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Contemporary Composition Seminar Fall 2012 Instructor: Prof. SIGMAN Thursday 14:00-16:00 Lecture VI 0. Administrata • Assignment II: due 내 일! • Midterm Exam: 11 월 01 일 • Review: 10 월 25 일 ?’s? I. Prescriptive (규정하는) vs. Descriptive (기 술적인) Notation A. Prescriptive Scoring • Set of performance instructions (명령) • No clear indication of sounding result (결과) • E.g., Lachenmann, Pression and Guero B. Descriptive Scoring • Indication of sounding result, without a clear indication of how to produce the sounding result • OR: • The ideal interpretation (이상적인 성능) of the piece, which may or may not be possible to achieve • E.g.: electronic works such as Stockhausen’s Studie II and Xenakis Mycenae alpha; also Xenakis, Evryali C. Prescriptive or Descriptive? • Most repertoire that we will study contains both prescriptive and descriptive elements • 우리가 공부하게 될 대부분의 레퍼토리가 규정하는과 설명을 모두 요소를 포함. II. Critical Music III: Cardew and Kagel A. Cornelius Cardew 1. Bio • (1936-1981) • 영국 사람 • Performed on guitar (기 타) in the premiere of Boulez’ Le Marteau sans maître (learned guitar for this occasion) • 1958-60: assistant to Stockhausen (and actually composed Stockhausen’s Carré) • Maoist/leftist politics • Killed by MI5 agent? 2. Context: 영국, 1960s-70s Common Associations World War II: Bombings (Coventry, ca. 1945) Cold War Radical Visual Art and Cinema Student Protests/Social Change Musical Experimentalism and Institutionalised Music: Gavin Bryars and the Portsmouth Sinfonia • “Popular” classical music as found source material (재 료) • The Orchestra as material • Performance experience/physical effort as a musical parameter (“uncontrolled variables”) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpJ6anurf uw Leading Questions • • • • • • • • Music, institutions, and professionalism The role of the composer The role of notation Collective musical experience and democracy: the role of improvisation Music, value, “cheapness,” and capitalism The institutionalisation of the avant-garde High culture vs. low culture and society Music new music be “good” music? 3. The Scratch Orchestra John Cage Influence • In 1958, Cardew first attended concerts of John Cage and David Tudor • Introduced the music of Cage, Feldman, La Monte Young, Christian Wolff and others to English audiences in the 1960s • Graphic scores • Indeterminate notation • Composer and intention Improvisation: the AMM • Cardew joined the AMM, an improvised music collective, in 1966 • Spontaneous, unplanned ensembles • Collective decision-making • Any musicians could join performances • Unconventional playing techniques • Unconventional instruments • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6iDLmFLQ I-I Scratch Orchestra Origins • Founded in 1969 by Cardew and Howard Skempton • Members: musicians (students) and nonmusicians (not ONLY specialists) • Performed original compositions, popular classics, “Scratch music” (group structured improvisations), and improvisation “rituals” Scratch Orchestra “Constitution” Ideals • Group ritual (의 식) via improvisation • Text scores and graphic scores that nonmusicians could read and create • Importance of the image • Anti-academic perspective • Collective experience • Intersection of musical practices • Use of unconventional, cheap (싼), and homemade instruments/electronics Not Necessarily “English” Music • Compilation of experimental English music from 1960-1977 • Includes recordings of Scratch Orchestra performances • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9weaMqZ kH4w 4. Treatise (1963-67) • During this time, Cardew worked as a graphic designer (그래픽 디자이너) for a publisher • 193-page score; 1 continuous line • Notation: geometric elements “treated” to distortion processes • For any instrument or group of instruments • NOT a descriptive score: abstract relationships formed and maintained between symbol and musical material Treatise: Score and Performance Examples http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9nR903Bdcs http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=dy-k678En4I 5. The Great Learning (1968-71) • Texts: Confucius, translated by Ezra Pound • In 7 “Paragraphs” • Musical situations described and instructions provided • For musicians and non-musicians • Voices, organ, percussion instruments • Communal, ritual experience • Performed by The Scratch Orchestra Great Learning Score • Simple melodic and rhythmic patterns • Repeated texts • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d84yl3Zvdo • 4. Music about Politics • In 1974, Cardew wrote a book entitled Stockhausen serves Imperialism (제국주의) • Maoist critique of Stockhausen and Cage “We sing for the future!” and other songs (노래) • In the 1970s, Cardew focused on writing music for the people (popular song), rather than only by the people (collective experiences) • Marxist/Maoist texts • Clear political messages • Renaissance English music influences • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eed1xXeD ElI B. Mauricio Kagel 1. Bio • • • • (1931-2008) Born in Argentina, immigrated to Germany Worked in Cologne Highly influential on 2 generations of (mostly German) composers • Known for work in music theatre • Absurdism (부조리) and humour (유머) 2. Instrumental Theatre: Match (1964) • • • • “Contest” (경기) between 2 cellists Referee (심판) = percussionist Extremely difficult cello parts Music about music Match Score and Film http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=8hnJzwI3-fs 3. Theatre of the Absurd: Staatstheater (1967-70) • For chorus, orchestra, corps de ballet (of nondancers) • Satire (풍자 코메디) of the conventions of opera and theatre • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IuM8sYuZ Pp8 4. Historical Music: Ludwig van (1970) • What happened in 1770? • Film • As in Lachenmann’s Accanto: the banality (진부) of Classical music in contemporary culture • Endless repetition and distortion of Beethoven themes = endless, meaningless repetition and distortion of performers • http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=play er_embedded&v=_-KoEofNim4#!