Zeitmaße (1955-56) Le Domaine Musical Pierre Boulez, cond. (13:38)
I was twelve when I took the record and score out from Carnegie Library, and sat for hours score-reading this wondrous work.
Fifty-eight years later, I feel a deep connection with Stockhausen's "Nr. 5" in his catalogue, as I've strived to unearth its secrets.
I'll try to share some of them below the first 22 bars of the score:
Zeitmaße means "time measures."
Stockhausen holed himself up in a rented room in Switzerland after he was commissioned to write a work for orchestra (this would become Gruppen). He had scarcely begun, when he was asked to write a short composition celebrating the tenth anniversary of Heinrich Strobel's serve at the Südwestrundfunk, Baden-Baden.
"I had to write something quickly, by that evening. I did not allow myself to take any time over it. And then, suddenly, I hear this whole little four-minute piece. I really chuckled to myself about it. It was for voice and wind quintet [sic; he surely meant quartet]. Later I replaced the vocal part with a cor anglais, and the 'piece' is the first four minutes of Zeitmaße."
The song -- using a text by Strobel, translated into French -- was scored for alto voice, flute, clarinet and bassoon (the "quintet" seems to have reduced to a "trio").
On cherche pour trouver quelque chose. Mais au fond, on ne sait pas ce qu'on cherche au juste. Et cela est vrai non seulement pour l"allemagne musicale.
(We are seeking to find something. But at bottom, we do not know quite what we are looking for. And that is true not only of German musical life.)
The song became the basis for the beginning of Zeitmaße. Stockhausen contemporarily wrote about the idea of "time measures" in an article entitled "How Time Passes":
"Music consists of order-relationships in time; this presupposes that one has a conception of such time. We hear alterations in an acoustic field: silence-sound-silence, or sound-sound; and between the alterations we can distinguish time-intervals of varying magnitude. These time-intervals may be called phases.
In order to compare one group of phases with another, we make a distinction between 'periodic' and 'aperiodic' phase-groups, and, between these extremes, we distinguish a greater or smaller number of transitional stages (as deviations from either periodicity or aperiodicity, depending on which predominates)."
The article goes on to explain his idea of serial organization, centering on the concept of a twelve-step duration series having the same properties as a basic 12-tone pitch series.
The first twelve notes of Zeitmaße form the pitch series: C#/D/A/C/G#/E/D#/F#/F/B/A#/G, which generates further series, where the last note of each row becomes a starting point for subsequent ones.
In addition to a pitch series, Stockhausen also constructed a dynamic series, which can be easily noticed by the constant change of dynamics in each part.
And finally, he determined five categories of "time measures," which are found both separately and in combinations:
Metronomically measured tempi, in 12 different degrees, measured as a chromatic scale;
"As fast as possible," dependent on the abilities of the players and the nature of the musical passage;
"As slowly as possible," with the passage to be performed in one breath. (Today, most accomplished wind players have learned circular breathing, which makes this process practical.);
Fast, slowing down to about a quarter of the initial speed; and
Slow, speeding up to "as fast as possible."
Thus, this early work prefigures Stockhausen's obsession with particular types of organization for each component of music: pitch, rhythm, form -- that grows more and more complex over the years.
String Quartet #2 (1915-17) 1. Moderato (10:11) 2. Allegro molto capriccioso (7:18) 3. Lento (9:18) Emerson String Quartet
1. Moderato
The dissonant minor second introduces the harmonic tension one feels throughout the movement. This melodic arpeggio (always finishing with that downward minor second) is the leitmotif of the movement ...
2. Allegro molto capriccioso
An explosive Hungarian dance! This tritone forms the basis for the crunchy harmony, and the dance begins with this D Minor/Major riff that is greatly developed.
3. Lento
Notice how Bartók carefully increases the size of the intervals -- from a minor second, to a major second, to a major third ... the soundscape gradually opens up ...
