Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Voices of Lynchburg


Herb Fanning - Voices of Lynchburg

I found a copy of this LP in a Goodwill store sometime ago. I think it's great that there is still worthwhile stuff to be found at Goodwill. Anyway, the tracks on the record are a collection of interviews with the citizens of Lynchburg, Tennessee conducted by someone named Herb Fanning who is also the narrator on this record. Lynchburg happens to be the location of the distillery of the world famous whiskey, Jack Daniels. Other than that, Lynchburg is a very small town with a very small population.

The people on this record talk about their favorite subjects including fishing, whittlin', and making whiskey, both legal and otherwise. What the heck is whittlin', you're probably wondering. You'll have to listen for yourself and find out or just do it the boring way and look it up on Google. The Lynchburg folks also talk a little bit about the history of the town and their ancestors who were among the town's first inhabitants. The last track is an interview with a country baker who was 91 years old at the time of the interview.

The interviews were recorded in the kitchens, porches and parlors of the folks interviewed along with park benches and the town square. The material on the LP was chosen from more than thirty hours of recorded conversations.


This is going to be the last post of 2008 so I wish everyone out there a happy 2009.

Tracklisting:

Side One

1. Around the Square {5:01}

2. Moonshine-and Other Natural Phenomena {5:45}

3. Goin' Fishing {6:27}

Side Two

1. Whittlin' {4:06}

2. Country Banker {10:40}

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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Opus '69


various artists compilation - Opus '69

This is another LP of Dutch avant-garde music from Radio Nederland, this time from 1969 as the title says. The two sides of the LP are two separate programs that were offered for free to radio stations outside of the Netherlands.

From the liner notes by Dr. Jos Wouters, Head, Music Department, Radio Nederland:

The same as in previous years "OPUS 69" consists of two half-hour programmes devoted to new trends in Dutch contemporary music.

The first programme contains two works related in style of writing though the result sounds quite different.

The work "World within world", composed by Wil Eisma, was written for four instruments (oboe, violin, viola and cello) and has the intimate character of the chamber-music atmosphere.

The composition "Clockwise and anti-clockwise" by Peter Schat - in the opinion of many the most important representative of the Dutch avant-garde group - is a work in which a technique of motionless sound-fields forms the most characteristic element. The ensemble of 16 wind instruments has been split up into five independently operating groups. Each movement of the composition is separated from the others by a Catalan battle-song from the civil war period.

The second programme includes a composition by Jan van Vlijmen, intended to be a musical play by five wood instruments, with motifs and sounds in a twelve-tone handling of the material.

Contrary to this we find a work for soprano and orchestra "Haiku II" by Ton de Leeuw, in which the composer made use especially of the relation between sound and space. This music is related to the Far East atmosphere.

Tracklisting:

programme I

1. Wil Eisma - World Within World {13:19}
performed by Netherlands Oboe Quartet

2. Peter Schat - Clockwise and Anti-Clockwise {13:11}
performed by Hilversum Radio Wind Ensemble; conducted by Peter Schat

programme II

1. Jan van Vlijmen - Quintet for Wind Instruments {11:55}
performed by Ardito Wind Quintet

2. Ton de Leeuw - Haiku II {14:47}
performed by Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra and soprano Dorothy Dorow; conducted by Edo de Waart

Legacies


various artists compilation - Legacies: Works from BEAST Vol. 2

BEAST (Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre) was founded in 1982 by Jonty Harrison. In 2002, it became part of the newly-formed Centre for Composition and Associated Studies (COMPASS) in the Department of Music at the University of Birmingham, and enjoys a close working relationship with the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group.

BEAST refers properly to the performing wing of the University of Birmingham Electroacoustic Music Studios (also directed by Jonty Harrison), where some of the UK's most important electroacoustic works have been produced, but the name has also come to describe the group of composers associated with and working in the Studios. In the twenty years since the first BEAST concert in 1982, over 50 composers have been members of BEAST. As well as winning international competitions and receiving performances, broadcasts and commissions for a number of new works, many of these composers have gone on to teach in universities in various parts of the world.

BEAST's comprehensive and unique sound diffusion system was specifically designed for the performance of electroacoustic music. It has performed extensively in the UK and other parts of Europe, including at London's South Bank Centre (often as part of Sonic Arts Network promotions), the Edinburgh and Huddersfield Festivals, the Henry Wood Hall in Glasgow, the Adrian Boult Hall in Birmingham, MultiMediale II in Karlsruhe, The Royal Dutch Conservatory in The Hague, The Acousmatic Experience in Amsterdam, the Aspekte Festival in Salzburg and the Inventionen Festival in Berlin. It received very high acclaim as the concert sound system at the 1990 International Computer Music Conference in Glasgow and was an important contributor to both Sounds Like Birmingham - UK City of Music 1992, and Birmingham's Towards the Millennium Festival during the 1990s. BEAST's own promotions in its home town have included ten years of the Barber Festival of Contemporary Music, several years of rumours... and related events at the Midlands Arts Centre, murmurs... at the Crescent Theatre and, for the past few years, it has been part of The Series season in the CBSO Centre.

The Beast diffusion system normally uses up to thirty-two channels of separately amplified loudspeakers, each speaker pair having characteristics which makes it appropriate for a particular position or function. The system includes arrays of high frequency speakers suspended over the audience, as well as ultra-low frequency speakers. The performer/diffuser is able, via a custom-built diffusion desk, to create a variety of sound images, and to 'sculpt' the spatial, dynamic and dramatic implications of the music in a particular performance environment to interpret and realise the composer's intentions. BEAST is currently developing a variety of new controllers and interfaces for the performance of acousmatic and electroacoustic music.

Throughout the past twenty years, BEAST has remained first and foremost a community of composers whose varied styles and aesthetics are united by a desire to explore the unique creative potential of the electroacoustic medium.

...........................................................................................

