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Stocktakings from an Apprenticeship |
List Price: $90.00
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Rating:  Summary: documentary in value:essays of a young innovator Review: While riding on the Paris Metro in the early Forties,during the War, a young Frenchmen had turned to his mentor and exclaimed that culture was at an end point , who will reorganize music, "You will,Pierre", said Messiaen.This collections of essays has now fascinating documentary value,for Boulez has moved on we all know, to larger realms in both universes of conducting and composition, and unpretenciously has kept the vision Messiaen had of his young student. Yet Boulez's aesthetic has not undergone a metamorphosis that is unrelated not totally unrecognizable from his youth.And all these essays are reflections and position papers, analyses,technical points like Sprechgesang and encyclopedic like entries. All were a means toward a comprehension of the situation in music at the end of the Second World War.The analytical essay "Stravinsky remains" is perhaps the most valuable item here . This is a dissection of his Rite of Spring, how the rhythm works like cells being placed together into mosaic-like patterns,creating textures,but truncating the rhythmic identities. "To the farthest reach of the fertile country" is an essay here inspired by a quote from Paul Klee, who has remained an enduring inspiration to Boulez to this day. This essay is on the implications of electronic composition, which in the early Fifties represented a new universe of sound and its conception. It was also dangerous, for how will it enter the realm of culture and creativity, how will electronics interface with the expressive concerns of form and content, and sonic manipulation. Recall that Boulez in his youth was a fiery activist for the cause of serial composition. Anyone who didn't follw this cause was useless and unimportant.He, for instance called for all opera houses to be burned to the ground, and loathed the likes of Verdi or Puccini exclaiming the vulgarity of their music. He also led jeering sections at concerts. But all this soon, to use his words, stopped,Boulez stopped barking like a dog outside. The infamous and misunderstood article "Schoenberg is Dead" is included here. Boulez never meant this title in a derogatory way, simply a ubiquitous use of the French phrase, the "king is dead", referring to the French Revolution. All Boulez meant was indeed modest, that Schoenberg's conception of the dodecaphonic language simply didn't extend itself into all the parameters of music.This is true of form in particular, where Schoenberg had retrogressed utilizing Baroque forms situated within atonal means. All of the grande auteurs that Boulez later conducted for the next thirty years are discussed in essay form: Alban Berg, Maurice Ravel, Claude Debussy, Stravinsky and Schoenberg. There is also an essay on "Alea", the indeterminate aleatoric idea which fascinated Boulez at this time the Fifties, and triggered his lifelong interest in Mallarme. His Third Piano Sonata was the focus of this concept of introducing performative freedoms into a work, much like encountering the mobiles of Alexander Calder, where fixed shapes rotates and interrelate in forever newer configurations.Here Boulez gives indications why he intends to embark on this creative excursion citing points in history without introducing much technical detail.The original of the work entitled "Notes of an Apprenticeship" was published by Alfred A Knopf in 1968 and has been unavailable.
Rating:  Summary: documentary in value:essays of a young innovator Review: While riding on the Paris Metro in the early Forties,during the War, a young Frenchmen had turned to his mentor and exclaimed that culture was at an end point , who will reorganize music, "You will,Pierre", said Messiaen.This collections of essays has now fascinating documentary value,for Boulez has moved on we all know, to larger realms in both universes of conducting and composition, and unpretenciously has kept the vision Messiaen had of his young student. Yet Boulez's aesthetic has not undergone a metamorphosis that is unrelated not totally unrecognizable from his youth.And all these essays are reflections and position papers, analyses,technical points like Sprechgesang and encyclopedic like entries. All were a means toward a comprehension of the situation in music at the end of the Second World War.The analytical essay "Stravinsky remains" is perhaps the most valuable item here . This is a dissection of his Rite of Spring, how the rhythm works like cells being placed together into mosaic-like patterns,creating textures,but truncating the rhythmic identities. "To the farthest reach of the fertile country" is an essay here inspired by a quote from Paul Klee, who has remained an enduring inspiration to Boulez to this day. This essay is on the implications of electronic composition, which in the early Fifties represented a new universe of sound and its conception. It was also dangerous, for how will it enter the realm of culture and creativity, how will electronics interface with the expressive concerns of form and content, and sonic manipulation. Recall that Boulez in his youth was a fiery activist for the cause of serial composition. Anyone who didn't follw this cause was useless and unimportant.He, for instance called for all opera houses to be burned to the ground, and loathed the likes of Verdi or Puccini exclaiming the vulgarity of their music. He also led jeering sections at concerts. But all this soon, to use his words, stopped,Boulez stopped barking like a dog outside. The infamous and misunderstood article "Schoenberg is Dead" is included here. Boulez never meant this title in a derogatory way, simply a ubiquitous use of the French phrase, the "king is dead", referring to the French Revolution. All Boulez meant was indeed modest, that Schoenberg's conception of the dodecaphonic language simply didn't extend itself into all the parameters of music.This is true of form in particular, where Schoenberg had retrogressed utilizing Baroque forms situated within atonal means. All of the grande auteurs that Boulez later conducted for the next thirty years are discussed in essay form: Alban Berg, Maurice Ravel, Claude Debussy, Stravinsky and Schoenberg. There is also an essay on "Alea", the indeterminate aleatoric idea which fascinated Boulez at this time the Fifties, and triggered his lifelong interest in Mallarme. His Third Piano Sonata was the focus of this concept of introducing performative freedoms into a work, much like encountering the mobiles of Alexander Calder, where fixed shapes rotates and interrelate in forever newer configurations.Here Boulez gives indications why he intends to embark on this creative excursion citing points in history without introducing much technical detail.The original of the work entitled "Notes of an Apprenticeship" was published by Alfred A Knopf in 1968 and has been unavailable.
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