Originally posted by RichardB
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Electronic Music
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zsb1w-3iFa8 (the first few minutes)
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Still not yet checked out A Floresta - must do that today...
But (yet another ) shout out to Barrett & Zaric's Mirage album which I've just played from suma through to the last song sphinx, played via the bandcamp app on my phone through a mini speaker while I was emptying the dishwasher, continued upstairs after I'd finished that. I think suma is really profound, particular moments being a sequence of harp chords during the last two minutes which is just sublime, and the piece is generally sparkling and iridescent with fascinating rhythmical processes and whose pitch structure is so supremely realised that gives such great expressive import to the aforementioned sequence of chords which feels inevitable, like it's goal-directed almost, which is not something one generally associates with serial music (but which is here achieved without the slightest hint of nostalgia for any previous music).
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Thanks again JK! Nice to know it sounds like something through a phone and little speaker.
As for who needs electronic music, ardcarp... well, for a start, composers during 2020-21 whose work was denied its traditional performing outlets and who had for many years wondered what it would be like to concentrate on studio-based work for a while. Being one such person, I have to say I learned a great deal from the experience, which has served also to inspire the music for acoustic instruments/voices I've been working on since the second half of last year.
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There's a really interesting TV documentary about Nono with footage of him working with the vocalists in the studio, and of a live performance:
GALLEHR, Theo. Denn der Wald ist jung und voller Leben, television documentary, WDR, Cologne, 1968.A floresta é jovem e cheja de vida (Luigi Nono)(fragmentos...
(It's in German but I think it's possible to get a lot out of it even if you don't follow the talking bits.)
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostThere's a really interesting TV documentary about Nono with footage of him working with the vocalists in the studio, and of a live performance:
GALLEHR, Theo. Denn der Wald ist jung und voller Leben, television documentary, WDR, Cologne, 1968.A floresta é jovem e cheja de vida (Luigi Nono)(fragmentos...
(It's in German but I think it's possible to get a lot out of it even if you don't follow the talking bits.)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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Currently spinning FURT plus - equals, specifically, 'Solution C', the third track with saxophonist John Butcher - it's a good one.
Will stick the first disk of the complete Xenakis electroacoustic works on after, since as I've already said it's his centenary soon and plan to listen to all the Xenakis in my collection...
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... the FURT disk has finished now. Even more than with the Xenakis orchestral works I listened to over the past week, I like to think it elicited quite a bit of 'WTF' reactions from my neighbours.
Not sure I'll listen to the first Xenakis electroacoustic works disk now though, I think my guitar beckons again...
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI like to think it elicited quite a bit of 'WTF' reactions from my neighbours.
I haven't heard that album myself for a long time. But returning to early electronic music, last Saturday we had the last in this academic year's series of Institute of Sonology concerts; most of it was music composed and performed by students, but a last minute addition to the programme was Kagel's 4-channel tape piece TransiciĆ³n I from 1960. I'm not sure anyone who didn't know would identify its composer, and that's partly because the way the WDR electronic music studio worked most of the time in that period was that a composer would provide a kind of blueprint for a piece, and it would then be realised with Gottfried Michael Koenig taking a leading role. With composers who weren't already experienced in studio possibilities, the result might end up sounding more like Koenig than the named composer, which is certainly true in this case - although the unpredictable way it evolves from one kind of texture to the next is a feature of Kagel's work in general, some of the sounds seem as if they could have been lifted directly from Koenig's Essay. It certainly doesn't have anything like the originality and excitement of Kontakte which was produced around the same time (also with Koenig's assistance, although here Stockhausen's own fluency with the studio was decisive). See what you think. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqGobBhbSlg (The date of composition is given wrongly on the video!)
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostSee what you think. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqGobBhbSlg
edit - finished listening to Essay. Very good!
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostWill stick the first disk of the complete Xenakis electroacoustic works on after, since as I've already said it's his centenary soon and plan to listen to all the Xenakis in my collection...
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI have this on now - which, in case anyone wondered, comprises Diamorphoses, Concret PH, Orient Occident and Bohor.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostThe first three are interesting enough in an etude-like way but Bohor is I think his first really original and powerful piece in the medium. It needs to be pretty loud though!The title Bohor is based on the subject of a medieval song cycle, "Bohor the Outcast," who was a valiant knight of the Round Table. Bohor is an 8-channel tap...
(I think "upstairs" are out tonight!)
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostThe first three are interesting enough in an etude-like way but Bohor is I think his first really original and powerful piece in the medium. It needs to be pretty loud though!
edit - my description of the piece, although in response to RichardB, is not aimed at him but rather is aimed at persuading anyone who hasn't heard the piece to listen!
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