Released in BEAST's 20th anniversary season, this double CD celebrates the work of some of the excellent composers who have worked in the Electroacoustic Music Studios at the University of Birmingham over the past twenty years. All the composers represented here performed regularly with BEAST's unique sound diffusion system during their time at Birmingham - an experience which has added a particularly sculptural quality to many of the pieces in this collection. All but one are now teaching in the UK higher education sector, nurturing the next generation of creative sonic artists. (From the liner notes)

Tracklisting:

CD1

1. Alistair MacDonald - dreel {10:47}

2. Joseph Hyde - vox mecanix {10:14}

3. Pete Stollery - onset/offset {7:28}

4. Robert Dow - when all is silent {12:57}

5. Joseph Anderson - ChAnGE'S MUSIC {26:03}

CD2

1. Andrew Lewis - scherzo {8:34}

2. Robert Dow - l'esprit conforme {10:17}

3. David Prior - somewhere submarine {15:38}

4. Pete Stollery - altered images {12:02}

5. Joseph Hyde - goldglow {20:01}

Monday, December 29, 2008

Solitudes Volume 2


Dan Gibson - Solitudes Volume 2

Hope that everyone is enjoying the holidays. It's great to be back posting. Usually, I post these kind of records on Sundays, but I was busy with activities yesterday. Perhaps this will be pleasant to listen to on a Monday.

THE SOUND OF THE SURF

I watched the sea, flat and grey, a slab of pewter that stretched and curved out to the rising moon.

Like a shapeless giant coming to life, it stirred, and rolled and sounded tentatively against the cliffs, as though someone spilled a bucket over the rocks. I could see the long lines forming parallel to the coast. Moving in, rolling gently at first, gaining force, rising up, showing silver now, then breaking against the rocks and rolling up over the sand.

Soon the long lines of silver were curling high, exploding in phosphorus bursts that reached for the stars, and shattered the silence, filled the cove with roaring, filled the tide pools with the comforting gurgles of infancy.

In the morning gulls circled and cried above the wake of the old man's fishing boat.

(excerpt from Bert Devitt's, 'Escape')

Is it some primordial force that draws us to the sea? An escape from our life on land? Is it curiosity? Romance?

One thing is certain - the sound of the surf is compelling. It stirs our imaginations. It calms us. It is strange.

And we love it.

These two sides allow us an intimate experience with the changing moods of the sea.

HEAVY SURF ON ROCKY POINT AND ALONG A SAND SPIT

The sea rages against the rocks but you are safe. The danger is stimulating but you are out of reach. The roaring vibrations of the ocean are overwhelming, but you can let them wash away the frustrations of another time, another place.

This is the sound of the great ocean surf crashing resoundingly and ceaselessly on the rocks, filling the tide pools and over a spit of sand beach.

PLAY AT A HIGH LEVEL FOR A STIMULATING MARITIME EXPERIENCE

OCEAN SURF IN A HIDDEN COVE [Moderate Surf With Gulls]

A lonely sound - the surf rolling up on the sand, sliding back down over the pebbles and shells. And yet this lonely sound is company. If there are two of you the sound of the surf is possibly the only welcome third party. Since this hidden cove can be in your living room try it with the lights turned low.

PLAY AT A SUBDUED LEVEL FOR RELAXATION

Tracklisting:

Side A

1. Heavy Surf on Rocky Point and Along a Sand Spit {29:58}

Side B

1. Ocean Surf in a Hidden Cove {29:19}

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Merry Holidays!


I'm going to take the next few days off to take care of holiday arrangements in the real world. I should be back to regular posting either a day or two after Christmas (December 25).

I would like to say season's greetings and best wishes for the holidays to my friend and contributor, H. C. Earwicker (hope the kids in your neighborhood don't get too many firecrackers for Christmas this year :) ), former contributor Telvin Bartruss, my fellow bloggers, and to all of the visitors to the Closet.

By a Crackling Fireside



By a Crackling Fireside

For this Sunday's nature/environmental sounds post, I present the sounds of the fireplace. Winter is really already here in the north hemisphere. Maybe this will help make the space warmer. It will certainly help stimulate a relaxing atmosphere.

Tracklisting:

1. By a Crackling Fireside {27:58}

NOTE: Both sides of the cassette are the same.

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Friday, December 19, 2008

The Avant-Garde Violin

* sorry, no cover or artwork available

various artists compilation - The Avant-Garde Violin

performed by Gabriel Banci - violin on all pieces; Zita Carno - piano on "Duo for Violin and Piano"; Ilhan Mimaroglu - electronics on "Music Plus One for Violin Solo and Electromagnetic Tape"

released in 1970

Duo for Violin and Piano: This work was written in 1963. It was one of a group of bravura works for solo strings and keyboard I embarked on at that time. All these works (the others are for solo viola and solo cello) employed proportional notation - that is, a method of writing which depends on the distance between the notes on the page to indicate their duration, instead of the traditional form of metrical division. This method of notation enables these works to have a fluidity of rhythm impossible in the conventional system of notation. (William Sydeman)

Music Plus One for Violin Solo and Electromagnetic Tape: A verbal description of the piece would be superfluous; everything happens here on musical grounds, just like in any other piece of music. From a programmatic standpoint too there is nothing to say, for there are no hidden meanings, no extra-musical connotations.
The title, "Music Plus One", may, however, need clarification. By "Music" only the tape part is meant, that is, that which has already been conceived and realized in terms of sound, to which the indefinite and abstract "One" is added. It is represented by what is written down on paper, which, although commonly referred to as "music", is not music unless translated into sound by a violinist. It should follow that the title does not apply to the present recorded realization, for the "One" too became music here, but to all other possible realizations, which should not greatly differ from the one heard on this recording because the notation I used is thoroughly conventional.
The style of writing too is "conventional", at least in the sense that it reflects my response to a certain brand of conventional violin-writing. Along with my recently developed inclination to use the past as the fantasy of the present, the fact that the piece was intended for a virtuoso player of Gabriel Banat's stature also determined the character of the violin part.
"Music Plus One" was written in the winter months of 1970, and the tape part was realized in the studios of Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center in New York City. (Ilhan Mimaroglu)

