to academic training. The audience's reflexive skepticism toward new music is, in itself, no more unjust than the skepticism with which you are approaching this article right now - waiting for me to show my hand, waiting to catch me in some fallacy. 


It seems to me that I haven't said a controversial or non-commonsensical thing here yet, though I will. To create a healthy musical culture, we need a shared reality. The Nonkens need to admit to the Byrnes that upon occasion a composer has wasted the audience's time with a pompous, confused piece written in ambitious but misguided imitation of earlier works; the Byrnes need to admit to the Nonkens that music may be capable of wonderful large-scale effects that one needs experience and a well-conditioned ear to hear. Where audiences and where composers will tend to draw the line will always differ, and that's good: it gives us a big gray area to argue about, and art is always furthered by being argued about. But nothing is to be gained by claiming that the composers have never, ever been at fault, nor by denying that audience members could gain something from extending their listening capacities.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


So far so good, I hope. 


I read the first three chapters of Finnegans Wake once. I laughed, I cried, it was marvelous. For years I thought at some point I'd go back and finish the book, but with each passing year it looks a little more doubtful. It's an incredible, heady pleasure, like nothing else in the world, but fully absorbing that pleasure takes considerable time and energy. Maybe when I'm retired. 


What if there were dozens of books like Finnegans Wake? I hear that there are. I haven't read any William Gaddis, I never finished a Thomas Pynchon novel, and I bought Hermann Broch's The Death of Virgil because of its connection with the composer Jean Barraqué, but didn't get very far into it. And I'm a voracious reader, always have a couple of books going at least. I'm sure all those books are very good. If I were a literature professor or reviewer of books, I would have dutifully taken the time to get through all that stuff. But I'm just a pleasure reader, except for when I'm reading things for my own scholarship. 


As a music aficionado and writer, I did do all that for many behemoths of 20th-century music. I combed Sinfonia for quotations, analyzed the entire tempo structure of Gruppen, listened repeatedly to Barraqué's Sonata and looked at the score, went through Carter's Double Concerto countless times, devoured Boulez's On Music Today and painstakingly compared its prescriptions to Le Marteau, read Babbitt's articles and book, and did my homework. I sometimes notice, though, that the big, complex pieces that I've really gotten to know well were ones I studied back between 1973 and 1986, when I was in school and just afterward, before I started at the Village Voice, before my son was born, when I had plenty of time on my hands. The crazes for Helmut Lachenmann and Gerard Grisey came along later in my career. I've listened to their CDs at times and thought, "Well, if I had time to listen to this over and over, maybe I'd start to get more out of it." And, a couple years later, I've listened again - and put the CDs back with exactly the same thought. That today's grad students find Lachenmann and Grisey as exciting as I once found Wolpe and Maderna, and consider me something of an old fogey for not hopping on the bandwagon, makes perfect sense. They've got the time, and the available memory. New experiences make a deeper and quicker impression on them, as they once did on me.


The qualities of complexity and opacity do not guarantee that a piece is good, as we've established above, nor do they guarantee that a piece is bad, as we've also established. It takes time, working one's way slowly into each piece, work by work, to judge how good something is. The question is, of course: how much complex, opaque music can the world afford? How many more complex, opaque pieces can I be expected to internalize in my life than the couple hundred or so I've already absorbed? New CDs arrive in the mail every week. According to the paradigm by which musicians usually talk about music, when a CD contains simple music, I probably listen to it once, say "That's nice," and then put it on the shelf; and when the CD is of complex music, I listen to it over and over, getting more from each new exposure. But what actually happens is closer to the opposite: when the music is relatively simple, it has a visceral impact on me, and soon I want to hear it again, and it starts becoming part of my mental audio furniture, and I start writing about it and recommending it to people. And when the music is complex, I'm more likely to say, "Well, if I had time to listen to this over and over, maybe I'd start to get more out of it." Some of those CDs never get listened to again. For others, the second and third listenings are much like the first.


