The programme ran:
Ligeti - 2nd string quartet
Pintscher - Study IV for Treatise on the Veil - Interval -
Cage - String Quartet in Four Parts
Xenakis - Tetras
More than three-quarters full and a respectful house but something of a puzzle of a concert. Does anyone know these pieces and can you suggest an alteration to the programme? The playing seemed to be wonderful but I think the length and order of the programme meant my attention wavered and the audience seemed a little tired before the end of the Xenakis.
The highlight was the Pintscher piece which was soft as breath and sonically novel. Unfortunately, to a degree, its reverence was followed by the repetitious 'piety' of the Cage sound. I couldn't grasp the point of the Cage with all its repetitions but it would have made a better prelude to the Pintscher, I think, than a successor.
I love the sounds modern strings provide - their rasps and rips, drones and see-saw slides - but when there's so much of it congregated in a single concert, the law of diminishing returns began to operate. Following the other 2 pieces, the Cage and Xenakis seemed comparatively broad and crude though the Xenakis made many excellent noises (and elicited some sniggers from the audience with its 'trumps').
I think the concert might have worked better for me with a different order:
Cage (may well be a classic work for all I know but it wasn't an interesting listen following the severe hush of the Pintscher)
Xenakis (which is a crowd pleaser I'd have thought) - Interval -
Pintscher
Ligeti (which seemed to incorporate elements, if only of tone, of all the previous pieces and might have served best as a sort of summary).
Ligeti - 2nd string quartet
Pintscher - Study IV for Treatise on the Veil - Interval -
Cage - String Quartet in Four Parts
Xenakis - Tetras
More than three-quarters full and a respectful house but something of a puzzle of a concert. Does anyone know these pieces and can you suggest an alteration to the programme? The playing seemed to be wonderful but I think the length and order of the programme meant my attention wavered and the audience seemed a little tired before the end of the Xenakis.
The highlight was the Pintscher piece which was soft as breath and sonically novel. Unfortunately, to a degree, its reverence was followed by the repetitious 'piety' of the Cage sound. I couldn't grasp the point of the Cage with all its repetitions but it would have made a better prelude to the Pintscher, I think, than a successor.
I love the sounds modern strings provide - their rasps and rips, drones and see-saw slides - but when there's so much of it congregated in a single concert, the law of diminishing returns began to operate. Following the other 2 pieces, the Cage and Xenakis seemed comparatively broad and crude though the Xenakis made many excellent noises (and elicited some sniggers from the audience with its 'trumps').
I think the concert might have worked better for me with a different order:
Cage (may well be a classic work for all I know but it wasn't an interesting listen following the severe hush of the Pintscher)
Xenakis (which is a crowd pleaser I'd have thought) - Interval -
Pintscher
Ligeti (which seemed to incorporate elements, if only of tone, of all the previous pieces and might have served best as a sort of summary).
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