Sonata for Violin Solo: [Robert Hall] Lewis's "Sonata" was composed on request from Gabriel Banat for a recital of twentieth-century violin music given at Lincoln Center in June, 1968. The composer writes as follows concerning the work:
"The creation of diverse musical situations and the development of interesting, expressive material were foremost in my thinking during the period when I composed the 'Sonata'. Thus strong, dramatic statements are sometimes found in juxtaposition to short phrases of quiet, more restrained mood; strummed four-note chords later give rise to passages of driving staccato character. In the 'Sonata', as in my other recent works, the basic method is that of elaborating a few musical gestures, which, gradually increase in scope and intensity.
"Originally, the 'Sonata da Chiesa' was an influence in structuring my composition, although as the work progressed, it assumed more flexible characteristics than those of the Baroque prototype. Four contrasting sections form the basis of the 'Sonata', the first of which is slow, in the manner of a 'Fantasia'. A second area, containing more rapid motion, later develops into a frentic 'Scherzando', involving multiple stopping, left hand pizzicato and saltando bowing. Expansive lyricism is primary in the third section, wherein a semi-contrapuntal texture in the upper register is achieved. A brief cadenza leads into the final 'Allegro Moderato', with its sharply profiled theme. Following some development, materials from previous sections are either alluded to or re-stated in literal form. The 'Sonata' concludes 'Meno Mosso' with the quiet dissolution of a six-note motive."

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. William Sydeman - Duo for Violin and Piano {22:27}

Side 2

1. Ilhan Mimaroglu - Music Plus One for Violin Solo and Electromagnetic Tape {10:31}

2. Robert Hall Lewis - Sonata for Violin Solo {11:49}

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Viewpoint


various artists compilation - Viewpoint: Works from BEAST Vol. 3

BEAST (Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre) is an organisation dedicated to the highest standards of public presentation of electroacoustic music and sonic art. Founded by Jonty Harrison in 1982, it came to international attention when it provided the concert sound system for the 1990 International Computer Music Conference in Glasgow. It has played in events and festivals all over the UK and has made a number of appearances in mainland Europe, most recently in Berlin for the Inventionen Festival. BEAST is based in the Department of Music at the University of Birmingham and has a close relationship with Birmingham Contemporary Music Group.
Composers associated with BEAST, predominantly those who work or have worked in the Electroacoustic Music Studios (at the University of the Birmingham), have won international prizes and have been commissioned by leading studios and performers; many are now teaching the next generation of composers and sound artists. Their individual aesthetics are united by a common desire to explore the vast potential of the electroacoustic medium and to bring this to the ear of the listening public.
Audio samples of pieces by BEAST composers, and details of forthcoming events can be found on their website.

About this compilation:

Aldeburgh beach is a viewpoint. What you see is the sea and an English beach. But what does it look like on the other side? What are the beaches like along the opposite coastline? BEAST gives you a sonic impression of what you would be able to see if the conditions were different.
You are invited to take a seat in one of the eight compartments facing coastal points of different European countries along the North Sea coast. Listen to eight BEAST composers presenting their works and letting you hear more than you can't see. (liner notes)

Tracklisting:

1. Richard Whitelaw - Norway {2:03}

2. Andy Dollerson - Sweden (Bowen, on Skagerrak) {5:04}

3. Iain Armstrong - Holmsland Klit, Denmark {4:07}

4. Michael Wolters - Germany {8:16}

5. Jon Aveyard - Noordwijk, Holland {4:37}

6. David Berezan - Belgium, (The Wall and De Panne) {7:05}

7. Peter Batchelor - France (vis-à-vis) {5:52}

8. Antti Saario - England (G+T - swimmers) {10:47}

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Coral Island


Toru Takemitsu - Coral Island

Toru Takemitsu is one of the best known of the younger group of Japanese composers, his works having been performed widely not only in his native country but also in Europe and in the United States. "I consider him to be one of the outstanding composers of our time," wrote Aaron Copland after a visit to Tokyo in September 1966. "Takemitsu possesses a vivid aural imagination uniquely his own. His music combines a personal sensitivity with a sophisticated and thoroughly contemporary musical technique." Among his recent works is "November Steps" which was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic as part of the celebration of its 125th anniversary.
Born in Tokyo on October 8, 1930, Takemitsu began his composition studies in 1948; as for teachers, Yosuji Kiyose is listed in official biographies, but when questioned by Edward Downes, program annotator for the New York Philharmonic, Takemitsu replied that his teacher is "this daily life, including all of music and nature." He has been strongly influenced by Debussy, Varese and Webern as well as by the traditional music of his own country, and among living composers who interest him especially are John Cage, Yannis Xenakis, Roger Reynolds, Yuji Takahashi and Toshi Ichiyanagi. Since early in his career Takemitsu has been in the forefront of the avant-garde movement, and in Tokyo in 1951 with Toshiro Mayuzumi and others of his generation he organized the Experimental Laboratory, with the aim of combining traditional Japanese music with modern serial techniques. Takemitsu's own catalog includes three electronic works in addition to orchestral works, chamber music and film music.

CORAL ISLAND
Composed in 1962, this work consists of five parts, in two of which the soprano sings poems by Makoto Ohka. It is a composition concerned with the relationship between the forces of reality and the abstract in both life and music. It is a kaleidoscope of coloristic images in word and sound.

WATER MUSIC
Of this work Takemitsu has written as follows: "When I see and listen to flowing water it reminds me of an old Japanese word, Tao [Chinese religion-philosophy Taoism]. I may have received some influence from Voltaire's thought. My image of tao [road] is not a continuous road but just many dots."
The work was composed in 1960 with a musique concrete method by Takemitsu and a recording engineer, Junosuke Okuyama. All sound elements are sounds of water drops. Each water-drop sound is changed and given rhythm by manipulating the recorder. "Water Music" was composed on a tape and then arranged into stereophonic sound. Listeners will experience a poetic feeling of stillness, motion, space and time. These spaces and times are not the same as those in physics. They are rhythm of nature and time of mind.

