finds (3)

1) A new experimental music series in Chicago called aperiodic that starts off this Sunday with a concert of works by Antoine Beuger, John Lely, Kunsu Shim, Laura Steenberge, and John Cage.

2) I would love to see these fibers come onto the market, and I wonder what musicians might do with it.

3) Documentation of a day-long event in Chile centered on the works of Antoine Beuger and Michael Pisaro.

4) A thought-provoking article by Taku Sugimoto that relates to experimental music and improvisation called Two Worlds.

5) The first two releases on Michael Pisaro’s new CD label, Gravity Wave: ricefall (2) and July Mountain. Erstdist is the distributor.

6) MusikFabrik’s new blog, which includes a fascinating post by Marco Blaauw on his development of the quarter-tone, double bell trumpet.

7) I’ve never seen anything like this documentation of the Week 1 of Samstagsdemos neuer Musik. And there are four more Saturday events yet to come.

8) another timbre has released a series of CDs called silence and after 1.

All the cd’s in this series can be seen as part of that horizon of possibilities that Cage’s work opened up. But ‘Silence and after’ could also refer to what has been called the ‘turn to silence’ within improvised music that occurred almost simultaneously in several cities round the world about 12 years ago. All the improvised discs in this series take their place in the wake of that quiet revolution, though it is open to question how much of the music on the cd’s is ‘improvised’ in a strict sense. The music may not be notated, but much of it was carefully prepared, or semi-structured, or re-worked after the event. Similarly all of the nominally composed works in the series involve varying degrees of interpretation / improvisation by the performers.

Donaueschinger Musiktage 2010 (3/3)—Peter Ablinger: Wachstum und Massenmord

I knew something was up when I saw the members of the JACK quartet fold their scores back to break bindings that had obviously still been intact a moment before. They started discussing rehearsal techniques for the piece. In the first moments the audience seemed not to know what to make of it. After a minute or so, we began to realize that what we were seeing and hearing was not a performance of the score, but a first rehearsal of the piece. The audience started to laugh. I don’t remember laughing, myself. I was thinking about how appropriate it was that on this day of the festival that was all about the string quartet, this performance situation revealed a crucial aspect of the string quartet that is usually hidden onstage: how they work together. You can see in any performance how they play together, but how do they get there? To me, it’s one of the most interesting aspects of such a tight ensemble. So while at first I was in a “where’s the piece” frame of mind, I started to appreciate the listening opportunity for itself. But after about seven minutes, the audience turned, and it was no longer about the quartet or the piece or the performance situation, but about the audience. Some audience members started clapping, shouting “bravo!” and being otherwise disruptive to get the quartet to end the performance. In the first performance (each quartet, Arditti, Diotima, and JACK, performed their own program three times), the JACK quartet made an exit once they were drowned out by applause. The performance instructions indicate that they are to stop once they acknowledge the audience. In their second performance, they kept going, seemingly oblivious to the clapping, the “thank you” spoken condescendingly in English from the audience, and the overall atmosphere of contempt for the piece. They let the noise die down, played through some minutes longer, and then said something like, “Okay, let’s wrap it up.”

The fact that there is still so much to remember, say, discuss, and question about Peter Ablinger‘s Wachstum und Massenmord several weeks later is a sure sign of, at the least, an interesting piece. I’ll try to at least present and amplify some of the many questions it raised for me.

Is this performance situation inherently theatrical? Can an instruction to make a rehearsal non-theatrical actually make it less so? Does the quartet end up substituting a performance of a rehearsal for a performance of a piece?

Not long after this event, I met a friend at the Frankfurt Zoo. When we got to the primates building, I realized that I had stepped into a perfect analogy. The monkeys were with their families, and in something like their normal habitat. Their job was simply to go on being monkeys. The string quartet was assembled with their instruments, music stands, pencils, metronome, scores. They were to operate as a rehearsing string quartet. The elephant in the room (to confuse the analogy with another zoo-related image) is that behind an actual or virtual wall of glass were a bunch of people watching. They had no reason to trust those people. They are mostly strangers. Would they do the same things once the audience leaves and there is no one watching them? The Observer Effect compounds the whole situation all over again.

How much entitlement does an audience have to affect the performance? How much will they do that in one culture vs. another? Is it an issue of geographical location or the sub-culture of a festival like Donaueschingen?

