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1 PEDAGOGICAL STRATEGIES FOR FREE IMPROVISATION: PERFORMANCE IN RELATION WITH COMPOSITIONAL THOUGHT Rogério Luiz Moraes Costa University of São Paulo Rua Bento de Abreu, 232 São Paulo, SP, Brazil, Cep 05049-010 55 11 91682010 [email protected] 1-INTRODUCTION Our intention is to formulate specific pedagogic strategies for contemporary improvisation (also known as free or non-idiomatici). When we speak about any kind of improvisation we can relate it with composition because both activities are different forms of musical thoughtii. Obviously, it would be impossible to summarize and further systematize all forms of musical thought because it would be necessary to address the “huge musical library” where we find everything that has been done (historically and geographically speaking), what is being done today, and even what has not been done yet, since music is an open field for new and unexpected experiences. And this means that music is the territory of virtuality. Quoting Luciano Berio we could say that today that library has become boundless. Rather like Borges’ Library of Babel, it spreads out in all directions; it has no before nor after, no place for storing memories. It is always open, totally present, but awaiting interpretation (Berio, p.9, 2006). In this sense, when something is fully systematized as a technique (maybe captured in a kind of computerized algorithm as has done David Cope iii) it can’t be considered as a work of art. Nevertheless, for our educational purpose, it could be useful, to borrow the open approach created by the English composer Brian Ferneyhough and further developed by Brazilian composer Silvio Ferraz, to think about musical composition from a listening point of view. As exposed by Ferraz in his article about music and semiotics (Ferraz, 1997), Ferneyhough proposes three different categories of musical thought: figural, gestural and textural. From these categories it could be drawn different pedagogic strategies that could be used with groups of musicians who want to learn how to improvise without the restraintsiv, limits, or implicit rules present in musical idioms, styles or genres. Obviously, these categories are only theoretical since music is multiple and not divisible. Just for pedagogical sake we could say that there are musical practices in which one or other of these categories is predominant. 2 -FIGURAL THOUGHT As proposed by Ferneyhough, figural thought refers to an abstract (based on mental images) way of thinking in which the musician deals with figures. These are rhythmical-melodic patterns that could be reduced to numerical proportions. The figure is an abstract idea that only becomes sonorous in practice and exist in the performer’s head independently of its unfolding. In the case of an improvisation performance it depends strongly on an active synthesis of the memory. What the 2 musician creates here and now becomes an abstract figure (a motif or a theme) that has to be manipulated in real time in many different ways and put into play interacting in a complex environment. In composition, J.S. Bach could exemplify this kind of attitude where the sonorous (the sound itself) dimension is not a first concern, or else, where what really matter are the “numerical” relations between motifs, themes, melodies and pitch class sets. In fact, all the occidental musical tradition based on notation and its figural possibilities such as the idea of counterpoint, developing and variation including Josquin, Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Schoenberg, and many others, could be thought to a certain extent as being figural. We could say that this is a kind of music based on notation and that its invention and constant improvement favored this kind of thought. But we could also affirm that figural thought doesn’t depend exclusively on a score, because even in oral tradition we can find this kind of musical thought. When an improviser works in real time, he could be developing or varying figural themes that were created by him, which he picked up from the improvisation environment, or from tradition. As a matter of fact this three possibilities certainly coexist in a performance: a figure is created by a performer in the context of a local environment that is immersed in a tradition. In this case he is thinking musically in a figural way. For an improviser to learn about this kind of approach it would be useful to listen and to analyze a large range of music such as, for example, Josquin’s Motets, Bach’s Art of the Fugue, Beethoven’s Symphonies, Schoenberg’s pieces etc. Moreover, there are a lot of great jazz musicians like Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Ornete Coleman and many others, who create their performances by using this kind of approach: picking up motifs and developing it through the chord changes - if the environment is related to a tonal/modal system – or freely in atonal environments. We could even mention this kind of musical procedure in non-occidental cultures such as Carnatic, Persian and Flamenco environments. Just as a pedagogical strategy, we could split this kind of thought in two subcategories. 