The defenders of musical complexity already have their angry fingers on the "comments" button, but wait - musical complexity needs no defense from me. I love Pli selon pli, remember? I bet I know more of Maderna's music than you do. That, at this point in my life, composers who can get their main musical ideas across in a listening or two get more of my attention than those who demand 12 or more listenings plus some reading and analysis is not a sign that I am superficial of soul. It is a sign that I am no longer a grad student, and that I am swamped with responsibilities. (I remember, when I studied with him in 1975, Morton Feldman being particularly caustic on this point. He'd criticize a student's piece as unclear, and the student would protest, "But you have to listen to the piece more than once," and Feldman would sneer, "Kid's 21, and he thinks I'm going to listen to his fuckin' piece twice.") (Maybe he didn't say fuckin', but it was clearly implied.) You can say, because it is one's duty to say so, that the pleasures that come from complex music run much deeper than those that come from simple music, and that the time spent getting familiar with a difficult masterpiece will pay off much more than the ten easier pieces I might have studied in the same span. But this hasn't uniformly been my experience. In my imagination, I think of Nono's Stille, an Diotima and Bill Duckworth's relatively simple Time Curve Preludes as being about equally great pieces; but the truth is, I haven't listened to the Nono in ten years, and I feel a need for the Preludes at least a couple of times a year. 


Another popular escape hatch: "You don't need to understand complex music to enjoy it, just sit back and experience it." Yet something tells me that if I simply listened to Ferneyhough's [Ha! I mentioned him] Transcendental Etudes as passively as I do to Cage's Winter Music, I would miss many of the crucial things Ferneyhough put into it. (I actually heard Ferneyhough lecture about that piece at the U. of Chicago, so I know something of how it works. I like it OK. Don't listen to it often.) I think, too, that had I taken that Cagean approach years ago to Boulez and Stockhausen (or hell, Cage, for that matter), I wouldn't today enjoy their music on as many levels as I do. I'm not opposed to the idea that a repertoire might necessitate score analysis and book reading to fully appreciate it. I just don't know how many more composers I'm going to have time to do that with in my life, nor how many the avid lay music lover ought to be expected to study similarly. Nor do I, as a result, find composers I've done that with - like Boulez and Stockhausen - deeper or more appealing than composers like Virgil Thomson or William Schuman who never necessitated any such study. 


Allow me a brief detour. There is an ancient tradition in aesthetics, and a wise one, I think, that simplicity in art is a virtue. I insist that one of the things we proved in the 20th century is that it is not a necessary virtue, that it may not be the best virtue - but it remains a virtue. Some will recognize the following quotations from my writing:


True genius is of necessity simple, or it is not genius.... The most intricate problems must be solved by genius with simplicity, without pretension, with ease; the egg of Christopher Columbus is the emblem of all the discoveries of genius. It only justifies its character as genius by triumphing through simplicity over all the complications of art.... Genius expresses its most sublime and its deepest thoughts with this simple grace; they are the divine oracles that issue from the lips of a child; while the scholastic spirit, always anxious to avoid error, tortures all its words, all its ideas, and makes them pass through the crucible of grammar and logic, hard and rigid.... - Friedrich von Schiller, "On Naive and Sentimental Poetry")


Simplicity is the most difficult thing to achieve in this world: it is the last limit of experience and the last effort of genius. - George Sand


In products of the human mind, simplicity marks the end of a process of refining, while complexity marks a primitive stage. Michelangelo's definition of art as the purgation of superfluities suggests that the creative effort consists largely in the elimination of that which complicates and confuses a pattern. - Eric Hoffer


Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. - Leonardo Da Vinci


And allow me to add one more quote which will haunt you forever, my fellow Americans, a quotation that has appeared in countless books, and that will live as long as American music itself lives:


I began to feel an increasing dissatisfaction with the relations of the music-loving public and the living composer.... It seemed to me that composers were in danger of working in a vacuum... I felt it was worth the effort to see if I couldn't say what I had to say in the simplest possible terms.


Aaron Copland, of course, about the time he wrote El Salon Mexico. Modernists draw a narrative around Copland that his thorny Variations for piano was a great, forward-looking work, while Billy the Kid was a terrible backsliding into mindless populism. But as Copland expert Larry Starr has aptly and truly written, "not only is this ballet score as sterling an illustration of Copland's basic methods as either the Piano Variations or Music for the Theatre; it also reveals these methods at a stage of greater maturity and refinement." Starr's right: study the scores, and you'll see that Billy the Kid is a more sophisticated score, gunfight and all, than the Variations. Copland did not weaken his music in simplifying it - he sharpened it.