Tuning Up (1946/completed by Chou Wen-Chung in 1998) National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain Vasily Petrenko, cond. (7:38)
Ironically, the story of Tuning Up sums up Varèse’s life-long failure to gain support for his vision, therefore wasting so much of his creativity. The 1947 film, Carnegie Hall, produce by Boris Morros, featured many musicians, such as Leopold Stokowski, Bruno Walter, and Fritz Reiner. Varèse had long known Morros through Walter Anderson, a loyal advocate for Varèse and the editor of The Commonweal, who published Varèse’s seminal essay, “Organized Sound for the Sound Film,” in 1940. Morros, however, failed in the 1930’s to support Varèse in gaining use of the sound studios in Hollywood for his acoustic experiments. While Carnegie Hall was in production in 1946, Morros persuaded Varèse, through Anderson, to compose a few minutes of music parodying the orchestra’s pre-concert tuning up, to be played by the New York Philharmonic with Stokowski. Varèse evidently took the request seriously, whereas Morros wanted slapstick and abandoned the idea. It was said that Varèse was paid a large sum, but that he rejected the cheque in a fury upon hearing his music distorted at rehearsal. The truth was that Varèse had, without discussing a fee, worked hastily on the piece, and that no rehearsals had ever taken place. Besides, no score or parts exist.
What Varèse kept of this venture are two short drafts of about one-and-a-half minutes each, employing quotations from his own music (as well as a few fleeting suggestions of other familiar music). The drafts appear to be revisions of an earlier version, with parts of manuscript pages and photocopies pasted over each other. The quotations, ranging from a single percussion figure to a few measures, are taken from Amériques, Arcana, Ionisation, and Intégrales, and are often modified or juxtaposed with new material. To create a complete edition of Tuning Up for performance, the first decision was whether it would make sense for the two drafts to be played successively. At the end of one of the drafts, following a statement on the pitch A in six octaves, there are two additional measures (mm. 36, 37) of soft and isolated sounds of A-related pitches that call to mind the final and penultimate endings of Déserts, which suggest openness and the expectation for continuation (perhaps suggesting the endless expanse of a desert).
Déserts was composed a few years after Tuning Up, but much of the material actually came from Espace, with which Varèse was involved in 1946. It was then concluded that this draft should precede the other, with its open ending expanded in the fashion of the passages in Déserts, to serve as transition to the second draft which ends on open As. Three measures are interposed (mm. 38-40), essentially reiterating the pitches already stated (E, F , and B) in the preceding measures (mm. 36-37) with the addition of one pitch (D). These statements on A covering the entire orchestral range obviously have a significant role and are therefore elaborated slightly, with emphasis on registral expansion (mm. 33-35, 95-100).
The most enigmatic notations in the drafts are the numerous large (in size) and long (in number of measures) signs of crescendo and diminuendo. These are not synchronized with the dynamic marks for instruments, which often seem contradictory. It could easily be assumed that he had some electronic means in mind. But Varèse had been trying to contact Theremin in Russia without success since 1940, and he would hardly have had time to explore other devices unavailable to him.
There are no other indications in the drafts as to what kind of musical content these hairpin signs are for. On the other hand, Varèse’s two sirens were in plain view in his workshop and could easily be brought to Carnegie Hall on demand. It was therefore decided to interpret these signs as for instruments in the orchestra to play “as if tuning” and for the sirens as used in Ionisation. In the completed edition, available instrumental groups are assigned to “tuning” passages in a total of 49 measures, about half the score, in accordance with Varèse’s notation in the drafts. Sirens join in some of the passages (mm. 28-30, 73-74, and 87-90) as suggested by the nature of the quotations. Elsewhere, sirens are assigned when no pitched instruments are available (mm. 49-51, 52-54, 68-69, 75, 79-81, and 86).
In recognition of his usual attention to register, timbre, and dynamics, Varèse organizes these added “tuning” passages according to how they interact with the notated parts with respect to these parameters. Similarly, percussion parts are expanded or filled in, mostly by quoting in Varèse’s own manner from Ionisation and Amériques, to highlight or contrast the pitched parts he wrote, and to correlate with the parabolic sounds of the sirens.
Because of the fast-paced quotations, the drafts consist of frequent tempo changes, with a total of 17 in barely three minutes. These tempo marks have been adjusted and edited, with the number of tempi reduced from seven to four. In addition, a few measures have been added to provide space or expansion to the sketched materials in the drafts (mm. 26, 70, 78, 92-93, 99-100).
Tuning Up is an inter-play of flashes of orchestral sonorities, rainbow-like colors of percussion, spatial trajectories of sirens, and the undulating sound of “tuning.” On another level, Varèse clearly had fun with the pitch A — teasing and flirting with it, juxtaposing or building upon it, and often resorting to his favorite scheme of intercepting cycles of intervals, frequently the fifth. Tuning Up is a perfect overture to Varèse’s music, and an equally fascinating opening for any symphonic concert.