1.1 Rhythmical: When we focus on rhythm consciously neglecting the frequency aspect. We could bring some of John Cage’s experiences with rhythm in which he would affirm that the sound doesn’t matter, giving focus solely to the aspect of abstract rhythmical thought. When we think about a group of percussionists playing (unpitched instruments), the idea of rhythmical games immediately comes into mind. Obviously, the issues related to timbre are very important too. But even if timbre is relevant, the rhythm can be seen as the most important organizing force - especially when we have strongly idiomatic or pulsated music. It is worthy to remind that rhythmical is not only that kind of music thought that deals with the various arrangements of the different durations related in various proportions. Rhythm also deals with accentuation, sensations of time flow, the use of ostinatos, rhythmic pedals, etc. The important thing is that it seems possible to bring a pedagogic strategy focusing in rhythm and especially in rhythmical figures thought as motives. We could exemplify some proposals: given a pulsed ostinato idea, improvise interacting in various ways: a) summing up with different pulsed figures and creating a “groove” (as an idea of complementation or “pyramid”); b) contrasting with non pulsed rhythms creating 3 multiple layers in a kind of heterophony; c) creating polymetric contrasts against it. And so on. Obviously, it is impossible (and it is not desirable) to avoid the other parameters of sound such as frequency, dynamics and timbre. But it is possible to create a focus just for the sake of an exercise or to propose a performance where the musicians interact by paying attention only to rhythmical figures, dealing with short memory, development, variation etc. 1.2 Melodic: When we focus on pitch classes and its relationship mostly in a horizontal level, leaving in a second plan the rhythmical aspects of the figures. Here we speak clearly about themes, melodies, motifs and its unfolding: transposition, diminution, augmentation, fragmentation, extension, retrogradation, inversion etc. The European tradition of tonal music (Baroque, Classical, Romantic) is based mostly on this kind of “thematic” manipulation. With Schoenberg, especially in his atonal period (in which he is certainly freer than in dodecaphony) we can perceive a kind of narrative composition that unfolds almost entirely from very short and synthetic intervallic figures. As we know in Schoenberg’s music these figures turn to be a species of original cell of the piece from where everything is originated (even chords or vertical formations). We can also find many examples of this kind of elaboration in jazz and other forms of improvisation practices. We could say that this kind of thought is predominant in the type of performance that follows the traditional pattern themechorus-theme, where solo improvisation is thought as melodic variations over chord changes. In this aspect it could also be related to traditional forms of Western music such as theme with variations, chaconne, passacaglia etc. Even in a modal framework such as those found in Hermeto Pascoal, Herbie Hancock and many others composer’s themes, most of improvisers think about melodies, themes, motifs etc. In a freer environment (with no such harmonic restraints) the improvisers also can develop their performances focusing in this kind of approach. In this case their performances could be related to traditional occidental atonal motivic manipulation, such as Schoenberg’s. It is important to remember that, as we have already pointed in the beginning of this article, in a real performance situation performers are involved in a holistic way with all the aspects of sound: pitch, timbre, rhythm, dynamics etc. Nevertheless, again we can think about these proposals as pedagogic strategies that aim exclusively to develop a certain creative attitude in the student of improvisation. For these purposes there are many possible exercises for the development of this kind of skill such as improvise thinking always in melodic figures over tonal chord changes, over atonal and modal framework, idiomatic rhythmical grooves (with no “harmony”) and so on. 2- GESTURAL THOUGHT As proposed by Ferneyhough, gestural thought refers to something “larger” than the figure. It is related to gestalt perception (as a tendency to structure). Obviously, musical gestures can be composed by figures. But they are more than that. The meaning of a gesture is more than just the result of the sum of several figures. Musical gestures are almost always contextualized in specific musical styles, idioms or some extra-musical reference. In this sense we could also say that this category deals with all the relations that music can establish with other “languages”, particularly those 4 related with body and movement. A gesture is any significant musical event, which has its limits well delimited in time and which is composed by smaller and nonsignificant units (which are the figures). A gesture configure its “meaning” in a specific territory. We could identify a typical gesture from waltz, jazz, samba, choro, be-bop, flamenco, Beethoven, Chopin, tonal system etc. But we could also use the term in a more literal meaning as a physical movement of the performer to produce a specific result. An improvisation performance can lean strongly on the use of gestures and, in this case, it almost always evokes cultural, technical, personal, stylistic or idiomatic identities. If it there is a performance where the musicians are encouraged to use gestures originated from their different cultural backgrounds - even if in a recontextualized environment - the result will certainly bring up recognizable fragments in a more or less successful blending. This kind of proposal points to a very important subject since it deals with the possibility of putting together in a performance musicians pertaining to quite different traditions. It looks like whether they maintain too rigid the gestual structure of their cultures they won’t be able to interact in a