VOCALISM AI (Love)
A 72-hour tape-montage of ai (a Japanese word meaning love) has been condensed into a 4-minute 9-second Ai. The sound elements are the voices of one woman and one man. They repeat ai many times in different pronunciations, with various intonations and different speeds. The work was composed on a tape by manipulating the recorder and using a montage method. (liner notes)

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. Coral Island {16:22}
performers: Mutsumi Masuda - soprano; Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Hiroshi Wakasugi - conductor

Side 2

1. Water Music {9:40}

2. Vocalism Ai (Love) {4:05}

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Evolutions and Contrasts


Henk Badings and Dick Raaijmakers - Evolutions and Contrasts

Equipment and instruments used:

CAPRICCIO: violin, 12 oscillators
GENESE: 5 audio-frequency oscillators
EVOLUTIONS: sine wave generators, sawtooth generator, noise generator, pulse generators, modulators, filters, reverberation apparatus, concrete sound sources
CONTRASTS: the electronic part of the Ondes Martenot, pulse generator with resonance circuits, noise generator, octave- and half octave-filters

About the music:

CAPRICCIO: The "Capriccio" for violin and two (electromagnetic) sound tracks was composed in 1952, and was first performed in the same year at the Gravesano (Switzerland) Music Festival. The violin part was played by Joke Vermeulen, who is also the soloist in this recording. The work represents one of the first attempts to combine a traditional instrument with electronic music. The accompaniment was realized exclusively with twelve oscillators.
This Capriccio is really a miniature violin concerto with an introduction, a whimsical principal movement, a slow movement, and a finale which contains virtuoso passages. However, although the work falls into four sections, the music is continuous. (Henk Badings)

GENESE: "Genese" was composed in 1958, and performed for the first time at a concert of experimental music during the World Exhibition in Brussels. The sounds were formed exclusively through the use of five audio-frequency oscillators, each apparatus capable of producing a single harmonic vibration.
"Genese" comprises three movements: an introduction, a slow movement, and a finale. The introduction is based on two forms of sound, the one low and menacing, the other high, metallic, and flashing.
...
The original composition was realized in four sound tracks. When these are played through loudspeakers, one in each of the four corners of a hall, the sound flows spatially round the listener. In this recording the sound flow has been reduced to two components.
...
Like "Evolutions" and "Capriccio", "Genese" was realized by me with the technical assistance of Dick Raaijmakers in Philips' physics laboratory, Eindhoven. (Henk Badings)

EVOLUTIONS: "Evolutions" is a suite of short electronic pieces whose elements of contrast on the one hand and of relationship and integrated development on the other render them well suited to serve as ballet music. They were composed in 1958, and performed in the same year by the Hanover Opera Ballet to a choreography by Yvonne Georgi.
...
The most remarkable feature of performances of "Evolutions" has perhaps been that this electronic music, sounding from loudspeakers, has had to compete with music played by a symphony orchestra. This was the case, for example, in Rome and Vienna. In Vienna it was performed in the State Opera House, a place rich in venerable traditions. The discussions beforehand in the Viennese press left no doubt as to the expectations. "Entehrung der heiligen Hallen" )"desecration of the sacred halls"), ran some of the headlines; but the evening of March 24, 1959, passed otherwise. Press and public voted in favor of electronic music, not in favor of the Vienna Philharmonic. "This fantastic-sounding and fantastically-danced vision of the future received, to the surprise of all, tempestuous applause from the conservative Viennese opera audience, and was undoubtedly the most important event of this season at the Vienna State Opera." This opinion of one critic represented the verdict of the majority...
Another notable fact appears from this review: opinions of the other works on the program were sometimes rather doubtful, but opinions of "Evolutions" were either decidedly positive or, in a few case, decidedly negative.
The entire apparratus of the studio of Philips' physics laboratory at Eindhoven was used in the composition of "Evolutions". (Henk Badings)

CONTRASTS: "Contrasts" (the original title, "Tweeklank", literally means "Two-note-chord") is based on the mutual opposition of contrasting musical quantities such as sound, rhythm and dramatic forms. It consists of a first movement written in conventional style and a second movement constructed as a "typical" electronic play of rhythm and sound, without either harmonic or melodic properties. (Dick Raaijmakers)

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. Henk Badings - Capriccio for Violin and Two Sound Tracks {7:21}

2. Henk Badings - Genese {9:53}

Side 2

1. Henk Badings - Evolutions-Ballet Suite: Overture {2:15}

2. Henk Badings - Evolutions-Ballet Suite: Air {2:23}

3. Henk Badings - Evolutions-Ballet Suite: Ragtime {3:28}

4. Henk Badings - Evolutions-Ballet Suite: Intermezzo {1:28}

5. Henk Badings - Evolutions-Ballet Suite: Waltz {2:13}

6. Henk Badings - Evolutions-Ballet Suite: Finale {1:37}

7. Dick Raaijmakers - Contrasts {4:48}

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Monday, December 15, 2008

Bernstein Conducts Music of Our Time Vol. 2


various artists compilation - Leonard Bernstein Conducts Music of Our Time Vol. 2

performed by the New York Philharmonic

released in 1967 or 1968

Lukas Foss on "Phorion": "Phorion" is the Greek word for stolen goods. The idea for this composition came to me one summer night in 1966, while asleep. I had been working on my "Cello Concerto for Rostropovich" of which the last movement is based on a Bach Sarabande. In my dream I heard (or saw) torrents of Baroque sixteenth notes washed ashore by ocean waves, sucked in again, returning, ad infinitum. This rather basic dream-vision only began to interest me when, upon awakening, the technical realization of my dream suddenly became clear to me in terms of a composition: Groups of instruments play and keep playing, inaudibly, tonelessly. Only when called upon by the conductor do they emerge for a moment, then submerge again into inaudibility on another conductorial sign. These signals are given at different moments to different instruments or groups of instruments and in varying order, so that even the conductor cannot keep track of the point at which a certain instrument will have arrived at its inaudible rendition when he calls upon it to emerge.
I decided to use (borrow, steal) the Prelude from the solo violin "Partita in E" by Bach. I also decided to use normal strings, organ, (preferably electronic since the fading in and out is characteristic of electronic instruments), an electronically amplified harpsichord or electric piano and an amplified harp or electric guitar.
My score is made out of the Bach Prelude in every detail; the Bach piece is used as if no other notes were available. This purism of technique seemed to me essential lest the piece deteriorate into a melange or potpourri.