Because of questions raised above, no attempt at reconstructing or completing Tuning Up was undertaken until 1998. The completed edition was commissioned jointly by Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (of Amsterdam), Casa Ricordi, and the Decca Record Company, Ltd. -- Chou Wen-Chung
Concerto in B Minor for Four Violins, RV 580 (1711) 1. Allegro 2. Largo 3. Larghetto -- Adagio -- Largo -- Allegro Il Giardino Armonico Giovanni Antonini, cond. (8:48)
Der Kinderfänger (2001) Kathinka Pasveer, alto flute and piccolo Antonio Pérez Abellán, synthesizer, percussion Benjamin Kobler, synthesizer Karlheinz Stockhausen, percussion (35:10)
Four Songs on Poems by James Joyce (1958-60) 1. Dove Song (3:39) 2. She Weeps over Rahoon (3:14) 3. A Flower Given to My Daughter (1:22) 4. Monotone (3:30) Lucy Shelton, soprano David Del Tredici, piano
"David Del Tredici is that rare find among composers -- a creator with a truly original gift. I venture to say that his music is certain to make a lasting impression on the American musical scene. I know of no other composer of his generation ... who composes music of greater freshness or daring, or with more personality." -- Oliver Knussen
16 Minuets, K. 176 (1773) 1. C Major 2. G Major 3. E-Flat Major 4. B-Flat Major 5. F Major 6. D Major 7. A Major 8. C Major 9. G Major 10. B-Flat Major 11. F Major 12. D Major 13. G Major 14. C Major 15. F Major 16. D Major Slovak Sinfonietta Taras Krysa, cond. (32:52)
String Quartet #5 in F Major (1835) 1. Moderato assai (8:56) 2. Adagio(6:20) 3. Scherzo: Allegro non troppo(4:58) 4. Finale: Allegro vivace(4:18) Melos Quartet
Adolphe Adam on Cherubini: "Some maintain his temper was very even, because he was always angry."
God, the Lord, is Sun and Shield, the Lord gives mercy and glory. No good thing will our God withhold from the Righteous.
2. Aria (Alto): Gott ist unsre Sonn und Schild
God is still our Soul and Shield He the hope of our salvation His our thanks and adoration That He guards His flock so well He it is will ward and stay us When our foemen seek to slay us When there bark the hounds of Hell
3. Choral (Coro): Nun danket alle Gott
Now thank we all our God With hearts and hands and voices In all His wondrous works Forever man rejoices Who from our Mother's arms His bounty doth bestow From childhood on through life His countless blessings grow!
4. Recitativo (Basso): Gottlob, wir wissen den rechten Weg
Praise God! we know The certain road to Blessedness Thou Jesus, hast shown it us thru thy Word and teaching And so we praise Thy blessed Name forever Yet not a few there are Who even now Are stumbling 'neath The yoke of faulty doctrine Ah, pity Lord These pitiful deluded one Direct their thought to right behavior And lead them as their Guide and Saviour
5. Aria (Soprano, Basso): Gott, ach Gott, verlaß die Deinen nimmermehr!
God, ah God, forsake Thy faithful Nevermore Keep Thy Word a beacon shining We implore Let our foes no more assail us Praise we Thee who never fails us
6. Choral (Coro): Erhalt uns in der Wahrheit
In probity maintain us In freedom e'er sustain us To praise Thy Name forever Through Jesus Christ our Saviour
Concerto in G Major for Viola, Strings and Continuo (1716-21) 1. Largo 2. Allegro 3. Andante 4. Presto Tomoe Badiarova, viola Bremer Barockorchester (14:27)
Various accounts give hints that Beethoven may have composed this as early as 1792 in Bonn. In any case, the publication in Vienna in 1797 still marks this as a very early work.
The influence of Mozart is felt not only in the music itself, but in the form -- a six-movement work which might have been called a divertimento.
The work cycles between the Lydian and Phrygian modes -- starting on A, up a fifth to E; then B-Flat, up a fifth to F -- all the way up the scale by half-steps.
The following example shows how this works: The first scale shown -- A Major -- has half-steps between the third/fourth and seventh/eighth degrees.
The Lydian mode has half-steps between the fourth/fifth and seventh/eighth degrees. The Phrygian mode has half-steps between the first/second and fifth/sixth degrees:
Gradually, the time spent in Lydian shortens and shifts more to the Phrygian ...