You'll think, reader, that I've now shown my hand, and my discountable bias, at last, but not so fast. You may recall that Ives's Concord Sonata - a rather complex piece and not easy of approach by the novice - remains my favorite work, and I wouldn't for all the gold in the world subtract a note from it. Even now in late middle age I occasionally come across a complex, impenetrable piece that blows me away, such as the symphonies of Matthijs Vermeulen, and even more notably the Fourth Piano Sonata of Kaikhosru Sorabji, whose gorgeous and complexly multilayered Adagio came to obsess me before I'd ever read a word about the piece. I listen to it often, trying to capture its tricks, because if I ever untangle them, I have every intention of stealing them. Here's another quote, from Samuel Johnson: "The first duty of a book is to make us want to read it through" - which can easily be transposed to, "The first duty of a piece of music is to make us want to hear it through." Complex as Sorabji's Fourth Sonata is, it make me determined to hear it through. Simplicity is a virtue, but it is not a necessary virtue, and if a piece has compensatory virtues that are dazzling enough, it can get by without simplicity. 


Here's that escape hatch: Anyone who's an obsessed fan of a particular complex, opaque piece can always claim that what that piece expresses couldn't possibly be expressed any more simply, and it's a claim pretty much impervious to opposing rhetoric. Thank god for the ambiguity and subjectivity of art, and there will be no Q.E.D. at the end of this article. What he cannot claim, though, I insist, is that music generally improves with complexity and opacity, nor that simplifying can't sometimes sharpen a composer's art. At the very least, complexity and opacity tend to withdraw a piece of music from the public sphere, while simplifying increases its public availablility. Ives's most public image, after all, is one of his simplest and (yet) most powerful pieces, The Unanswered Question


It is, for me, a sign of generosity in a composer, of his urgency in wanting to reach me, that he is willing to work to sharpen his musical argument by simplifying it as far as he can without falsifying it. And before someone assumes that I am carrying arround some boneheaded, dumbass notion of simplicity, I do not mean reduction to quarter-notes and eigth-notes, but rather the streamlining and agreement of all elements of a piece to create a unified, singular impression. I hear now and then that some stranger thinks my Private Dances is my best piece; it is certainly my simplest piece, though there are some pretty hairy rhythms in it (including a dance in 29/4 meter). Like Copland, I sometimes take great pains to simplify what I try to say in my music for maximum public effect, and those pieces seem to get across well; other times, I want to do something that just won't reduce to simpler terms, and only my fellow composers realize what I've done. I've always thought Beethoven got the proportions right: he wrote an Eroica Symphony and a Ninth Symphony that showed the masses exactly what he was about, then a Grosse Fuge and an Op. 111 Sonata that made most of his contemporaries think he was mad. Had all of Beethoven's music been as dense and counterintuitive as his last sonatas and string quartets, we would still consider him a genius today, but he would have come down to us as a much smaller, more eccentric figure. 


What does this portend for the would-be composer of complex, opaque music? Of course he is free to write what he wants, keeping aware that as the amount of complex, opaque music in the world grows, the time available for the dramatic needs of his own contribution shrink in proportion. He is content, of course - naturally! - to settle for a very small, very serious audience. If such a composer wants his music to reach an avid but beleaguered music lover in middle age such as myself, the want of the virtue of simplicity will need to be made up for by some pretty dazzling compensatory virtues. Failing that, he will always have for his audience the grad students - who have time and incentive to decipher his intricacies, and who may well continue to love his music into their dotage for the intellectual challenges it provided them in youth.


Originally from PostClassic, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 05:10 AM | Comments (0)

A Little More from Maine

Originally from Ionarts, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 24, 2008 at 02:12 AM | Comments (0)

July 23, 2008

Church Bells in Kuerten

Originally from ANABlog, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 09:38 PM | Comments (0)

New Music and the Headless Monster

What if everything we thought we knew about the "long tail" was wrong?