successful way. It is hard to define the procedures that make possible this kind of environment. We could use the concept of deterritorialization of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari to think about this kind of process. They exemplify this concept with Béla Bartók who, from territorial and popular melodies, self sufficient, closed on themselves (and therefore, clearly gestual), creates a new chromatic style ensuring development of a new style, let’s say, more universal. It looks like, if what is “under” the gesture is figure, timbre (texture) and sound, musicians of different traditions can interact in a satisfactory way if they assume a receptive posture and create an environment where these “chunks” of territory can be torn apart and rearranged in new combinations. To improvise inside of a territory, consciously assuming all its rules, boundaries and constraints is also a very useful way to introduce students in the this kind of activity. 3- TEXTURAL THOUGHT As proposed by Ferneyhough, refers to something that involves a particular form of listening focused in the general configuration of a sonorous flux characterized by melodic and rhythmic figuration, harmonic-interval organization, registration, dynamics, density, spacing, modes of articulation, density, timbre and other possibly features of sound behavior. In his own words texture is the irreducible stochastic substrate of music and is the minimum precondition for there to be any differentiation potential relevant (Ferneyhough, 1990, p. 23)v. In other words we could also say that the textural types are characterized by modes of interaction of these formal basic features: how are sounds disposed in time, how they relate in the harmonic space and are grouped into subsets - in blocks or as a superposition of flows partially independent etc. The textural types are multiplicities, combinations of expressive traits and define types of sound behavior. In the context of tonal music we usually link this concept to traditional categories such as monody, polyphony and homophony. But in contemporary music this kind of thought relates to more diversified forms of music making in which especially timbre takes a structural and predominant role. In this case texture and timbre are not related with any tonal framework and therefore are not coordinated with the complementary 5 relationship between melody and harmony as a mean to reinforce harmonic tonal goals. Yet, as opposed to gesture, texture itself doesn’t evoke specific cultural territories. Its quality produces a kind of primordial sensation that lies before that identification of a specific territory. When we speak about texture we can make an analogy with the idea of sonorous object (object sonore) as proposed by Pierre Schaeffer. This kind of approach focuses our listening upon the sound itself through its energetic history (form of attack, spectral envelop, allure etc). The concrete and electronic music – which has Pierre Schaeffer as one of its most prominent formulators - brings forth a series of concepts, procedures and categories that contaminate and influence all the contemporary musical production including improvisationvi. In his Treatise of Musical Objects Pierre Schaeffer created, along with the concept of sonorous object, the idea of quatre écoutes (four modes of listening: ouïr, écouter, entendre, comprendre) along with the concept of ‘reduced listening’, meaning disregarding the original context of the sound, including its source and signification, and instead focusing our listening on the sonorous features. With these concepts in mind he formulates the opposition between the idea of musical and sonorous. The first concept would be related with the concept of comprendre that means grasping a meaning and treating the sound like a sign, referring to this meaning as a function of a language. For example, in tonal music, we hear an aggregate of sounds as a chord, which has its functional meaning. For Schaeffer, in a certain extent we don’t really hear the sound but instead we hear what the sound means in the tonal context. As another example of this concept we could think about a rhythmical figure played by a percussionist in a samba context. Again, we hear the figure as a whole, as a gesture, as a sign belonging to a very delimited musical idiom. It makes sense in that context. The listening is focused in its quality as a part of a system and, therefore we don’t really hear the sound in itself. For Pierre Schaeffer, to hear the sonorous (that would refer to a presumed pre musical situation) we have to seek for the “reduced listening” as it was mentioned above. This kind of listening would make possible for someone to “really” hear the sound and its inner qualities and energies, and it would make possible the textural kind of thought as referred by Ferneyhough. In this case music can be thought as a result of physical and aural qualities of the sound itself. In this sense much of the electroacustic music is conceived not as music made of sounds (material originating form) but rather as music where sounds are produced. As a logical conclusion of what has been written until now, we have that when we propose for a group of improvisation, an exercise focused in the idea of texture or timbre we should somehow avoid the prominent use of figures and gestures as this would lead our attention to the type of listening Schaeffer defines as musical in opposition to sonorous. We could say, quoting French philosopher Gilles Deleuze, that a musical practice that aims to transcend the molarityvii (in our case, the territory, the idiomatic musical borders) has