Some might be interested in having a listen to this new BF work for 20 instrumentalists, performed here by Ensemble Modern conducted by Jonathan Stockhammer:
Brian Ferneyhough: Inconjunctions
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Roehre
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amateur51
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I'm glad I'm around at this period in history to witness music like this, I found myself warming to it immediately. Ferneyhough seems masterfully in control of what sounds to me like an incredibly complex score (though that is just an impression, I don't actually know anything about it). But I certainly agree with the somewhat lonely comment left beneath that video.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI had to tweak the sub-woofer.
I listened again to this today and I must say I find it ever more attractive. The opening woodwind section for example is full of alluring sonic happenings in a restive, dawn chorus kind of a way. And when the strings enter robustly after five mins or so, the baleful quality they introduce is very memorable I think.
I liked the 'oh it's stopped' ending too.
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Roehre
Originally posted by Daniel View PostGosh, I liked it but I didn't quite go that far ...
I listened again to this today and I must say I find it ever more attractive. The opening woodwind section for example is full of alluring sonic happenings in a restive, dawn chorus kind of a way. And when the strings enter robustly after five mins or so, the baleful quality they introduce is very memorable I think.
I liked the 'oh it's stopped' ending too.
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Originally posted by Daniel View Post. . . masterfully in control of what sounds to me like an incredibly complex score (though that is just an impression, I don't actually know anything about it). . . .
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Tapiola View Post"In art, the impossible has a chance of success, while the certain is deceptive and hopeless" (Alfred Schnittke)
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Hi Sydney,
Originally posted by Sydney Grew View Post... if so, is the truth simple or "incredibly complex"?
(Actually it often feels to me as if there is a kind of absolute and universal quality in some music that might be labelled truth. But something I might find so, in say a Beethoven Quartet, somebody in a Rwandan slum might find alien and stifling, and find a similar truth in a quite different way. So the truth itself that the music seems to convey to me might be universal, but it would seem perceiving its presence in any given piece of music is at least dependent on cultural conditioning.)
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