Liner notes explain "Crescendo e diminuendo" by Edison Denisov: Although Mr. Denisov considers himself an heir to the tradition of Shostakovich and Prokofiev, he has been influenced also by Stravinsky, Nono and Boulez. Mr. Denisov is regarded as one of the bolder innovators among present-day Russian composers and has used both aleatory and serial techniques in certain scores. His "Crescendo e diminuendo" was written primarily for his personal pleasure, and he does not consider it to be entirely representative of his musical style. The score calls for only thirteen instruments: harpsichord, 6 violins, 3 violas, 2 cellos and double bass, and is only partly written out in musical notation. Part is in graph form. Within the limits of what has been written, a good deal is left to the discretion of the conductor or individual players.
The final bar of "Crescendo e diminuendo" is dated April 18, 1965, Moscow.

Gunther Schuller supplies information about "Triplum": "Triplum" was a term used in Medieval and early-Renaissance music to describe a three-voiced composition. The term is used in the present work to describe the constant division of the orchestra into its three primary components or 'voices': the woodwinds, the brass, the strings. The instruments of each of these choirs are combined collectively into various types of structures, each choir then being used individually to delineate certain structural levels or layers. These structures may vary in type - polyphonic, homophonic or heterophonic, to name but the simplest examples - and may occur simultaneously in three separate register levels or may follow each other in succession, or various combinations thereof. Most of these structures are relatively complex, often involving all members of, for example, the woodwind group - there are twelve - or all eleven brass instruments, and so on. Insofar as these choirs are represented by densely woven structures, it is suggested that the listener - particularly on a first hearing - try to hear these structures as a totality, and not try to follow individual instrument lines.
...
"Triplum" is scored for 3 flutes (2 interchangeable with piccolo), 2 oboes, 1 English horn, 2 clarinets (1 interchangeable with basset horn), bass clarinet, 3 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, 1 tuba, 1 harp, celesta, organ, piano, xylophone, glockenspiel, marimba, kettledrums and other percussion, and the usual strings.

Tracklisting:

Side 1

1. Lukas Foss - Phorion {9:58}

2. Edison Denisov - Crescendo e diminuendo {6:06}

Side 2

1. Gunther Schuller - Triplum {16:45}

Bernstein Conducts Music of Our Time


various artists compilation - Leonard Bernstein Conducts Music of Our Time

performed by the New York Philharmonic

additional performers on "Improvisations for Orchestra and Jazz Soloists": Don Ellis - trumpet; Barre Phillips - bass; Joe Cocuzzo - drums

released in 1965

Part of the excitement of living in the mid-twentieth century is our fever for exploration. Outer space, inner space, the cosmos, the atom, the intellectual realm of mathematics and the intuitive world of music: all our worlds are expanding with the speed of an interplanetary missle, a speed both exhilarating and frightening.
As recently as 1950, neo-classicism seemed to dominate contemporary music. Yet, barely seven years later, Robert Craft could declare that a majority of the youngest West European musicians, having embraced serialism, now characterized their time as "the age of Webern." And that age had hardly been named before it was over. Important serial music continued to be written, of course, but the excitement of exploration shifted to a still newer wave of composers, for whom serial procedures were a stale formula. Electronic music (including musique concrete) and chance music lured a whole platoon of composers. Many explored musical styles in which form and constructive methods lost their importance, and interest shifted to sheer physical sound, acoustical "events," in a striking parallel to the optical "events" of current "pop" art.
It is a striking fact that the three works in this album, by György Ligeti (born 1923), Morton Feldman (born 1926), and Larry Austin (born 1930), were all composed in the year 1961.
In a way, György Ligeti's "Atmospheres" is the most conservative of the three, for it is the only one completely composed by the composer. Commissioned by the Southwest German Radio of Baden-Baden, it was first performed at Donaueschingen on October 22, 1961, under the direction of Hans Rosbaud. Ligeti, who was born in Hungary and now lives in Vienna, writes of his music: "My personal development began with serial music, but today I have passed beyond serialism. In 'Atmospheres', I have attempted to supersede the structural approach to music which once, in turn, superseded the motivic-thematic approach, and to establish a new textural concept of music. . . . This so-to-speak informal music is embodied in a new type of orchestral sound: the sonorous texture is so dense that the individual interwoven instrumental voices are absorbed into the general texture, and completely lose their individuality. This is the reason for the unusual format of the orchestral score, which is noted on eighty-seven staves, since the string instruments are written completely divisi, that is, with an individual part for each player."
Morton Feldman's "Out of 'Last Pieces'" is a more radical work in the sense that it is only partly composed in advance. Such details as pitch and rhythm of the notes are left to the individual orchestral player's discretion. For his new, semi-improvised music, Mr. Feldman had to invent a new system of musical notation. He chose graph paper. "The discovery that sound in itself can be a totally plastic phenomenon, suggesting its own shape, design and poetic metaphor, led me to devise a new system of graphic notation," writes Mr. Feldman. "'Out of 'Last Pieces'' (1961) was written on coordination paper, with each box equal to mm. 80 [or one-eightieth of a minute]. The number of sounds to be played within each box is given, with the player entering on or within the duration of each box. Dynamics throughout are very low. The amplified guitar, harp, celesta, vibraphone, and xylophone may choose sounds from any register. All other sounds are played in the high registers of the instruments, except for brief sections in which low sounds are indicated."
Larry Austin's "Improvisations for Orchestra and Jazz Soloists" is based in part on the popular American tradition of jazz improvisation and the jam session. Composed in June, 1961, it was first performed in May, 1962, during the first International Jazz Festival held in Washington, D.C. Discussing his aim, Mr. Austin writes: "At strategic points throughout the work are brief moments in which individual performers - at times orchestral, at times jazz, at times both - invent rhythmic designs on given pitches within specified spans of time. I believe this 'uncontrolled' element injects moments of creative tension in the work not readily obtained in a situation completely controlled by the composer. I strive to involve the performer and the listener in active music making." The work is divided into three connected sections: the first based on variants of the traditional twelve-bar blues, the second a slow blues, and the third based on a Charleston-like rhythm.
The most radical of the four pieces on this disc, "Four Improvisations by the Orchestra," was composed at the moment of the recording. In other words, it is almost one hundred percent improvised. "The orchestra and I are going to compose on the spot," said Leonard Bernstein to the audience in Philharmonic Hall, when he and the orchestra first improvised in public. "Nothing has been fixed or decided upon in advance except two or three signals for starting and stopping. Otherwise, every note you hear will have been spontaneously invented by the New York Philharmonic, with its conductor serving only as a kind of general guide, or policeman. Here is the New York Philharmonic's 'Improvisation No. 1,' which has never been played before, and never will be again."
The New York Philharmonic's "Improvisations Nos. 2, 3 and 4" were heard at succeeding concerts at Philharmonic Hall. The "Improvisations" on this disc bears no number. Like the earlier Philharmonic improvisations, this had never been heard before the moment of recording and, by its nature, it can never be performed again. (Edward Downes)