to be held in a molecular plan, in a kind of neutral pre musical non-territory. To clarify these concepts we could say that textural or timbral is a more vertical kind of thought in opposition to a more horizontal (related with occidental tradition of narrative), which means that it leans more upon intensification as opposed to extension that can be thought as being more discursive. Of course, it can be argued that texture may be composed by figures. Obviously, there are figures that are heard as melodies and themes in a tonal context, or even in a narrative atonal context such as most of Schoenberg’s pieces. But there are figures 6 that are used to create a textural context as in much of Xenakis, Ferneyhough ou Ligeti’s works, only to name a few contemporary composers. Therefore, in this last approach, figures are taken by the composers or, in our case, by the improvisers in order to build a textural environment. In this sense texture and timbre definitely seems to be the most appropriate approach to free improvisation since it suggests a kind of listening that is focused in the “essence of music”. That would be the sound and its energetic qualities. In this situation it comes to mind the absolute necessity of including extended techniques for the instruments as a mean of penetrating in the dynamism of the sound itself through empirical experimentation and, at the same time, escaping of the already warn out qualities of figures and gestures in music in which the sound - much in a linguistic, almost communicative way - function as a signifier of a signified. In the process of exploring an instrument in a more experimental way, searching for its unknown and unexpected possibilities, somebody is able to reach a situation where the instrument can be considered as an extension of his/her own body or voice. Quoting the researcher of oral poetry of the Middle Ages Paul Zumthor, the voice lies in the silence of the body (Zumthor, 1993, p. 12). For him, voice is a skill for language. It has substance and tactility. The languages use the voice, but they should not be confused with it. The language is abstract and the voice is concrete. Also, the sound coming out of an instrument is ability to music. Analogously, it looks like this is a very interesting way of thinking about the relation between the musician and his/her instrument. Anyway, at this point it looks like it is absolutely necessary to introduce for the students of improvisation the kind of exercises where they will have to deal with a more textural and timbric kind of music making – mostly, but not only - through the use of extended techniques. It is perfectly possible to reach this kind of result using conventional techniques. It should be useful to listen and analyze music from Scelsi, Grisey, Murail, Ligeti, Ferneyhough, Kurtag, Dusapin, Sciarrino to name only a few. 4- CONCLUSION: PLANNING IMPROVISATION The main goal of the exercises discussed above is to provide the students of improvisation with means with which approach a free improvisation situation in a contemporary point of view. Therefore one of our goals was to relate contemporary improvisation to contemporary composition. So, we will summarize all that was exposed relating it to a compositional situation and trying transposing it to a performance of improvisation. Before that, it will be useful to speak about premeditation. There is a very interesting issue related with the usage of premeditated gestures in a solo improvisation. This situation brings forth the important issue of planning or not the solo while it is being done and can be applied particularly to the figural thought. Obviously, premeditation is not applicable only to figures, for it can happen also in a textural or gestual environment. The difference is that in figures the premeditation is applied to an abstract representational image (rhythmical and intervallic ideas), while in gesture and texture it looks like it is impossible to construct an abstract preview of something that is essentially non-representative. Anyway, when an improviser is making a solo he is able to act with a maximum of planning trying always to 7 anticipate the next step or deal with the unexpected, the accidental and chance, incorporating every “mistaken” or “dirty” sound. There are various degrees of balance between these two attitudes that could be thought as rational and intuitive. In this sense, we could consider improvisation as a kind of quick (and unrevised) composition. Obviously, when there is interaction with other musicians it is not possible to think in this way because what comes up musically is a result of the complex interaction between various performances. Coming back to the pedagogical strategies mentioned above, it would be interesting to establish here a parallel of improvisation with the compositional practice by Brian Ferneyhough regarding to the flow of sound events, the relationship between the figural, gestural and textural levels and the link between the sound objects in the flow of time. Let us not forget, however, that the plan for consistency of improvisation is substantially different from that of composition. Cite here the words of an interview of Ferneyhough for the Perspectives of New Music Journal of 1990: "... I, invariably, devise a sound event as something that fluctuates between two poles notional - that is, its gestual gestalt [texture] immediate and identifiable and their role as a starting point for the subsequent establishment of linear trajectories of the components characteristic [figures] of gestalts. The specific aspect of an event is the degree to which these elements