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  • Nick,

    Not ranting at all - impassioned. Glad to see it.

    I don't know enough post Horn Trio Ligeti to justify my huge overgeneralisation but it was interesting to see your response which is what I was hoping to encourage. Hopefully others will be enthused to explore some of the later Ligeti you've mentioned.

    I did feel let down by Ligeti with his Brahmsian Trio - and even as a piece of post-romantic music I personally don't think it works so well. It was like Ligeti was my avante garde hero and then he turns his back on us. I never really understood why he did that. Still I was young and headstrong.

    My favourite Ligeti is still the pre trio Orchestral and chamber music. The Aventures and Nouvelle Aventures are a complete riot - what imagination - what daring and importantly what fun. I saw them sung by three naked singers at the Queen Elizabeth Hall 20 odd years ago [:O]ops: . Quite an experience for a college student.

  • Do you know any Kagel? I've heard about some piece of his where the musicians get taken hostage. The audience don't know it's "part of the piece" till what? The SWAT teams turn up at the end and start firing? Hmm - I guess after recent news events that kind of thing doesn't seem so clever any more. It was probably a product of "quieter times" than now. But I'm intrigued if any VSL members know anything about that piece or anything else by him.

  • Ah I see your point David. I worked throught Ligeti's works kind of backwards starting with the piano concerto going back. Thinking about it that is very good point regarding the trio, which had never really struck me before. I suppose wth some pieces by Ligeti I kind of dismiss without really thinking why, like the piece for 100 metronomes, Volumina (sp) and those later Hungarin chorale studies, the name of which I forget. You've got me thinking now...

    Oh and Guy was correct, I'd got my titles mixed-up, as usual.

    Regards

    Nick

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    @Nick said:

    ...suppose wth some pieces by Ligeti I kind of dismiss without really thinking why, like the piece for 100 metronomes, Volumina (sp) and those later Hungarin chorale studies, the name of which I forget. You've got me thinking now...Nick


    I wouldn't dismiss Poeme Electonique (the metronome piece) or Volumina. Poeme Electronic is one of those pieces like Cages 4'33" which just had to be written and if they hadn't somebody else would have. I have seen PE performed at the Union Chapel in Islington during the sadly lamented Almeida Festivals in the 80s and 90s. It was a fascinating (and enjoyable) aural and visual experience. What is a joke is Ligeti releasing an extract (about 5 minutes of the usual 20 minutes) as part of the recent CD collections??

    Volumina does things to an organ that you wouldn't want your mother-in-law to hear but is enormous fun - at least I think so. Oddly it seems to me that pre Horn Trio Ligeti was vital and full of the excitement of youth but post Horn Trio he's become too full of his own importance and concerned with his comercial success and consequently lost that vitality and relevance. But don't quote me on that.

    Guy

    I don't know the Kagel you mention and have only experienced a couple of his pieces including playing his "Tuba Mirum" for solo tuba where as well as fairly freeky playing technique the player is required to sing/shout/scream the Latin Tuba Mirrum and do some theatrics with the positioning of the tuba and walking off stage. Again though, it is a fun piece and not to be taken too seriously.

    For me much of the best avant garde music (and art) is intended to be fun. it is the pretentious that gives it a bad name.

    Dave TK

  • I heard/saw some Kagel many years ago, and have looked at several scores -- formed the opinion back then that he was a fraud, one of many from his time (Boguslaw Shafer was another, as I recall). But perhaps that was one of those too-hasty judgments. Haven't heard any or seen mention for years.

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    @DaveTubaKing said:

    Poeme Electronic is one of those pieces ...


    Just a quick formal (german [[;)]] ) correction: the famous "Poème electronic" is by Edgar Varèse. The Ligeti piece is called "Poème symphonique for 100 metronomes".

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    @DaveTubaKing said:

    Volumina does things to an organ that you wouldn't want your mother-in-law to hear but is enormous fun - at least I think so. Oddly it seems to me that pre Horn Trio Ligeti was vital and full of the excitement of youth but post Horn Trio he's become too full of his own importance and concerned with his comercial success and consequently lost that vitality and relevance. But don't quote me on that.


    I agree with that. But please don´t quote me either! [:D]

  • Can we please "get real" about Ligeti's Horn Trio. I don't like it as much as Atmospheres or Volumina or the Piano Etudes. But can we stop talking about it as if he wrote it as a way to get heavy rotation exposure on Top Forty radio stations!

    Guy

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    @"mathis said:

    Just a quick formal (german [[;)]] ) correction: the famous "Poème electronic" is by Edgar Varèse. The Ligeti piece is called "Poème symphonique for 100 metronomes".


    oops! quite right - love Varese' piece too - now there's a guy who wasn't tempted over to the dark side.

    DTK

  • It's good to know it is not just me with the hopless memory !

  • Kagel has written some music I think is great. I'm not usually keen on theatre (with or without music) so some of the more stagey pieces aren't my favourites, but I think MM 52 is very good. The Piano Trio is great. Also Tactil, Rrrrrrr...5 Jazz Pieces, Fürst Igor Strawinsky There seems to be quite a few pieces where the "humour" (another thing I generally dislike in music) goes wrong, but when it's done right (I think Tactil is a good example) you feel as though your'e floating somehow on a cushion of audacity and invention. Time moves differently.
    I agree with Dave TK about fun vs pretentiousness. Fun is a different from humour.

    best,
    John

  • Thanks for the specifics about some kagel pieces -- will try to find them, somehow, live or recorded ?or videotaped if that's necessary?

  • Poeme Electronique by Varese is a fascinating work. It would have been fantastic to hear it in its original presentation on 400 speakers in a huge pavilion at the Brussels World's Fair.

    Also - it is MICROTONAL! HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA!!!

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    @gugliel said:

    Thanks for the specifics about some kagel pieces -- will try to find them, somehow, live or recorded ?or videotaped if that's necessary?


    There is a series of Kagel releases on disques montaignes including variété, which I forgot about before. DGG released Tactil on their budget 20th Century series with Music for Renaissance Instruments a few years ago. I recommend starting with these 2.

    best,
    John

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    @William said:

    Poeme Electronique by Varese is a fascinating work. It would have been fantastic to hear it in its original presentation on 400 speakers in a huge pavilion at the Brussels World's Fair.

    Also - it is MICROTONAL! HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA!!!


    Äh, why is Poème Electronique microtonal?

  • It doesn't even use notes. It is entirely sounds warped in various ways, including pitches that correspond to non-chromatic tones.

    Maybe that isn't strict microtonality, but what is? To me the world is microtonal.

  • PaulP Paul moved this topic from Orchestration & Composition on