Originally from NewMusicBox, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 08:10 PM | Comments (0)

Ionarts Turns 5: State of the Blog

Originally from Ionarts, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 05:13 PM | Comments (0)

Mind: the gap (Hommage a Nam Jun Paik)

[july 23, 2008 | sbpc/022] Hear Audio [ mp3 5.1MB ]
Musicians from the impromptu Ana-R chamber orchestra, in divers combinations, performed over the course of two separate evenings in june six times a parisian Sound CityScape, signed by the Korean artist Daily ... We used a flute, a toy piano, a Casio keyboard, an acoustic guitar and an ukulele on sunday june 15th at La Veilleuse; at the franco-korean Espace Han-Seine, on friday june 22nd, there were a double bass, a piano, and - again - Rebus's toy piano. I think I never ever before heard nor played anything as ephemeral.
" "... As ephemeral as the nightly view of a city from within an airplane flying high overhead. As ephemeral as the view of Paris from within a car that is speeding along its ring way ..."
Such was Daily's 'Hommage to Nam Jun Paik' ...

Originally from HarSMedia (Feed and Podcast), ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 05:12 PM | Comments (0)

The Composer's Chair, Episode 3: Malcolm Forsyth

The Composer's Chair, Episode 3: Malcolm Forsyth

From Podcast: Sounds New.

Originally posted by jeff from cacophonous.org, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 05:11 PM | Comments (0)

What's in a name?

I have a much uglier word for it, Sir: Misappropriation.
-Waylon Smithers

Here’s an interesting excerpt from our contract.

Section 25.18 CSO Name.

(a)

The designation “Chicago Symphony”, “Chicago Symphony Orchestra”, “Members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra”, “CSO”, or any similar designation may not be used by any Member or Members unless in connection with an event under the auspices of the Association or any subcontractor of the Association or unless to identify a recognized ensemble existing as of September 17, 1979, which has been using such designation. Any unauthorized use will be resisted by the Association.

I wonder if anyone on our players’ committee has seen this:

Originally from Bass Blog, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 02:12 PM | Comments (0)

legotiste

Lego Opera returns with an adaptation of Bizet’s Carmen, courtesy of the gifted regisseur BarkingBartok.

Originally posted by La Cieca from parterre box presents La Cieca, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:03 PM | Comments (0)

sharing different heartbeats

I am hesitating even now to make this post, fearing that it's going to sound like a teenager's latest LiveJournal entry. Still, I think it has some relevance, especially because the roles I'm presenting are usually reversed.

I feel like two different people right now: the musical me, and the "normal" me, when I am out of the role of being a musician. At first, I was pleased to find that, after weeks of being uncomfortable and trying a few new ideas without abandoning what I already knew was right, I am playing better than I ever have. This last rough patch was by the far the trickiest one to navigate, mostly because it carried some physical problems with it (aperture problems, double buzzing, etc.). However, as I learned and always say, "we must have the actual experience of how our weeds change into nourishment."

Unfortunately, I am feeling a little bit of a relapse concerning these feelings that I might have partially misdiagnosed as a lack of musical motivation. The reason I suspect this comes from just noticing how timid and neurotic I've been in my daily life lately. I'd like to think that, as hard as I worked at music while I was in college, I worked almost as hard at trying to relax and have a better overall social manner. Just like anything else in life, this comes in plateaus and glass ceilings and all that. Lately, I am almost constantly feeling on edge, worrying about what other people are thinking of me and if I am bothering them. I've been subjected to the social equivalent of getting out of a hot tub and jumping into a cold outdoor pool. I used to spend a majority of my day with coworkers, few of which were within even a few years of my age, and a body of students who were young enough to create a strict line between the role of each group (compared to, say, when I student taught at 21 and had seniors in high school who were 18). Now, I spend a lot of my time around my in-laws and my parents, feeling a little less like an adult and just a tad more like I'm home on a college break. It's probably not helping that everyone around, both family and friends, feel the imminence of our upcoming move and seem to treat the time we spend together just a little differently.

Basically, these social lines have all blurred. I am still a child to my parents, in a sense, and they're the only "adults" I'm having a lot of contact with. I have a relationship outside of my prior job with a handful of my former students that I am happy to have, but distorts the "order" that used to exist (some are even on a first name basis with me, and at this point, I feel a lot more like a cousin or a family friend than a former teacher).

