Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Babbitt (1916 - 2011)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBabbitt is almost certainly the composer I would name if asked to suggest which I thought was the "most neglected in terms of performance, broadcasts and recordings".
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... but that goes mainly for Europe, surely. His work is very highly regarded in the USA, and has been massively influential there. Personally I don't really get it. The music seems dry as dust to me.
As for Babbitt's reputation in the US; he was certainly very influential from the '60s to the '80s, particularly in his work advancing Music Theory to levels of precision of study and discourse which it had never previously enjoyed. But it seems that his Music doesn't appear to be any more valued in the US than in the UK or Europe, if the number of performances and recordings is a criterion of regard. There is only a handful of works available on disc - a fraction of the number of pieces written (IIRC, for example, only four of the String Quartets have ever been recorded.) Wuorinen aside, are there subsequent composers whose work shows an interest in pursuing the discoveries and possibilities that Babbitt opened for them? (In contrast to those who pursue those of Cage & Feldman on one "side", or Reich and the Minimalists on the "other"?)
A shame - as this programme is amply demonstrating, there is a rich seam of expressive material leaving plenty to mine.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostLet's agree on moist.
Edit: I think moist is an underrated word.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post(And who needs wet Music?)
I would say that very few of the less commercially-oriented American composers, apart from the "minimalists", are as amply recorded as their European colleagues unless (like Cage, Feldman and Carter, for example) their music gained admirers and currency in Europe. So Babbitt is hardly an exception in that regard: how often do you come across recordings of music by James Tenney or David Behrman or Ben Johnston (etc. etc. all of who are much more interesting than Babbitt in my opinion)? Babbitt's influence runs very deep through his years of teaching at Princeton, and his particular development of serial composition technique is still taught and practised quite widely, not to mention the influence of his work in electronic music (essentially using synthetic sounds as substitutes for instrumental ones).
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostYou know perfectly well what I meant!
But thanks for the comments about Babbitt's continuing influence in the States - I didn't know this (I'd thought that, with Steve Mackey as a more recent Music Prof at Princeton, such things had been sidelined). And point taken about Tenney, Behrman & Johnston - but, as you've said, Babbitt had a much bigger national and international "presence" than those and others? With such influence, it's frustrating that so little of the Music has reached recording studios.
Still - good for Brighton! Two concerts to commemorate the centenary - respect![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postpoint taken about Tenney, Behrman & Johnston - but, as you've said, Babbitt had a much bigger national and international "presence" than those and others?
Ensembles for Synthesizer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5n1pZn4izI
Composition for Four Instruments https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fkx5IYfiPs
String Quartet no.4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkB_qJW0JR8
... and I'm no closer to understanding what people see in this music. Maybe these were the wrong examples, but I've heard quite a lot of his music over the years as well as being intrigued by Paul Griffiths' description of some of his techniques in the first edition of his Music since 1945 (I don't think this bit made it into subsequent editions).
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It was a very interesting programme, contrasting these two composers, with different philosophies and very different musical results.
It may boil down to personal tastes - but that's giving the game away.
Intrigued to hear about Moondog's affinity with very early European music, I'm not sure how that was expressed in his music.
Other than that, I wish I had something sensible to say ......
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI wouldn't know how to quantify that, but I know plenty of people who would speak of Tenney or Johnston in particular in awed tones. Anyway, I thought I would find myself some Babbitt to see if I wasn't relying too much on imperfect memories, and I listened this evening to these:
Ensembles for Synthesizer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5n1pZn4izI
Composition for Four Instruments https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fkx5IYfiPs
String Quartet no.4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkB_qJW0JR8
... and I'm no closer to understanding what people see in this music. Maybe these were the wrong examples, but I've heard quite a lot of his music over the years as well as being intrigued by Paul Griffiths' description of some of his techniques in the first edition of his Music since 1945 (I don't think this bit made it into subsequent editions).
I don't know what to say - my perplexity at people's failure to see the point of Babbitt's Music is probably the match of your own distance from understanding what other people see in it. The Ensembles always delights me (I was chuckling throughout) and again, the only way I can describe it is to use words like "sparkling" and descriptions of the "sheer richness and generosity of the sound colours"; the "vocoder" effect around the 8min mark, for example. A bit "stoppy-starty", perhaps? A bit "hyperactive"? I didn't think so: any more than I think that Feldman needs to be a bit more "eventful" - the timing of the Ensembles - and the brief but frequent contrasting fragments of lyricism - "permitted" the extended "juggling" of agile Music. The recorded sound on the youTube video was very harsh at times - if that is an aspect of the composition intended by the composer (rather than an unsympathetic uploading of the source recording) I can see that I'd have difficulties listening repeatedly to it - but I would really look out for a recording that reproduced the "warmer" sound quality I'm imagining would be what was intended.
I've known the Composition for 4 for quite a long time. A lyrical complement (in this context) to the Ensembles - a "natural" successor to the harmonic/textual soundworlds brought into being by Webern and Schoenberg, but reimagined in terms entirely of Babbitt's own imagining. I might criticize the predictability of the structure - as soon as we get to the 'cello solo, it becomes clear that the piece is a sequence of ensembles each prefaced by a solo cantilena: I sort-of hoped he'd puill the rug from under my expectations and begin a solo on the violin/flute and then transform it into a duet with the flute/violin. There was something similar: the violin solo was eventually joined by the 'cello - but then you knew that there's be a corresponding duet between the two woodwinds (which there was). That is a potential danger of multi-layered Serialism - the more features are subject to serial procedures, the more general details can be foreseen. (I think Babbitt became aware of this danger - his later works avoid it more successfully, imo.) But "general details" aside - the specific, moment-to-moment details weren't predictable; and I loved listening to them. (A niggling point of "interpretations" - I'd prefer if the staccatos in the opening Clarinet solo were a little more staccato to contrast more playfully with the longer notes surrounding them. The performer did a sort-of "do-do-do": I imagine more of a "pom-pom-pom" - but what do I know?!)
I thought I'd heard the Fourth S4tet before, but I didn't recognize it when I was listening, so I have only my immediate impressions to base any comments on. And I just really enjoyed listening to it ("lyricism", "drama", "variety" - empty words to anyone who doesn't get it) and want to hear it again.
These three pieces and the works in last night's H&N I found entirely enthralling and a real joy. So, I suppose, it goes.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 08-05-16, 15:04.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Oddball View PostIt was a very interesting programme, contrasting these two composers, with different philosophies and very different musical results.
It may boil down to personal tastes - but that's giving the game away.
Intrigued to hear about Moondog's affinity with very early European music, I'm not sure how that was expressed in his music.
Other than that, I wish I had something sensible to say ......[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostFeldman and Carter make similarly unpredictably successful pairings
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