A Xenakis documentary for your enjoyment (I've yet to watch it, though) -
Xenakis, Iannis
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostA Xenakis documentary for your enjoyment (I've yet to watch it, though) -
https://www.arte.tv/en/videos/103998...57QOEpGzEY2x2c
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostA Xenakis documentary for your enjoyment (I've yet to watch it, though) -
https://www.arte.tv/en/videos/103998...57QOEpGzEY2x2c
Probably emigrating to France was the best thing Xenakis ever did. His music doesn't seem anywhere near so revolutionary these days, and I agree that it's best approached from a Greek perspective.
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostHis music doesn't seem anywhere near so revolutionary these days,
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostThanks for that; I enjoyed it immensely, and it did have subtitles, for when the going got tough.
Probably emigrating to France was the best thing Xenakis ever did. His music doesn't seem anywhere near so revolutionary these days, and I agree that it's best approached from a Greek perspective.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostMost music being written now is a good deal less revolutionary than his, and is becoming even less so.
Having said that, even IX's music that is older hasn't really been absorbed into some kind of new mainstream, there doesn't seem to be that many contemporary composers who take off from where IX left off.Last edited by Joseph K; 08-06-22, 07:34.
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostThanks for that; I enjoyed it immensely, and it did have subtitles, for when the going got tough.
Probably emigrating to France was the best thing Xenakis ever did. His music doesn't seem anywhere near so revolutionary these days, and I agree that it's best approached from a Greek perspective.
I've listened to a fair amount of Xenakis, his music interests me, but I certainly don't put myself forward as any type of expert, and I certainly have no intention of spending all my time listening to his complete works; life's too short! But correct me if I'm wrong, I don't think voicing an opinion on this board necessarily implies a great depth of musical knowledge. Nor is membership of the board limited to professionals and those of a similar standing.
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Originally posted by Quarky View PostI've listened to a fair amount of Xenakis, his music interests me, but I certainly don't put myself forward as any type of expert, and I certainly have no intention of spending all my time listening to his complete works; life's too short! But correct me if I'm wrong, I don't think voicing an opinion on this board necessarily implies a great depth of musical knowledge. Nor is membership of the board limited to professionals and those of a similar standing.
This isn't to do with "depth of musical knowledge" at all, I was just wondering about your opinion that Xenakis's music seems "less revolutionary these days". I would say that his work, whether or not one likes to listen to it, represents a fundamental rethinking of what music can express, how it can be conceived and made, and his thinking regarding the use of computers in sound synthesis was so far ahead of its time (and ahead of the technology available in his lifetime) that composers young enough to be his great-grandchildren are still catching up with it.
Alongside that, most composers "these days", I mean the sort of composers whose work might be taken up by the Proms, are going about their work as if they know nothing and care less about how profound Xenakis's revolutionary thinking was, which I find highly disappointing. I'm not trying to pull rank when I say that, as a prof of electronic music, I am often surprised at how students these days are often so much more conservative in their musical thinking than are faculty members. That's not how things ought to be!
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One thing I was going to add to the edit of my post above was speculating over whether one of the things preventing IX's ideas becoming more mainstream or absorbed into contemporary music in general in the way one might suppose serial music has done, is the depth of mathematical knowledge required to really get a foothold on his concepts and technique. I'm ready to be corrected but I think this might be the case - I guess there is nothing stopping the ambitious composer from taking what they can just from studying one of his scores, though. Personally I would have to consult my sister for some understanding of these things, she's a statistician.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostYes. I wonder how much of Xenakis's music Quarky knows... just to take his late electronic pieces which in the grand scheme of things are not all that old (30-ish years) and they're still unique and uncompromising.
Having said that, even IX's music that is older hasn't really been absorbed into some kind of new mainstream, there doesn't seem to be that many contemporary composers who take off from where IX left off.
Well this comment has inspired me to finally listen more systematically to his late music, the music from the late 80s onwards -- try and understand what was going on there. And I may use this thread to jot down any responses I have. Anyway first up this morning is DOX-ORKH (1990 I think.) And it's like how I remembered it -- menacing, heavy, discordant.
Something must have deeply upset him up at this period of his life, to inspire him to write this sort of music. Was he depressed?
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostSomething must have deeply upset him up at this period of his life, to inspire him to write this sort of music. Was he depressed?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovYp...eArditti-Topic
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostIt does not sound like or make sense to me as the music of a depressed person, which is a bit of an odd thing to suggest, IMO. Then again, I'm not sure one could judge from someone's music their mental state. In any case, DOX-ORKH is not uniformly menacing, heavy and discordant - there are textural and harmonic contrasts that are lighter. But most of IX's orchestral music features dense, heavy textures and might sound menacing - personally I find them awesomely colourful and often ecstatic, completely life-enhancing and affirming...
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Postthe depth of mathematical knowledge required to really get a foothold on his concepts and technique
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