If there is a lack of social stability, which creates a lack of emotional stability, how can I find stability in my craft if I should be using it to emote what I feel under this skin? You don't have to tell me twice that what I'm feeling is nothing compared to the demons that other musicians - established musicians, virtuosic musicians, REAL musicians with gigs and reputations - have had following the around for centuries. Perhaps it has reminded me how weak of a person I can be from time to time, or just how uncomfortable I can be in my own skin.

As tired as I get of overthinking my work on my instrument, it is grueling and exhausting to pore over the same personal insecurities for years and years without finally letting things be as they are and not giving a fuck about what anyone else thinks. That means no more incessant questions and worries. You're going to step on toes, but I hope that when I do, I'm at least looking where I'm walking.

It's funny how I often trade the same set of problems back and forth between my euphonium and everything that I do without a euphonium. Both my musical and non-musical lives require the same efforts and follow the same processes. They both have highs and they both have lows; they both have breakthroughs and setbacks. We can be aware of our successes, but we always need to try to improve (thanks, Michael Jordan).

Originally from the search for artistry, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:02 PM | Comments (0)

BBC classical music sponsorship outlawed


'When I drove off the cross-channel ferry last Monday I retuned the car radio to BBC Radio 3. Within an hour the presenter had plugged the BBC's New Generation Artists Scheme so many times that I concluded she was earning a bonus for every mention' - those were my words posted here on 30 Sept. 2007.

For a long time I have been a lone voice complaining about the incessant and gratuitous on-air plugs for BBC Radio 3's New Generation Artists scheme. This week I was joined by another voice. The BBC Trust, the body that works on behalf of licence fee payers to audit broadcast quality, has outlawed sponsorship of specific BBC activities including the New Generation Artists scheme which was funded by financial giant Aviva, the world's fifth-largest insurance group. The image above is from the BBC website.

Of course it is vitally important that new musicians are supported and nurtured. But the BBC is a public body which is funded by license fee income to the tune of more than £3 billion ($6 billion) every year. So it is hardly short of the odd pound or two and is simply undermining its own credibility with these ill-conceived attempts to ape the commercial sector.

Any copyrighted material on these pages is included as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk

Originally from On An Overgrown Path, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:02 PM | Comments (0)

The department of silly Elgar


Leonard Bernstein's notorious BBC Symphony recording of Elgar's Enigma Variations with its seven minute Nimrod has for a long time been at the head of my department of silly Elgar. But this evening's BBC Prom performance by Roger Norrington and the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra of the A Flat Symphony proved to be a real challenger to Lennie. I understand Norrington's arguments about playing Elgar without vibrato and with flexible tempi. But if it destroys the music why do it?

Now this is what Elgar meant by a massive hope for the future.
Any copyrighted material on these pages is included as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk

Originally from On An Overgrown Path, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:02 PM | Comments (0)

Merola cast aces Britten chamber opera

Joshua Kosman, San Francisco Chronicle, 7/22/2008

Originally from Classical Music News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:01 PM | Comments (0)

Doctors upbeat on Levine's cancer diagnosis

CBC , 7/22/2008

Originally from Classical Music News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:01 PM | Comments (0)

Life On Earth: U.S. Government Tentatively Allows Pan Cogito To Keep His Wife; Might Reconsider Deporting Her To Lithuanian-Ukrainian Borderlands















Recently first published one hundred year old drawings of fungi and vascular plants by Carlos Spegazzini, the eminent Argentine mycologist (1858–1926). Spegazzini's numerous publications describing over 5000 fungi almost never included illustrations, but a very large number of the original packets of his specimens bear beautiful, delicate, carefully-drawn and scientifically accurate pencil drawings of the material enclosed. These pictures range in size from approximately 7 to 10cm square. In some cases, where material is scanty, these drawings may be the only remaining evidence of the microscopic features of the fungus he originally observed.

The third image is of Fruitbodies of the golf-ball fungus Cyttaria espinosae on living twigs of the southern beech tree Nothofagus obliqua, Valdivia, Chile.

Image credits: (c) Departamento de Biodiversidad y Biología Experimental, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina; and D.W. Minter and the Biodiversity Website. With thanks.