Tracklisting:

Side I

1. György Ligeti - Atmosphères {6:38}

2. Morton Feldman - Out of "Last Pieces" {10:34}

Side II

1. Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic - Four Improvisations by the Orchestra: I {0:55}

2. Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic - Four Improvisations by the Orchestra: II {1:51}

3. Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic - Four Improvisations by the Orchestra: III {1:29}

4. Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic - Four Improvisations by the Orchestra: IV {2:19}

5. Larry Austin - Improvisations for Orchestra and Jazz Soloists {11:51}

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Sunday, December 14, 2008

Song of the Whales


Nature's Relaxing Sounds - Song of the Whales

It's Sunday which means it's time for some music from Mother Nature.
There's not any background information on this CD. I'm guessing that the whales on this CD are humpback whales. That's what they sound like to me. So relax and enjoy.

Tracklisting:

1. Song of the Whales {60:00}

Friday, December 12, 2008

Music of Harry Partch and John Cage


Harry Partch and John Cage - Music of Harry Partch and John Cage


I received this in the form of a CD-R some time ago. There is not much information about this that came with the CD-R. What I know is that this is ripped from an LP copy that has Partch's music on one side and Cage's music on the other side. David Tudor performed on the piano on Cage's pieces. Partch's pieces are songs with Harry himself on vocals accompanied by instruments that Partch built. The LP was originally released in 1978.

Tracklisting:

Side One

All tracks on side one by Harry Partch.

1. The Rose {1:33}

2. The Wind {1:34}

3. The Waterfall {1:02}

4. The Intruder {1:09}

5. I am a Peach Tree {1:23}

6. A Midnight Farewell {1:16}

7. Before the Cask of Wine {2:10}

8. The Street {2:39}

9. The Dreamer That Remains {10:16}

Side Two

All tracks on side two by John Cage.

1. Music of Changes Part III {10:16}

2. Music of Changes Part IV {11:42}


Thursday, December 11, 2008

Dhyanam Meditation: South Indian Vocal Music


K. V. Narayanaswamy, Palghat Raghu, V. V. Subramaniam and Sarota Balasubramaniam - Dhyanam Meditation: South Indian Vocal Music

companion release to this


performers:

K. V. Narayanaswamy - vocals
Palghat Raghu - mridangam
V.V. Subramaniam - violin
Sarota Balasubramaniam - tambura



Although founded upon the same underlying principles as the Hindustani classical music of northern India, the South Indian or Carnatic system is distinct and has been so since at least the Medieval period. Carnatic music is essentially vocal and the artist's performance could be described as an elaborate improvisation based upon an equally elaborate repertoire of art songs in complex forms. The vina player, flutist, or other instrumental soloist has no separate repertoire; he simply plays songs and improvises upon them according to the nature of his instrument. The vocal music contained in this album, then, is at the very heart and core of the Carnatic tradition, one of the most highly evolved and prestigious in the world of music. (Robert Brown, liner notes)

Tracklisting:

Side One

1. Kriti: Sabhapatikku {4:01}

2. Kriti: Raghuvaranannu {13:47}

Side Two

1. Kriti: Gopalaka Pahimam {9:27}

2. Javali: Marulukonnadira {4:41}

3. Tillana: Ni Ri Ni Ri Ga Ma {3:13}

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Music of Bali: Gamelan Gender Wayang



Wayan Loceng and Ketut Balik - Music of Bali: Gamelan Gender Wayang

recorded in Sukawati, Bali

Bali, one of the over thirteen thousand islands in the Republic of Indonesia, is a tiny island paradise that celebrates daily life through the arts. The Balinese calendar is packed with one occasion after another for festivity. The village of Sukawati, where this recording was made, is typical. Almost every night the sounds of the large gamelan orchestra can be heard, sweeping through the air like an intoxicating fragrance. Either in performance, with dancers or actors, or rehearsing for some celebration soon to come, the local gamelan is likely to be heard late into the night. The men of each neighborhood within a village form a club around the large ensemble of metallophones and gongs that is the Gamelan Gong most familiar to Western listeners. Not necessarily specialized musicians, the players come from all walks of life, rice farmer to village prince.

Additionally, in Sukawati one is likely to hear the sounds of a quite different, more specialized small gamelan ensemble, the gender wayang, which consists of either one or two pairs of instruments. Sukawati is famous for its tradition of the wayang, or shadow play, and its music. The two musicians recorded here are acclaimed masters of their instruments, musical specialists and teachers that are widely sought after by students of the gender in Bali and around the world.

Typically, a shadow play begins long after the sun has set, perhaps as late as ten or eleven o'clock, and often lasts for four or more hours. The dalang, or shadow-puppet master, weaves an intricate story derived from various parts of the great Hindu epics, the Mahabhrarata or Ramayana. Most likely capable of presenting one of over fifty stories from memory, he will mix jokes about local events into the ongoing tale of the forces of Good and Evil.

As the dalang skillfully moves the flat leather puppets, the shadows they project onto the screen appear to move as if alive, and the well-known characters dance, clown around, plot against one another, get swept away in romances, run about and fight fierce battles as the forces of Good ultimately defeat Evil.

