Having lived for the past year or so with Schoenberg/Gould piano pieces on my CD player, the comparison with Stockhausen's "drawings", and other piano pieces on last night's H&N was immediate.
I don't know if Stockhausen and Boulez have pushed forward the boundaries of Serialism in any significant respect from Schoenberg's initial formulation - I guess they have, but it would not be apparent to my ears.
But the immediate and noticeable difference is that Schoenberg' pieces were so melancholic - full of Angst, I think the term is. Stockhausen's works in contrast are actually very happy and cheerful. Whether Stockhausen set out deliberately to distance himself from Schoenberg in this respect, and whether it might explain some of his clowning around (e.g. Helicopter pieces), I wouldn't know.
In any event congratulations to the H&N team for a brillant programme last night.
I don't know if Stockhausen and Boulez have pushed forward the boundaries of Serialism in any significant respect from Schoenberg's initial formulation - I guess they have, but it would not be apparent to my ears.
But the immediate and noticeable difference is that Schoenberg' pieces were so melancholic - full of Angst, I think the term is. Stockhausen's works in contrast are actually very happy and cheerful. Whether Stockhausen set out deliberately to distance himself from Schoenberg in this respect, and whether it might explain some of his clowning around (e.g. Helicopter pieces), I wouldn't know.
In any event congratulations to the H&N team for a brillant programme last night.
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