*

Yesterday, Senator, and Presidential candidate, John McCain talked about the need for the U.S. military to secure the "Iraq-Pakistan border.”

Originally from Renaissance Research, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:00 PM | Comments (0)

Classical and pop reviews (5)

Comments have trailed off...is everybody sick of this?

Here are two New York Times reviews to contrast. First, Steve Smith on a concert of music written by women. A very well-written, evocative review (which someone commenting on a previous post was good enough to praise):

During a panel presented recently at the National Performing Arts Convention in Denver, the American Music Center and the American Composers Forum reported preliminary findings from "Taking Note," a survey of American composers. The study was undertaken to help those organizations better serve their constituencies. According to its findings, the average American composer is a highly educated 45-year-old white male.

That revelation might not seem especially surprising: the history of classical music has long been portrayed as a chronology of great men, mostly white and European. But women have written music since antiquity, and they steadily grew in prominence during the 20th century. Anyone who regularly attends new-music concerts can attest that female composers are increasingly well represented. At conservatories, by some reports, perhaps half the composition students are women.

Plenty remains to be done before parity is achieved. But in a concert by the NeoLit Ensemble at Bargemusic on Friday night, it was refreshing to encounter a slate of works by seven female composers, presented without any hint of corrective polemic....

The concert began with Ms. Chen's "Night Thoughts," a spare evocation of a Tang dynasty poem.

Ms. Lukas played tones that bent, swirled and fluttered, accompanied by plucked glissandos on cello and icy piano figures. Midway through, the flute offered a nostalgic melody, which gradually dissolved back into general murmurings....

Ms. du Bois commented from the stage that "The Storm," her sonata for cello and piano (originally for violin and piano), recast the turbulent emotions she felt at 18 as a roiling tempest. Romantics might have deemed this sturm und drang; nowadays, to borrow a term from rock, it was pure emo. Ms. Bass and Ms. Mihailova were equal to the work's impassioned demands.

Steve notes that gender seemed trumped, at this concert, by ethnicity. Chen Yi is Chinese, and Shulamit Ran, whose music was also played, is Israeli, " and each called on musical aspects of her heritage."

And now here's a review of a Liz Phair concert, by Jon Pareles.

Phair sang all the songs from her 1993 debut album, "Exile in Guyland":

The "Exile" songs were amateurish in the best ways. The lyrics were blunt and unguarded: tales of a young woman veering from sexual bravado to wounded bewilderment at men's behavior to keen observation of power struggles within couples. The song structures often strayed from verse-chorus-verse, and unconventional tunings led to odd guitar chords. Her voice was untrained, mingling tenacity and diffidence....

At one point she polled the audience members on how many had bought the original album (nearly all), how many used it to get over a breakup (a significant response), how many couples had met over it (few) and how many had played it during sex (enough to surprise her)....

After 15 years of other people's indie-rock idiosyncrasies, "Exile" still holds up in all its conflicting impulses: its determination to be "adamantly free" and its longing for someone to trust, its swagger and its pain.
The contrast couldn't be clearer. Maybe the classical concert was more compelling than Liz Phair's event. Maybe readers interested in classical music would rather have been there. Maybe Steve's review is more evocative than Jon's. But nobody, I'd think, can deny that Jon's review connects more directly to the lives we lead than the classical review does -- or that Liz Phair's music has more direct, more vivid things to say about being a woman than the classical pieces apparently do.

(And for classical people who wish pop reviews talked more about the sound and structure of music, Jon in fact does that. See the first paragraph I've quoted, above, and also Jon's comments on "the sparse arrangements of the original album: the exposed guitars and snare-drum sputters," and on Liz Phair's voice, "sinewy in the angrier songs and sustained in the quiet ones.")


