YouTube videos with score
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Originally posted by Flay View PostThat's four instruments. But how many fingers/people are needed to play each, ferney?
(Ferneyhough has also written works for large orchestras, by the way. Rather good they are, too!)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Flay View PostThat's four instruments. But how many fingers/people are needed to play each, ferney?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post- something that the Berne String Quartet (for whom the work was intended - and who had recorded BF's Sonatas for String Quartet, which isn't exactly a doddle!) might have said when they saw the work for the first time. They politely declined the honour of the first performance, leaving the field clear for the Ardittis (all thirty-two fingers and eight thumbs of 'em) to take over, beginning a 37-year association with the Composer. (The Ardittis have recorded the work three times: for RCA, Auvidis Montaigne, and Aeon - and I have also heard the Quatuor Diotima perform it Live, too. I wish both that RCA/BMG/Whoever would reissue the Berne Sonatas coupled with the Ardittis' first recording of the Second S4tet on a single CD, and that the Diotimas would record at least some of the Ferneyhough quartets.
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One of the best features of scores featuring in videos is that it enables works with more than one piece being played simultaneously can be shown on screen in ways impossible in a printed "book" score. Those of us who try following the recording of Richard Barrett's Opening of the Mouth will know the fun of having to zip backwards and forwards to find the relevant pages that match what's happening in the performance. With video score, the various pages can be superimposed on screen as they occur in performance.
This (or something similar) is what I suspect is presented in this youTube video of Politeia, from the (as yet) not commercially recorded Construction. And it's pretty magnificent:
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post(Ferneyhough has also written works for large orchestras, by the way. Rather good they are, too!)
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostHmmm...but the prospect of, for example, La Terre est un Homme presented on YouTube with its score would make me wonder what size screen (and a portrait orientated one at that) one would need in order to be able to see it all just as much as I could not help but wonder what "size" ears one would need in order to hear it all!...
They might have to rotate the score by 90 degrees and we'd have to watch with laptops resting on their ends! The size of ears - there's an essay by Derek Puffett on the Berg Drei Orchesterstücke in which he claims that it's impossible to hear everything that's going on. I think he meant it as criticism - but for me one of the (many, many) attractions of works at these levels of textural complexity is that I hear some new features with every hearing. Of course, that's also true of, for example, a Mozart String Quintet - but with Berg, Ferneyhough, Ives and others who so successfully make this a forefronted parameter of the Music, it is particularly joyful - and defiant. ("Defiant" because the chances that a work so complex that it needs several performances will actually receive those multiple performances in the current economic and aesthetic conditions is an act of defiant optimism that this conditions will get better.)
And having the score would be a help to getting to hear more of it (if not "all"), too.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Thanks for the links to the Stravinsky and Richard's piece, Ferney. Both wonderful experiences.
I'm afraid a little of the subtlety and detail of Richard's work got a little lost between the score and my headphones here on the 10.00 Liverpool St to Norwich. I particularly liked the idea ( if I read it correctly) of average duration quavers, but so much to enjoy and learn. And what a fantastic presentation of the score.
And the Stravinsky was rather tasty too.Last edited by teamsaint; 11-10-17, 19:26.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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