Sitting behind the screen with the dalang is the gamelan gender wayang. Although one of the smallest gamelans in Bali, the two or four players are able to produce music equal in richness and complexity to the much larger gamelans. The music of the gender wayang is melodically and rhythmically complicated and intricate, and the gender is acclaimed to be one of the most demanding instruments on the island.

Each player must play a separate melody in each hand, and these two melodies can be very synchopated and rhythmically independent. Melodies are often distributed between two players so each performer has to precisely fit small melodic fragments into the complementary, interlocking and sometimes overlapping fragments that are played by the other performer. The high degree of skill that gender players are respected for is especially demonstrated when the melodic fragments exist in both hands at once, quite independent of one another.

The instrument gender wayang is very portable, consisting of a modest frame, ten bronze bars and bamboo resonators. The bars are struck with stylized wooden hammers, round disks placed on the ends of thin tapered handles. Each instrument has two octaves of the five-note slendro scale, and each set of instruments seems to have a unique version of slendro tuning, different from any other set of instruments. Either one or two pairs of gender form an ensemble, with the second pair an octave higher. Corresponding notes from the different instruments are systematically mistuned, to create the pulsating, shimmering sound of this gamelan. (liner notes)

Tracklisting:

Side One

1. Pemungkah {20:31}

Side Two

1. Sekar Ginot {8:14}

2. Pena Kawan Malen Merdah {4:08}

3. Sekar Sungsang, tua {4:45}

4. Sekati {7:19}

Monday, December 8, 2008

Makrokosmos Vol. 1 & 2


George Crumb - Makrokosmos Vol. 1 & 2

Laurie Hudicek - piano

There's a lot of recordings of Makrokosmos Vol. 1 & 2 out there and I may post a few of the other versions later. Laurie Hudicek's performance is highly regarded as one of the better ones and while I have not heard all of them, I also agree that this is one of the top performances of this piece.

Although composed fairly recently (1972/73), George Crumb's two volumes of Makrokosmos: Twelve fantasy-pieces after the zodiac for amplified piano have proven to be hallmark compositions of 20th century solo piano music. These monumental works, 24 pieces after the zodiac, are tackled by relatively few artists in the music world today. For not only do these pieces stretch the imagination and test the technique of the performer, they also reach beyond the realm of certainty, beyond that which is concrete and comfortable, and beyond the security of the keyboard.
...
It is commonly known that these pieces are written after the zodiac. Each of the twelve pieces from both sets has a descriptive title, a zodiac symbol, and explicit instructions indicating the mood of the work, making these pieces, in the romantic sense, character pieces. For example: from Volume II: Ghost-Nocturne: for the Druids of Stonehenge (Night-Spell II) Virgo Dark, fantasmic, subliminal. Even in his titles Crumb shows us that his music is "larger than life," in that it isn't confined to the world in which we live. It makes us feel small at times, which adds to the discomfort of some listeners. There are sounds in these pieces that are not only foreign to the piano, but are sounds we might not even find in nature, sounds that may only exist in space or in our childhood fantasy-world, sound hallucinations.
In the above movement Crumb has the performer use glass tumblers to bend the pitch of the piano by having them move the glasses slowly along the strings while pressing firmly on them and playing the keys. Not only is the sound exotic, but also the technique is not a pianistic one. This remains true for most of the other techniques Crumb employs, such as strumming, plucking, muting, scraping, and hitting the strings, as well as using other objects such as paper, chains, a wire brush, thimbles, and plectrums. The techniques are far different from those used in most keyboard literature today.
Among the most mesmerizing of Crumb's departures from the keyboard are the vocal parts. The pianist is required to sing, chant, whisper, moan, hiss, and whistle, which, for some, is a feat in itself. However, Crumb asks for the pianist to do this while playing both on the keys and strings. From Volume 1, Night-Spell I Sagittarius has the pianist whistling extensively, and the final section requires playing on the keys, plucking the strings, and whistling a traditional tune simultaneously. Techniques are no longer limited to the tone control of the fingers, but also include the shape of the lips and breath control, and phrasing inside the piano. (liner notes)




Tracklisting:

1. Primeval Sounds (Genesis 1) [Cancer] {4:20}

2. Proteus [Pisces] {1:16}

3. Pastorale (from the Kingdom of Atlantis, ca. 10,000 B.C.) [Taurus] {2:07}

4. Crucifixus [Symbol] [Capricorn] {2:38}

5. The Phantom Gondolier [Scorpio] {2:45}

6. Night-Spell I [Sagittarius] {3:48}

7. Music of Shadows (for Aeolian Harp) [Libra] {2:50}

8. The Magic Circle of Infinity (Moto perpetuo) [Symbol] [Leo] {1:49}

9. The Abyss of Time [Virgo] {2:30}

10. Spring-Fire [Aries] {1:44}

11. Dream Images (Love-Death Music) [Gemini] {4:09}

12. Spiral Galaxy [Symbol] [Aquarius] {2:50}

13. Morning Music (Genesis II) [Cancer] {3:00}

14. The Mystic Chord [Sagittarius] {2:47}

15. Rain-Death Variations [Pisces] {1:41}

16. Twin Suns (Doppleganger aus der Ewigkeit) [Symbol] [Gemini] {3:21}

17. Ghost-Nocturne: for the Druids of Stonehenge (Night-Spell II) [Virgo] {1:52}

18. Gargoyles [Taurus] {1:22}

19. Tora! Tora! Tora! (Cadenza Apocalittica) [Scorpio] {2:33}

20. A Prophecy of Nostradamus [Symbol] [Aries] {3:49}

21. Cosmic Wind [Libra] {1:55}

22. Voices from "Corona Borealis" [Aquarius] {3:31}

23. Litany of the Galactic Bells [Leo] {2:36}

24. Agnus Dei [Symbol] [Capricorn] {3:47}

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Sunday, December 7, 2008

Environments 5 [cassette]


Syntonic Research, Inc. - Environments 5 [cassette]

Syntonic Research, Inc. released some cassettes in addition to LPs. It may be confusing that Environments 5 on cassette has crickets where Environments 5 on LP has heartbeat sounds and leaves blowing in the wind (posted earlier in this blog, BTW). The Environments cassettes are a different series from the LPs though I believe that the first 2 or 3 cassette releases are the same as the LPs. Enjoy the chirps of the crickets (which are male crickets singing to attract females) as they will most likely wither and die as winter is coming on (here in the northern hemisphere).