Originally from Sandow, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 01:00 PM | Comments (0)

Exclusive Interview: DANNY ELFMAN FEELS THE BURN COMPOSING ... - iFMagazine


Exclusive Interview: DANNY ELFMAN FEELS THE BURN COMPOSING ...
iFMagazine - Jul 22, 2008
Some of the music had electronics in it. Some had samples. But I thought if Steve Reich could do this sort of thing, than so could I, even if it was ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

Thomas Adès at the Serpentine Gallery, W2 - Times Online


Thomas Adès at the Serpentine Gallery, W2
Times Online, UK - 17 hours ago
Hunt's performance of Steve Reich's minimalist classic, New York Counterpoint - where the clarinettist supplies a live 11th line of counterpoint to ten ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

Tanglewood: Carter Centennial Celebration Traversing sound fields - Berkshire Eagle


Tanglewood: Carter Centennial Celebration Traversing sound fields
Berkshire Eagle, MA - Jul 22, 2008
By Andrew L. Pincus, Special to The Eagle That would be Elliott Carter's "Sound Fields," for string orchestra, which received its world premiere Sunday ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

Proms Chamber Music 1: Pierre-Laurent Aimard - musicOMH.com


Proms Chamber Music 1: Pierre-Laurent Aimard
musicOMH.com, UK - Jul 22, 2008
Elliott Carter's 1980 Night Fantasies describes torments of a less ferocious but still anguished kind: the sort of heebie-jeebies that haunt the darkness in ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

Tanglewood Contemporary Festival: Baby Photos and Musical Puzzles - New York Times


Tanglewood Contemporary Festival: Baby Photos and Musical Puzzles
New York Times, United States - 21 hours ago
“Carter’s Century: An Exhibit Celebrating the Life and Music of Elliott Carter,” is split between two buildings on opposite sides of the Music Shed, ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

At Tanglewood, a Composer Nears the Century Mark - New York Times


At Tanglewood, a Composer Nears the Century Mark
New York Times, United States - 8 hours ago
To celebrate the life of Elliott Carter, who turns 100 on Dec. 11, the Tanglewood Music Center — Tanglewood’s teaching arm, which runs the festival — is ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

Tanglewood Contemporary Festival: Carter in Context - New York Times Blogs


Tanglewood Contemporary Festival: Carter in Context
New York Times Blogs, NY - Jul 21, 2008
By Allan Kozinn Elliott Carter, far left, being led on stage by the conductor Stefan Asbury, after a performance by the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra. ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

Contemporary Consort - Norfolk Eastern Daily Press


Contemporary Consort
Norfolk Eastern Daily Press, UK - 5 hours ago
... Cautionary Tales and his Three Pieces in the Shape of a Shoe, and music by composers including Stravinsky and Dutilleux, plus a glass of wine with the ...

Originally from lutoslawski OR xenakis OR boulez OR Dutilleux OR ligeti OR "elliott carter" OR stockhausen OR "steve reich" AND music - Google News, ReBlogged by newmusicrebloggers on Jul 23, 2008 at 12:59 PM | Comments (0)

Magna Carter (3): The stuff that dreams are made of


But probably the music had more to do with it, and
The way music passes, emblematic
Of life and how you cannot isolate a note of it
And say it is good or bad.

—John Ashbery, "Syringa"

Monday’s concerts for this year’s all-Elliott-Carter all-the-time Festival of Contemporary Music at Tanglewood began with the absence of James Levine, still recuperating from kidney surgery; stepping in to play Matribute, a short piece Levine commissioned from Carter in 2007 as a birthday gift for Levine’s mother, pianist Ursula Oppens took a moment to send best wishes to Levine and remind the audience of the circumstances of the piece’s birth. Beginning with a void seems like the sort of philosophical game Carter would appreciate and appropriate; but Matribute itself was a sort of two-part invention with occasional chordal privileges, the individual voices—one fast, one slow—not imitating each other, but rather at key points dovetailing into a single flourish. The piece is characteristic of Carter’s solo piano writing over the past decade or so, concentrating on brief evocative miniatures rather than major statements. (Although given the man’s pace of output, that generalization may be obsolete by the time you finish this sentence.)