parameters is to provide opportunities for separation, extension, and recombination in future constellations ... I even handle something like a variable parametric provided that: a) can be quantified in a consistent manner to allow modulation of gradual processes, and b) a component is sufficiently clear and identified in a gestalt so that may be identified in subsequent contexts "(Ferneyhough, 1990, p.24). It is inevitable for an improviser, in a contemporary performance context, to deal with these three dimensions (figure, gesture and texture) at the same time and in a nonlinear way. During an interactive performance, time is not teleologically directional, discursive or causal. There isn’t a correct development for the performance. Every sound act (as in the action-paintings of Jackson Pollock) has the potential to produce significant changes in the flow of the performance. It depends on its degree of “resonance” that is revealed only in the real time of interaction. Sometimes, an event that is apparently secondary in a complex texture becomes prominent and changes all the unfolding. The simultaneous layers in the flow of the performance interact in all directions: horizontally, vertically, and diagonally. Then, the image presented above by Ferneyhough, can be applied to an improvisational environment where every little musical act of the performers present in a complex and multidirectional texture has the potential of becoming a significant line apt to produce important changes in the sound flow. Or else, all the sonic events can be thought as lines of energy interacting in unexpected ways, and the difference of potential between then in the course of performance is what produces the succession of “provisory states” that delineates the performance. As quoted by Luigi Nono from a inscription written in a monastery in Toledo: “Wayfarer, there is no path. Yet you must walkviii” Bibliography BERIO, Luciano, Remembering the Future, Harvard University Press, London, 2006. FERNEYHOUGH, Brian, Shattering the vessels of received wisdom – Conversation with James Boros in Perspectives of New Music, Seattle, 1990. 8 FERRAZ, Silvio, Semiótica Peirciana e Música: mais uma aproximação, in Revista Opus 4, Editada pela Anppom, Associação Nacional de Pesquisa e Pós Graduação em Música, São Paulo, 1997. MACHÊ, François-Bernard, Music, Myth and Nature, in Contemporary Music Studies N.6, Nigel Osborne, University of Edinburgh, UK, 1992. SCHAEFFER, Pierre, Traité des objects musicaux, Seuil, Paris, 1966. ZUMTHOR, Paul, A letra e a voz (The voice and the Text), Companhia das Letras, São Paulo, 1993. i It is difficult to define this kind of musical activity, but we could say that free improvisation is an independent form of music making that supposes a special kind of engagement from the musician that is thought to be at the same time a composer and a performer. In this sense his/her performance doesn’t depends on any previous composed music or any set of instructions posed by a composer such as we can see in the works of K. Stockhausen, John Cage, Cornelius Cardew and others. It is also quite different from an idiomatic situation where the musician creates its performance from a previous reference (as a theme used in Jazz). This kind of musical activity can be performed either by a group, in an interactive way, or by a soloist. In this case we have a situation that could be considered in a certain measure, a kind of instantaneous composition. ii Speaking about improvisation it certainly would be better to say musical activity meaning that we are talking about something that involves body and mind at the same level. However, we will keep the expression musical thought just for practical reasons. iii David Cope, besides being an important composer and a professor, is also known as a scientist who is developing researches involving artificial intelligence and music. iv Paradoxically, our pedagogical approach for free improvisation need a kind of systematization that has to make use of constraints. But this must be understandable since it would be impossible to reach our objectives without breaking strong resistances that are rooted in the biography of most of the musicians. v Ferneyhough, Brian, in Form, texture...in Contrechamps 3... vi As quoted from François-Bernard Mâche about the more recent advances in technology in music: But it happens that new technologies of musical data processing are overturning the game of signs by restoring sound to its rightful status, without the loss of combinatory richness which has resulted from strait jacket of notational organization. The sequencer coupled with the synthesizer or the sampler, and the automatic transcription facility, makes possible the immediate notation, in the form of tablature, of the most complex musical gesture, and this with a fidelity equal to that of sound recording itself. The work of composition can take place in real time…by improvisation, and in time-lag by modification of the transcription of improvised elements. And the musician, instead of working with sound, can henceforth work the sound itself, therefore considering as one thing what has traditionally been separated into form and material (Mâche, 1992, p. 25) vii For Deleuze and Guattari, molarity is the site of coded wholes. It is a productive process: a making-the-same. Its attractor state is that of stable equilibrium. It is the mode of being, rather than becoming. The principle revolutionary objective of their writing is to break down molar aggregates in favor of molecularity, and the "microphysics of desire (http://www.christianhubert.com/writings/molar___molecular.html).