For me this will be a week to be savoured, Kaija being one of my favourite composers of today.
Kaija Saariaho (b. 1952) - 12-16 October
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Just a goddamn wonderful composer..... tend to prefer her earlier work......
But the music is so immediately sensuous and visionary, falling so physically upon the ear...and what lies beyond the ear...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 12-10-20, 12:32.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostSheer magic, inventotive, a fabulous, incisive ear for timbres and melodic fragments.
I always hear her music as a symphony of wild birdsong and lively rhythms!
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Recall in 2016 (I think) there was broadcast from the MET on Opera on 3, Kaija's opera L'Amour de Loin. Enjoyed this greatly.
It was emphasized that this was the first opera composed by a woman that was performed at the MET, and they employed I recall a female conductor. It struck me at the time that the MET, and perhaps Opera in general must be heavily male-dominated, for such a comment to be necessary.
May be that's why I don't listen to much Opera?
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostBeen a week of non-stop discovery.
I think I prefer the instrumental mixes / pieces to the vocal?
One superficial thing I learned from the week was the correct way to pronounce "Saariaho" - Sarry Ah Ho, not Sariah Ho, as rhyming with "pariah"!
One of the question Calum didn't ask - unless my attention lapsed - was, what relation did Ms. Saariaho feel with Finland's musical past, particularly the long-engulfing influence of Sibelius (the composer!), and with the culture of a country she left for France, where the artistic and expressive ethos feels to be far greater on her music.
Kaija's parting statement about maintaining enduring values... well, I couldn't have stated them better or more completely than she did.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBy the end of the week I had the strong impression of a composer who has come to adhere much more strongly to traditional expressive conventions than I had realised before. (...) However, I am quite comfortable with this course of development, according as it has with many one-time iconoclasts whom time has revealed as respectful of the past and its riches
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI think she has always adhered strongly to traditional expressive conventions. I can't think of a piece of hers that doesn't do so. Yes there's a certain (somewhat overhyped) involvement of electronic techniques, but really only to enhance certain aspects of the sound of traditional instruments, never as a source of different sonic perspectives in itself or of inspiration to think of instrumental music in a different way... and I speak as someone who's been involved in performances of several of her electro/acoustic pieces. I don't intend this to be a criticism, since I've known Kaija and her work for many years and have much time for both, but she is basically a very traditionally minded composer and always has been.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI wonder, do you also feel this to be the case with the Spectralist composers, whom Kaija mentioned in passing - or, at least, some of them? Because I have the feeling that their music often evokes past aesthetics, especially Debussyian impressionism - their harmonies for me are strongly reminiscent of his orchestrational practices in particular - even more so than eg Messiaen's, his polychordal juxtapostionings seeming superficially most obviously pre-figurative - being a sort of elaboration of Debussy's fascination with and mastery of timbre and timbres, albeit often cloaked under a language of acoustic properties that make it seem apparently more aligned with Stockhausen, as regards his early research into acoustics.
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