It was an elegant though somewhat incongruous prelude to the day’s music, which elsewhere often evinced a grittier cast. The whole of the 5:00 concert was given over to the piano. Charles Rosen performed Carter’s 1946 Piano Sonata, in which the open-prairie perfect-interval sound of contemporary American modernism is, in many ways, both romanticized and reimagined through an urban prism. Ravel and Ives are common reference points for the Sonata, but Franz Liszt might make a viable claim, right down to the second-movement fugue that echoes the B minor Sonata—nevertheless, the intricacy of the writing is a vehicle for bringing the piano into the present, not modernism overlaid with old-school virtuosity, but modernism through virtuosity: you can hear how Carter's scurrying density grows out of his style of counterpoint, rather than just being an added textural element. The combination of lush texture and chormatic rigor produces a tough Romanticism reminiscent of film noir. Rosen’s wasn’t always the most note-perfect performance, but who cares? He’s earned that slack. His phrasing and tone was exactly right, redolent with streetwise grandeur.

Oppens followed with 1980’s Night Fantasies, in an amazing, blazing display of keyboard prowess—and both music and subject matter would echo through much of the subsequent evening. I once saw a television program where Harold “Doc” Edgerton, the high-speed photography pioneer, did a neat trick with an open faucet and a strobe light: he pointed the strobe at the stream of water, and when he turned it on, the stream seemed to “freeze” into its consituent individual droplets. Adjusting the rate of the strobe, the droplets could be made to appear to descend or ascend at varying rates. That’s kind of like what Night Fantasies does: the torrent of notes may suddenly turn into a passage of oracular chords, or sparse gestures, but you never escape the sense that the flow of the music is still hurtling forward.

The recognition of pianistic flow as just individual notes is one of the keys to Carter’s piano writing. So much Classical and Romantic piano music requires the complicit illusion that the immediately-decaying piano tone isn’t decaying at all, that the sounds are actually connected via a viable legato. As listeners, we’re conditioned to suspend our disbelief in that regard; Carter will have none of it. His piano notes explicitly decay; if he wants to sustain a phrase or gesture, he’ll fill it in with more notes, more attacks. It’s a matter of principle: you don’t write for what you wish the piano could do, you write for what the piano actually does.

That kind of sonic realism carried over into the 8:00 program, which was evenly divided between vocal and instrumental chamber works. The Triple Duo, from 1983, seems to refashion the battlefields of Carter's 1960s music (the Double Concerto, or, especially, the Piano Concerto) into a more ritualized, civilized-veneer game. Throughout the opening, the instruments offer variations on a gesture, a flourish that ends with an accented jab—the effect is like fencers jockeying for position. The play of allegiances and conflict is just that: play, a civilized, rule-based simulacrum of combat. Eventually, though, the piano is lobbing low-cluster grenades, the motives become wide-ranging jousts, the jabs are less tentative. The return of the initial rhetoric is a bit more sardonically wise about the stakes involved in even the most formalized contests. Stefan Asbury conducted a performance that emphasized the allusive seriousness in a piece that could be played for sparkling humor; what humor there was in this reading was subtle and dark.

Penthode, which closed the concert, is a different kind of dark, a dim, old-varnish landscape. Composed in 1985 "for five groups of four instruments"—a rationally-organized league—it seems to regard the mercurial, nocturnal danger of Night Fantasies from a more objective distance. The low components of each group (bassoon, bass/contrabass clarinet, tuba, double bass, trombone) are almost always present; the ombrous colors and more diffuse orchestration reduce extremes of exuberance or violence. Even the most loud and active sections have that mid- and low-range foundation, giving the complex surface a grounded feeling: the piece is at home in the shadows. Asbury conducted again, keeping a cool edge amidst the velvety timbres.

Apart from the brief Matribute, the only recent music on the day's concerts was Tempo e Tempi, written in 1999. It's pocket cantata about time itself, but time of day figures in many of the Italian poems—Montale, Quasimodo, Ungaretti—that Carter sets. Night creates its own time, its own flow of time—"time to which my pulse beats as I would, " as Ungaretti puts it in the final song, "Segreto del poeta." "In me the evening is falling," Quasimodo writes in "Òboe sommerso"; the days become "maceria," which could mean both rubble and a wall built from it, the abrading limits of diurnal structure. The four instruments—violin, cello, oboe, and clarinet—are more reserved than one might expect from the intersection of Carter and his favorite subject matter, but, like a laconic detective, the music gives the impression of knowing more than it lets on, the understated flipside to the free-flowing confessional of Night Fantasies. Three of the songs reduce the accompaniment to a sing