Electronic Music

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  • Richard Barrett
    Guest
    • Jan 2016
    • 6259

    Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
    I'm also very fond of the sophisticated twitterings and timbral evolutions of Morton Subotnick, and this is my favourite example, the less well known Sidewinder: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bvok7DIEAEc
    Also on Qobuz for those who have it...

    While Subotnick's electronic compositions are never less than engaging, I find the pieces that involve instruments much less so, and his way with instruments much less imaginative than when he's constructing and orchestrating his synthetic sounds. Of course he isn't alone in this, and conversely there are also composers of fine instrumental/vocal music who seem less fluent when working with electronics (Boulez for example). Come to think of it, the ability to move between (and combine) electronic and acoustic resources in a way where each inspires the other is something shared by several of the 20th century composers whose work I admire most: Stockhausen, Xenakis, Nono, Cage.

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    • Boilk
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 976

      Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
      While Subotnick's electronic compositions are never less than engaging, I find the pieces that involve instruments much less so, and his way with instruments much less imaginative than when he's constructing and orchestrating his synthetic sounds.
      Agree, hybrid pieces of his (like The Key To Songs) tend to lack the engagement of earlier purely electronic work such as Silver Apples or The Wild Bull, despite the latter's primitive (by today's standards) timbres.

      Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
      Of course he isn't alone in this, and conversely there are also composers of fine instrumental/vocal music who seem less fluent when working with electronics (Boulez for example). Come to think of it, the ability to move between (and combine) electronic and acoustic resources in a way where each inspires the other is something shared by several of the 20th century composers whose work I admire most: Stockhausen, Xenakis, Nono, Cage.
      Those are mostly old-school (i.e. post War) composers. Amongst the younger generations there are countless composers who've cut their musical teeth fluently straddling both acoustic and electronic camps. Long-since departed from the London scene (back to his native Mexico) is Javier Alvarez, whose Papalotl and Mannam are amongst his many fine examples (from the 1980s/90s) of almost seamlessly combining electronic and acoustic resources. Needless to say, the AKAI S900 sampler proved indispensable in the making of these works - technology which some of the previous generation did not have!

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      • Richard Barrett
        Guest
        • Jan 2016
        • 6259

        Originally posted by Boilk View Post
        Long-since departed from the London scene (back to his native Mexico) is Javier Alvarez
        Of course I know Javier and his music, and I have a lot of time for both. But even among composers of his (my) generation and younger there are plenty of people composing electroacoustic music where one or the other element is underdeveloped, however their teeth may have been cut. I think that the all-round fluency and imaginativeness I attributed to my 20th century examples and indeed to Javier is (still?) relatively uncommon.

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        • Joseph K
          Banned
          • Oct 2017
          • 7765

          Getting back to Eloy's Shânti: it is definitely growing on me. At first my thought was "this is a bit ambient", but I think it helps to turn up the volume in such a case. Listening now, I am not sure why I procrastinated getting round to listening where I left off, since its vortex-like textures, as Richard describes them, are quite attractive and it does a good job of drawing the listener in. I think Tristan Murail might have been influenced by some of the ideas in this, though he uses them in a more temporally-compressed form in his works.

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          • Joseph K
            Banned
            • Oct 2017
            • 7765

            Opinions on Eloy's acoustic music?

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            • Mandryka
              Full Member
              • Feb 2021
              • 1580

              Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
              Opinions on Eloy's acoustic music?
              There’s one I really like, called Faisceaux Diffractions. Rich and assured.

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              • Richard Barrett
                Guest
                • Jan 2016
                • 6259

                Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
                Opinions on Eloy's acoustic music?
                Listen to as much as you can find (which isn't much). Faisceaux-Diffractions and Equivalences are on Youtube. And it just came to my mind that if you like the former (& maybe also if you don't!), Hugues Dufourt's Saturne for a similarly mixed electric/acoustic ensemble is going to be worth hearing, much more interesting IMO than his later more ummm "classical" work.

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                • Mandryka
                  Full Member
                  • Feb 2021
                  • 1580

                  Do you think there are three «phases» to his work - the acoustic music, Shânti and Gaku No-Michi, and the rest?

                  Saturne is good IMO, Dufourt is a composer who I find oppressive, heavy, but I enjoyed Saturne. There’s a great passage toward the end which is, I suppose, inspired by the God eating his son.

