Xenakis, Iannis

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Serial_Apologist
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 37851

    Originally posted by RichardB View Post
    And thanks from me too. This was well worth hearing: fascinating foretastes of later Messiaen, Serocki, Penderecki and Gorecki. I wonder if David Bedford had heard "Ais" when he composed his "Two Choruses on Poems of Kenneth Patchen" in 1963.

    Comment

    • RichardB
      Banned
      • Nov 2021
      • 2170

      Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
      I wonder if David Bedford had heard "Ais" when he composed his "Two Choruses on Poems of Kenneth Patchen" in 1963.
      I doubt that, since Aïs was written in 1980. I'm reminded of being at a talk by Xenakis when someone asked him whether Metastaseis was influenced by Le marteau sans maître, to which he answered with characteristic terseness "when was Le marteau written?"

      Although Xenakis withdrew the first two parts of Anastenaria after the third was finished, elements of that style do keep surfacing in his later work, particularly in his incidental music for Greek tragedies. What doesn't ever really return, on the other hand, are the serial framework and Fibonacci proportions of Le Sacrifice.

      Comment

      • silvestrione
        Full Member
        • Jan 2011
        • 1725

        Originally posted by RichardB View Post
        I doubt that, since Aïs was written in 1980. I'm reminded of being at a talk by Xenakis when someone asked him whether Metastaseis was influenced by Le marteau sans maître, to which he answered with characteristic terseness "when was Le marteau written?"

        Although Xenakis withdrew the first two parts of Anastenaria after the third was finished, elements of that style do keep surfacing in his later work, particularly in his incidental music for Greek tragedies. What doesn't ever really return, on the other hand, are the serial framework and Fibonacci proportions of Le Sacrifice.
        'Incidental music for Greek tragedies'? I'd be interested in that. Is it readily available?

        Comment

        • RichardB
          Banned
          • Nov 2021
          • 2170

          Originally posted by silvestrione View Post
          'Incidental music for Greek tragedies'? I'd be interested in that. Is it readily available?
          He wrote music for the Oresteia, one chorus from each of Oedipus at Coionus and Helen, a more extended setting from Bacchae (one of his last works which was staged in London in the 1990s), and, in a related vein, music for Seneca's Medea. All of these have been recorded apart from the Bacchae.

          Comment

          • Mandryka
            Full Member
            • Feb 2021
            • 1570

            Roger Woodward, pianohttp://www.rogerwoodward.com/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_WoodwardIannis Xenakis (1922-2001)Mists (dedicated to Roger Woodward)(w...


            This is Woodward playing Mists. Does anyone know if it's from a commercial recording?

            Comment

            • Bryn
              Banned
              • Mar 2007
              • 24688

              Originally posted by Mandryka View Post
              https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=de...=RogerWoodward

              This is Woodward playing Mists. Does anyone know if it's from a commercial recording?
              Not that I know of, but you could try asking him: http://www.rogerwoodward.com/index.php/contact/

              Comment

              Working...
              X