I’m almost completely sure that this event would never play out this way in the US. It’s also worth taking into account that the audience had a high proportion of composers in it, and that there is a further sub-culture that builds around many of the people who go to the festival year after year.

Normally I enjoy the idea of extending the performance space beyond the stage, extending the agency beyond the performers and into the audience. But in this case it became an outright power play. In an early performance of the piece, a few scattered individuals applauded or said “bravo” to tell the quartet, okay, the piece should be over now. In later performances, larger groups of the audience, I would guess ten people at minimum, began to clap in rhythm to drown out the sound of the quartet. Where will attention be focused? On the belligerent audience members, or on the understated rehearsal going on onstage? It’s undeniable that the piece is provocative. But whose decision is it when to end? The composer’s, or the quartet’s, or the audience’s? In this case it was up to the performers. So long as they did not acknowledge the audience, they could keep going. But certain members of the audience did virtually everything in their power, short of storming the stage, to bring the performance/piece/event/rehearsal to a close. What was going on? I can’t speak for anyone else, but no one is keeping me from speculating. I don’t think it was an outright lack of patience. I doubt that there was anyone present who had not sat through 20 minutes of rehearsal of one kind or another before. I think it was an objection to the premise. One possible objection would be that the premise of the piece was artificial. Based on my zoo analogy, I’m not at all sure that I disagree. But ironically, the audience could have made the whole situation less artificial by making themselves less apparent. It is a theatrical act to ignore aggression directed at the stage.

How will one quartet treat the performance as compared to another? Is that a function of how they normally rehearse, or of how they relate to the audience? Is it okay for their performance to be impacted by their awareness of the audience? If it is inevitable, where is the line of demarcation between the performance of the piece and the performance for the audience? How much do they need to protect themselves?

It was fascinating to see what the Diotima Quartet did with the Ablinger piece, in contrast with the JACK quartet. They skipped through to different spots in the score, rather than going sequentially. They played up the comic potential of the situation, and had the audience laughing for quite some time. They came onstage for this piece in everyday clothes, rather than wearing the tuxes as in the rest of the concert. Pencils were dropped, and they spoke quite audibly, so that the audience could hear them. The performance was clearly a performance, and I suspect that it had very little to do with how they actually rehearse. This audience had already heard the JACK quartet’s first performance, and it seemed that some people had decided how long they would ‘let’ it last. After a little while, there were one or two waves of a very aggressive effort to get the quartet to stop. The quartet’s virtual bubble had been broken in the first place by their self-protective measure of making the situation more performative, rather than giving the audience insight into an actual rehearsal experience. But to be fair, I’m not sure that I would have wanted this audience to see an actual working process either. It is a very vulnerable situation, under these circumstances. I was quite pleased to see that they did not stop playing on command, but ended more or less on their own terms.

Is it a good piece? Do I like the piece? Is it, in fact, a piece?

Normally, an ensemble will put hours, days, months into the rehearsal of a piece. A performance can be likened to the surface area of the ensemble’s experience of the work. In IEAOV, Ablinger has written about the verticalization of time, “by which a succession of sounds as input become timbre as output.” In this piece, he turns the performative situation inside out. There is no longer any clean surface or linearity. I’d like to be able to talk more about the work itself, but I find myself coming back to the question of what was actually so offensive to much of the audience. Was it the simple fact that we were not offered a performance of a score? Or maybe it was the idea that not much work went into composing the piece. But did we know that? The material sounded promising to me. But the insistence on rehearsing rather than performing the score took away from the audience’s perception of the linearity of the work. That, combined with the audience’s strong reaction, made it nearly impossible to take in much of what was in the score, despite a strong effort. The forces at play in environment were just too strong. I heard the most in the first moments of the first performance, when the audience was disoriented and still docile.

Why have I taken so long to go over this post in particular?

Every time I think about this experience, new questions comes up. Here is the latest set:

Did the piece implicitly give the audience the power to influence it, and did they abuse that power? Did the audience members who made their presences known augment or obstruct the performance? Is the piece intentionally revealing not only aspects of the quartet itself, but of the cultural dynamic at play in the room? Does intention matter, or is all about how it plays out?