These are crickets, perfectly recorded with all the complexity and syncopation of nature's whims. The sounds seem to be coming from a great distance and nearby, yet you can't really say where they are, as this sound in stereo truly fools the mind. Since crickets are essentially a single, specific frequency, the sound is transparent, aiding conversation without interference, transforming a darkened room into an unspoiled pasture or meadow, where one can find peace.

Tracklisting:

1. Crickets {28:55}

Note: Both sides of the cassette are the same. It was done this way for continuous playback. To get continuous playback with the file, just activate "repeat" on your player of choice.

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Saturday, December 6, 2008

And on the Seventh Day Petals Fell in Petaluma



Harry Partch - And on the Seventh Day Petals Fell in Petaluma

In recalling the circumstances that gave rise to the composition of And on the Seventh Day Petals Fell in Petaluma, Partch refers to one of his sabbatical returns to California: "I had been away from the part of the world I generally consider home for six years. In the seventh year I found a studio in the unused Pioneer Hatchery in Petaluma, California. However sentimental or Oriental that may sound, the fact remains: it was the time of falling petals, and this music followed."
"The work consists ," notes Partch, "of twenty-three one minute duets and trios, which later - through electronic synthesis - become ten quartets and quintets, and a concluding septet."


 
Although it would appear that "Petals" stands as one of Harry Partch's rare essays in so-called "absolute" music, such is by no means the case. For, speaking of the instruments here and the melodic-rhythmic sonority textures they produce, he observes further: "The instruments used in this work were incubated in a world of their own, almost totally. And the sounds which enliven the audio aspect of their being have become the musical sinews of a larger concept, a full-blown integration - Delusion of the Fury-a ritual of Dream and Delusion - as yet unperformed, unseen, unheard. Here, in the notes to that larger work, nothing is elaborated, nothing is 'developed'. An idea is stated in sparest form, and abandoned. Another idea is stated in sparest form, and abandoned."



In another communication to this writer, Partch has summed up his attitude toward his own work, of which Delusion of the Fury is the culmination: "The work that I have been doing these many years parallels much in the attitudes and actions of primitive man. He found sound-magic in the common materials around him. He then proceeded to make the vehicle, the instrument, as visually beautiful as he could. Finally, he involved the sound-magic and the visual beauty in his everyday words and experiences, his ritual and drama, in order to lend greater meaning to his life.
"This is my trinity: sound-magic, visual beauty, experience-ritual."

The following scheme indicates the order of the thirty-four verses comprising And on the Seventh Day Petals Fell in Petaluma, together with the instruments used. Verses (24 through 34) are composites generated through over-dubbings of the first twenty-three verses: 1/2 - 3/4 - 5/6 - 7/8 - 9/10 - 11/12 - 13/14 - 15/16 - 17/18 - 19/20 - 21/22/23. Verses 1 to 17 are on Side One of the disc; Verses 18 through 34 are on Side Two. (liner notes)



Performed by the Gate 5 Ensemble.

Tracklisting:

All tracks are around a minute long.

1. Verse 1 [Zymo-Xyl and Crychord]

2. Verse 2 [Surrogate Kithara and Bass Marimba]

3. Verse 3 [Harmonic Canon I and Blue Rainbow]

4. Verse 4 [Chromeleodeon II and Koto]

5. Verse 5 [Mazda Marimba and Boo]

6. Verse 6 [Cloud-Chamber Bowls and Diamond Marimba]

7. Verse 7 [Chromelodeon II, Bloboy and Kithara II]

8. Verse 8 [Zymo-Xyl and Spoils of War]

9. Verse 9 [Harmonic Canon I and Kithara I]

10. Verse 10 [Diamond Marimba and Boo]

11. Verse 11 [Kithara II and Marimba Eroica]

12. Verse 12 [Koto and Spoils of War]

13. Verse 13 [Harmonic Canon I and Cloud-Chamber Bowls]

14. Verse 14 [Surrogate Kithara and Diamond Marimba]

15. Verse 15 [Chromelodeon I and Kithara I]

16. Verse 16 [Koto and Castor & Pollux]

17. Verse 17 [Adapted Guitar II and Mazda Marimba]

18. Verse 18 [Harmonic Canon I and Marimba Eroica]

19. Verse 19 [Drone Devils, Gubagubi and Castor & Pollux]

20. Verse 20 [Koto and Crychord]

21. Verse 21 [Spoils of War and Bass Marimba]

22. Verse 22 [Chromelodeon I and Boo]

23. Verse 23 [Zymo-Xyl, Blue Rainbow, Gourd Tree and Cone Gongs]

24. Verse 24 [Zymo-Xyl, Crychord, Surrogate Kithara and Bass Marimba]

25. Verse 25 [Harmonic Canon I, Blue Rainbow, Chromeleodeon II and Koto]

26. Verse 26 [Mazda Marimba, Boo, Cloud-Chamber Bowls and Diamond Marimba]

27. Verse 27 [Chromelodeon II, Bloboy, Kithara II, Zymo-Xyl and Spoils of War]

28. Verse 28 [Harmonic Canon I, Kithara I, Diamond Marimba and Boo]

29. Verse 29 [Kithara II, Marimba Eroica, Koto and Spoils of War]

30. Verse 30 [Harmonic Canon I, Cloud-Chamber Bowls, Surrogate Kithara and Diamond Marimba]

31. Verse 31 [Chromelodeon I, Kithara I, Koto and Castor & Pollux]

32. Verse 32 [Adapted Guitar II, Mazda Marimba, Harmonic Canon I and Marimba Eroica]

33. Verse 33 [Drone Devils, Gubagubi, Castor & Pollux, Koto and Crychord]

34. Verse 34 [Spoils of War, Bass Marimba, Chromelodeon I, Boo, Zymo-Xyl, Blue Rainbow, Gourd Tree and Cone Gongs]

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