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                  • Joseph K
                    Banned
                    • Oct 2017
                    • 7765

                    Originally posted by Mandryka View Post
                    There’s one I really like, called Faisceaux Diffractions. Rich and assured.
                    Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
                    Listen to as much as you can find (which isn't much). Faisceaux-Diffractions and Equivalences are on Youtube. And it just came to my mind that if you like the former (& maybe also if you don't!), Hugues Dufourt's Saturne for a similarly mixed electric/acoustic ensemble is going to be worth hearing, much more interesting IMO than his later more ummm "classical" work.


                    Thanks.

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                    • Richard Barrett
                      Guest
                      • Jan 2016
                      • 6259

                      Originally posted by Mandryka View Post
                      Do you think there are three «phases» to his work - the acoustic music, Shânti and Gaku No-Michi, and the rest?
                      I would say that there's a single "break" in the early 1970s where the music shifts from a post-Varèse pathway towards embracing "eastern" aesthetic/philosophical ideas, leading almost immediately to an expansion of the timescale of his work and a decisive move towards centring on electronic music. Yo-in which immediately follows Gaku-no-michi seems to me to be a direct consequence of it; and so on.

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                      • Serial_Apologist
                        Full Member
                        • Dec 2010
                        • 37998

                        Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
                        I would say that there's a single "break" in the early 1970s where the music shifts from a post-Varèse pathway towards embracing "eastern" aesthetic/philosophical ideas, leading almost immediately to an expansion of the timescale of his work and a decisive move towards centring on electronic music. Yo-in which immediately follows Gaku-no-michi seems to me to be a direct consequence of it; and so on.
                        I suppose Jolivet anticipated that turn thirty years earlier in many ways in his own works of the 1940s.

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                        • Richard Barrett
                          Guest
                          • Jan 2016
                          • 6259

                          Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
                          I suppose Jolivet anticipated that turn thirty years earlier in many ways in his own works of the 1940s.
                          And Debussy before him, with his gamelan-inspired use of whole tone scales. But I think Eloy was following more in the footsteps of Stockhausen (to whom Shānti is dedicated) than anyone else.

                          I listened to the whole of Yo-in today, I can't say it had my full attention from start to finish, but it certainly contains some striking things and doesn't seem too long for what it's doing. Followed up by Javier Alvarez's Temazcal, which is more engaging to see than just to hear, although it's still attractive in recorded form. (For those who don't know, it's for maracas and tape.)
                          Last edited by Richard Barrett; 05-08-21, 13:29.

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                          • Serial_Apologist
                            Full Member
                            • Dec 2010
                            • 37998

                            Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
                            And Debussy before him, with his gamelan-inspired use of whole tone scales. But I think Eloy was following more in the footsteps of Stockhausen (to whom Shānti is dedicated) than anyone else.
                            Yes indeed. I was thinking in terms of Varèse's influence on Jolivet, and should of course said the 1930s so as not to confuse matters! Jolivet moved more in a neo-romantic direction in the 1940s, though that Varèse influence is still there in the character of the harmonic language and the uses of tuned and untuned percussion, and it returned with no ambiguity from the mid-1950s onwards - even in the second Piano Sonata, which I was delighted to find on youtube yesterday, but overtly in the Third Symphony. I can imagine the banging of heads in the Domaine resulting from a contemporary composer - and a French one at that - writing a symphony (quelle horreur!) loudly and indisputedly proclaiming its Varèsian debt, in 1964!

                            Here it is: the ONF certainly did Jolivet proud, with his lordship on the rostrum, that day in 1966 - and it certainly belies my own previous charges of congested orchestration of a few days ago. There's a rather wonderful anecdote for which we have to thank Jolivet's widow, who, in an English interview, told how her husband had told her that he included police whistles in the finale, which can be heard at around 21.0" and 22.5", in anticipation of the May 1968 events!

                            André Jolivet (1905-1974): Sinfonia n.3 (Troisième Symphonie) (1964) -- Orchestre National de France diretta da André Jolivet (dal vivo Théâtre des Champs-Él...

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                            • Mandryka
                              Full Member
                              • Feb 2021
                              • 1580

                              Biographical information on Eloy here - you have to tolerate some ads unfortunately.



                              Anyway I’m listening to l’approche du feu méditant. This seems not quite the same sort of thing as Shânti or Faiscaux!

                              Comment

                              • Joseph K
                                Banned
                                • Oct 2017
                                • 7765

                                I'm now listening to Eloy's Faisceaux-Diffractions (yes, not Electronic Music really, but I think it makes sense to continue the discussion here). I'm enjoying it - I think the electric and bass guitars have a very surreal sound in this context. I mean, I think it would sound surreal anyway, just more so; I'm reminded of Romitelli's Professor Bad Trip. Also aspects of Boulez.

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