Originally posted by Oddball
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Xenakis, Iannis
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Richard Barrett
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I have to say that I find Aventures and Nouvelles Aventures uproariously funny. Nothing subverts the emptiness of grand opera bel canto gestures than these witty little pieces. Having said that, George Benjamin, on a 2009 COTW broadcast confessed to finding them "silly" IIRC. But then George is probably not renowned for his SOH.
Le Grand macabre is, of course, a towering masterpiece.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI agree. And I think part of the reason here is that his "humour" seems to act as a mask to hide a deeper lack of commitment...
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amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI agree. And I think part of the reason here is that his "humour" seems to act as a mask to hide a deeper lack of commitment, if that's the right word, which manifests itself in other ways too, for example in the shortwindedness of most of his compositions (and/or the movements they usually consist of). Which is not to say that some of his pieces aren't beautiful of course.
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Richard Barrett
Of course there's no doubt that Ligeti was a highly skilled composer and (probably, though you never know) wrote exactly the music he wanted to. I just can't see it as "concise, polished perfection" though. An example: the late Hamburg Concerto where he has the brilliant* idea of combining the solo valved horn with a quartet of differently-pitched natural horns in the orchestra, so as to explore the "out-of-tune" possibilities of their various overtone series (and it's clear that this is what he wanted to do because he says so in his programme note). But in the course of seven movements lasting fifteen minutes or so, this idea is touched on once or twice in a perfunctory sort of way but never really explored. I could think of plenty of other examples of what strikes me as perfunctoriness in Ligeti's music, although obviously this same feature will strike different people in different ways. As for (Nouvelles) Aventures and Le grand macabre, I guess I'm not sufficiently interested in opera to be much exercised by its bing "subverted"! On the other hand if George Benjamin thinks something is silly there must be something good about it...
* not meant sarcastically, in case that isn't clear!
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Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostI think a useful distinction can be made between a) people who mostly write notes (also known as "pitched tones"), and b) people who mostly write unpitched sounds (also known as "funny noises" - rapping the pianoforte, that sort of thing). Ligeti was one of the latter I have always thought.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View PostI think a useful distinction can be made between a) people who mostly write notes (also known as "pitched tones"), and b) people who mostly write unpitched sounds (also known as "funny noises" - rapping the pianoforte, that sort of thing). Ligeti was one of the latter I have always thought.
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Well, Ligeti is an innovator isn't he? the experimenter in music par excellence if you will. I can't think of anyone else who has been able to make a coherent surreally tragic musical composition out of a hundred metronomes, presaging the silencing of the human voice for all time; or able to convey the monstrosity of the machine in various stages of collapse, as in Volumina. A unique musical voice.
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I've got two discs of Xenakis, both LPs:
Vanguard VCS 10030. Metastasis, Pithoprakta and Eonta. French National Radio O., cond. Maurice le Roux
Decca Headline Head 13. Synaphai, Aroura and Antikthon. New Philharmonia O. cond. Elgar Howarth
I couldnt hum a tune from any one them, but they are terribly good for establishing my credentials (falsely) as one who knows all about this avant-garde stuff.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostWell, Ligeti is an innovator isn't he? the experimenter in music par excellence if you will. I can't think of anyone else who has been able to make a coherent surreally tragic musical composition out of a hundred metronomes, presaging the silencing of the human voice for all time; or able to convey the monstrosity of the machine in various stages of collapse, as in Volumina. A unique musical voice.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostOf course there's no doubt that Ligeti was a highly skilled composer and (probably, though you never know) wrote exactly the music he wanted to. I just can't see it as "concise, polished perfection" though. An example: the late Hamburg Concerto where he has the brilliant* idea of combining the solo valved horn with a quartet of differently-pitched natural horns in the orchestra, so as to explore the "out-of-tune" possibilities of their various overtone series (and it's clear that this is what he wanted to do because he says so in his programme note). But in the course of seven movements lasting fifteen minutes or so, this idea is touched on once or twice in a perfunctory sort of way but never really explored. I could think of plenty of other examples of what strikes me as perfunctoriness in Ligeti's music, although obviously this same feature will strike different people in different ways. As for (Nouvelles) Aventures and Le grand macabre, I guess I'm not sufficiently interested in opera to be much exercised by its bing "subverted"! On the other hand if George Benjamin thinks something is silly there must be something good about it...
* not meant sarcastically, in case that isn't clear!
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostWell, Ligeti is an innovator isn't he? the experimenter in music par excellence if you will.
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