Donaueschinger Musiktage 2010 (2/3)—sounding worlds

Two pieces on the final, orchestral concert at the 2010 Donaueschinger Musiktage, though very different from one another, brought up powerful images of landscapes, geographies, topologies. In fact, I can’t think of another musical experience that’s done that more powerfully than either one of these pieces. I might call that great programming. But it could not have been deliberate. Both of these pieces were world premieres. No one, including the composers themselves, could have known just what these pieces would be at the time they were programmed.

James Saunders wrote in the program notes that “‘Geometria situs’ is the Latin term adopted for the study of the geometry of place. This field of mathematics has become known as topology.” At the time I heard the piece live, I had only read the program notes in their German translation, and this point was lost on me. I heard an almost perpetually flickering, unstable quality, a play at the edges but not at the center of each sound. I had the mental image of the sounding body of the orchestra supporting, but not appearing within, what was heard. The clearest analogy might be an aerial view. There are obscuring elements (clouds) and so much detail that it cannot all be taken in. One thing is covered by another, either wholly or partially. And there are many things, both seen and unseen (heard and unheard). A crucial question for me is often, what parameters are at play in a piece? I wrote at the time that it was bold and skilled to make it not about pitch or rhythm, and barely about timbre or texture. Pitch was frequently static, and otherwise moved very slowly. There was little overt rhythmic action. Timbre was always flickering, always changing, but in such detail, instrument by instrument, that it was not a structural element. To my ear, the two related parameters at play were the degree of shallowness or depth of the sounding body and the solidness or instability of its component parts. Going back to the aerial view image, how deep into the surface can be seen, and how high does it project? Whatever is nearest to the eye or lens takes precedence, and will at least partially obscure what is below it. It is an inversion of the way things appear at ground level, and lightens the cumulative perceived weight. Anything in motion will attract the ear, as it does the eye. Each player had pages not only for their own primary instrument, but for related auxiliary instruments–blown tubes, bowed materials, etc. Each instrument, whether primary or auxiliary, alternated between transitional passages and sustained sounds.

So if that’s a listener’s perspective (or at least this one listener’s perspective), I had little to no idea of the players’ positions in relation to this sound world until I had a chance to see the score. Saunders wrote that he “wanted to create a situation where players had some autonomy, and in particular where choices they make have an effect on the shape of the piece.” They are given a set of pages, and individually choose the order of those pages before the start of the piece. They also choose at which cue to enter on each new page. The conductor controls the flow of time, according to the selection of one of five time charts. The title refers to “the spatial properties of an object that remain constant when undergoing deformations such as compression or stretching, but not by cutting or gluing.” The local details of the score and the total duration are more or less constant, but the sequence and flow in time is distorted, and will never be the same from one performance to another. The sounding world of the piece is established by the details within the score, but the players actively shape the spacing and sequence of those actions.

Hearing Ivan Wyschnegradsky‘s Arc-en-ciel and Arc-en-ciel II was an ear-opening experience for me. The six pianos each have a separate tuning, so that each whole-tone is evenly divided into twelfth-tones. (For any non-musicians who might be reading, in a nutshell there are five new, evenly-spaced notes between each note on a regularly-tuned piano. Each pianist takes a separate increment of that subdivision.) I have tended to experience microtonal inflections as a kind of color. At times I would mentally discount for that, thinking that a singer or wind player brought in a new element to the sound because it was something other than the usual tuning. (I don’t think that logic holds up, but I don’t recall closely reasoning with myself at the time.) These pieces delved into and sustained a palette of sonic colors I had never before imagined, opening up a whole new landscape.

haas.jpg

Georg Friedrich Haas dove into the space opened up by Wyschnegradsky’s work and found a broader view with limited approximations. I know many people were very moved by this piece. I think it has something to do with being taken to a new place, the experience of these fresh vistas and colors. Neither Wyschnegradsky nor Haas cluttered the field, but gave the tunings room to sound in various combinations and configurations. In the Haas in particular, I related to it at many points as journeying to a new space, and then pausing to take it in. The operatic analogy might be that of recitative and aria. The program notes reference ‘an “aria” of overtones.’ Haas also speaks about moments of fusion and moments of friction. The detail of the tunings allows for a rich and specific network of overtones. It also allows for a very close rubbing between tones locally. The possibilities for both consonance and dissonance are expanded.

I’ve gained a lot by thinking and reading and listening back on these pieces. I had some strong impressions at the performance, but I didn’t fully know what it was that I was experiencing the first time. Truth be told, I still don’t.