Originally posted by ahinton
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Richard Barrett CONSTRUCTION
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Panjandrum
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Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostI had hoped that my laboured and literal response to your own post would have had the effect of holding up a mirror to your own post: I now see how forlorn such a hope was.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Postmy point was not the amount of one's life spent listening to a piece, nor the familiarity; rather and perhaps unfairly to equate length with ambition ... is the piece doing anything on the scale of the Art of Fugue or the Ninth, if not why such monumental length? what is it for? if it is a mere quotidian duree why listen? is it a compendium such as the Art or a Monument such as the Ninth?
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Funny isn't it, how these avant garde über-serious composers write lots of stand-alone shortish pieces over several years, and then group them together as a vast cycle of works, presumably to make a more epic statement? Is it hoped that these alleged cycles - comprising works written for different performers (and presumably through different commissioning bodies) - will invoke all the seriousness of attention which has traditionally greeted the symphonic utterance of yesteryear? Have multi-work cycles become the modern-day child of the multi-movement symphony? There was Ferneyhough's Carceri d'Invenzione of the 1980s, more recently James Dillon's monumental (although perfectly digestible) Nine Rivers (1982-c.2000). And now Barrett's multi-work (rather than multi-movement) Construction (sic., since it's presumably not an acronym).
To me these cycles have the whiff of "put all these pieces together, and I'll maybe get taken more seriously". But, heaven forbid, one reviewer cites that Construction (sic.) itself belongs to Barrett's even larger cycle of entitled Resistance and Vision. Der Ring des Nibelungen and Licht, better watch out
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hackneyvi
Originally posted by Boilk View PostFunny isn't it, how these avant garde über-serious composers write lots of stand-alone shortish pieces over several years, and then group them together as a vast cycle of works, presumably to make a more epic statement? ... To me these cycles have the whiff of "put all these pieces together, and I'll maybe get taken more seriously". But, heaven forbid, one reviewer cites that Construction (sic.) itself belongs to Barrett's even larger cycle of entitled Resistance and Vision.
A piece of such size must surely have intentions. Although it's fragments may be, the thing is compiled so it's not just dashed off. Can anyone tell us what the intentions are? Or is it a sketchbook work?
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hackneyvi
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Posti still have not listened, mostly because i have a problem with how long this piece appears to require to hear it .... i mean the Art of Fugue i somewhere arounf 1hr 50m
Which makes me think - I've got a hour before I need to go out and I might as well give Barrett my ear.
Perhaps reason here is what mucks up the listening. We don't say we need to hear the whole thing to say what we might feel about a portion; but might be expected to hear the whole thing to make other kinds of judgement about it. But what are we judging if we're not judging our feelings about music?
I suppose I mean that giving a thing of this length a fair chance doesn't have to mean listening to it in its entirety and, though its length has deterred me all week, on reflection I can't think why.Last edited by Guest; 27-11-11, 00:18. Reason: Poorly expressed point (which hasn't scrubbed up much better by editing).
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heliocentric
Originally posted by Boilk View PostFunny isn't it, how these avant garde über-serious composers write lots of stand-alone shortish pieces over several years, and then group them together as a vast cycle of works, presumably to make a more epic statement?
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hackneyvi
4 sections (?) form a micro-opera based on The Trojan Women;
5 fragments which could form, if compiled, a violin concerto;
10 sections (the remainder): half have electronics in the foreground, half have the instruments;
All the parts run continuously or simultaneously or something.
Utopian ideas and spontaneous and pre-planned thinking / action are er have um something to um do (wa diddy diddy dum diddy doo) with it er.
An inspiration was Bacon - angular juxtapositions with disturbing events occuring within the setting.
God um he er he's a ahh boring er oh-wa er speaker (but I appreciate er that he um that he er was er nervous um).
The 9 members of his audience must have been quite overwhelming to confront.
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hackneyvi
I'm about 15 minutes in and I think that the mini-opera might have started.
So far, it's sounding pretty much like a new music parody.
I'm reading Tolstoy at the moment and I think he would have despised this. It's not really making any mark on me at all, though, so far.
Oh, wait though ... There's an unintelligible woman swooping in Greek that I fancy would be incomprehensible even if Greek was a language I spoke. She's starting to get on my tits.
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hackneyvi
Originally posted by heliocentric View PostI'm sorry but what evidence do you have for the size of the audience? since you obviously weren't there.
But size isn't everything.
I've done 30 minutes and I feel ... it's of no interest to me.
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heliocentric
Originally posted by hackneyvi View PostI fancied I could hear individual pairs of hands clapping in an echoic acoustic
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Originally posted by hackneyvi View PostThe 9 members of his audience must have been quite overwhelming to confront.
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John Skelton
Originally posted by french frank View PostI think someone put up a link to the programme note somewhere - no? Can anyone help with finding it?
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