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Adriana Hölszky, Conlon Nancarrow, Michael Lentz, Uli Winters, Hans Zender, Olivier Messiaen, Enno Poppe, Younghi Pagh-Paan, Iannis Xenakis, Beat Furrer, Gérard Pesson: musica viva festival munich 2008

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Item number: NEOS 50909/10 Categories: , ,
Published on: July 12, 2010

infotext:

musica viva Munich
Forum of Contemporary Music

Ever since it was founded by the composer Karl Amadeus Hartmann in 1945, the Bavarian Radio concert series ›musica viva‹ has been one of the world's most important forums for contemporary music. Premieres and historical milestones of modernity are the concept of these monthly concerts.

In January and February 2008, a three-week festival took place in Munich for the first time in the history of ›musica viva‹. Not only the always committed Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, but also other top orchestras of the ARD helped this festival (and thus outstanding composers and interpreters of new music) to a great success.

The filmmaker and composer Peider A. Defilla (owner of BOA Videofilmkunst) has been documenting the ›musica viva‹ concerts for BR-alpha, the educational channel of Bavarian television, since 2001. In each 15-minute film essay, he depicts the broad musical spectrum of ›musica viva‹. The existing cooperation between Bayerischer Rundfunk, NEOS and BOA also made the DVD presented here with representative excerpts from the most important concerts and interviews of the festival possible.

In addition, NEOS released a six-CD festival box set in September 2009: five Hybrid SACDs with the unabridged works by Czernowin, Dillon, Furrer, Hartmann, Hölszky, Lim, Pintscher, Reimann, Saariaho, Saunders, Scelsi, Widmann, Xenakis and one Stereo CD with traditional music from Egypt and Persia, one of the main focuses of the festival [NEOS 10926].

Adriana Holszky
Countdown
Staged concert piece based on texts by Ver du Bois [2007]

The composition Countdown for countertenor and 20 instrumentalists fragmentarily uses the text Odyssey through Homeless Shelters by the homeless writer with the pseudonym Ver du Bois (Woodworm). The instrumentalists create several sound spaces with the countertenor in the middle. However, his sound space is a separate, central, inner space that does not communicate with the circle of instrumentalists. This symbolizes loneliness, not being included, standing apart.

Conlon Nancarrow
study no. 41

for two phonolas [1981]

study no. 41 is one of four works for two player pianos. It consists of two different pieces and three parts. In 41a one of the two piano roles is played on one of the two pianos, in 41b another role on the same or a second piano, and in 41c both roles are played simultaneously on two pianos. study no. 41 is one of Nancarrow's most complex works. The voices are based on complicated, irrational tempo relations, ie each voice runs at a different speed.

Michael Lentz and Uli Winters
Boxing song over 12 rounds
for a boxer, ringing punching bags, piccolos, bass clarinets, e-guitar, drums, subwoofer, a beatboxer and two speakers [2006/07]

The rhythm of the steps and punches, the audible breath, shouts from the audience - the musical essence of a boxing match is further developed with the composition boxing song. A real boxer as meter and soloist enters the ring with an ensemble from piccolo to subwoofer. Music as a product of physical exertion, voice in the form of rocking voice comments and in the form of a human beat box. Reaction and counter-reaction, offensive and cover, concentration and distraction: boxing as a way of life, a cycle of exertion and relaxation.

Hans Zender
Logos - fragments

for 32 singers and three orchestra groups [2007]

The fragments were created or are created in free sequence. So far, six have been completed and about the same number are sketched. The texts used are fragments from Gnostic writings, from apocryphal sources and from the Gospel of John. Rhythm and harmony are based on techniques that restrict the composer's arbitrariness through the strictest of laws, giving them something ›ritual‹ that wants to bring the listener to concentrated concentration.

Oliver Messiaen
A smile

for orchestra [1989]

Messiaen's music was inspired by Gregorian chant, Indian rhythm and the songs of birds. Un sourire is a homage to Mozart, whom Messiaen greatly admired: »... If I love Mozart, it is because there is a rhythm in his music with very different accents. This is because he composed German and Italian libretti. So there is a constant alternation of stressed and unstressed tenses in his music, and that gives great rhythmic power. Mozart is cheerful, enchanting, playful, but in fact rhythmically very powerful.«

Enno Poppe
cuneiform

for orchestra [2005/07]

Everything looks the same from afar. The idea of ​​a piece that always consists of the same five notes, always in the same order. Color and expression arise from the rigid adherence to the form. But still no minimalism, maybe even the opposite. Up close everything is very different.

Younghi Pagh Paan
In luce ambulemus

for tenor solo and orchestra [2007]
on Latin texts from the letters of the Korean priest Yang-Eop Choe [1821–1861]

In her work In luce ambulemus (Let us walk in the light), wandering is the symbol of an inner search that finds its goal in attaining humility before God. The music is characterized by a tense balance between solidity of form and constant change of sound.

Iannis Xenakis
antikhthon
for orchestra [1971]

Antikhthon was conceived as a ballet in 1971, commissioned by choreographer George Balanchine. Xenakis chose an abstract approach from classical Greek philosophy. He himself remarked: »I have chosen a Pythagorean term (antikhthon = anti-earth) of the 5th and 6th centuries BC. The Pythagoreans were the first to claim that the earth is not the center of the universe.« Antikhthon could also be heard in this way: as a sound image of the universe that has lost its Ptolemaic center and has instead gained in infinite breadth.

Beat Furrer
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra
 [2007]

"I'm always interested in the transitional situations," says the composer of himself. "Where does one order change into another. Where are the edges of the individual phenomenon?” In this work, too, individual gestures emerge from monochromatic, seemingly still surfaces, which are focused or lose themselves as scurrying gestures chasing shadows. Furrer places a shadowy body alongside the solo piano in the orchestra, with which the soloist moves into distant proximity.

Gerard Pesson
Aggravations et Final

for orchestra [2002]

Speed ​​as a stylistic device plays an essential role in this work. Brief echoes of archetypal sound phenomena - marches, waltzes, ritornellos - do not appear as quotations, but rather as fleeting thoughts on the edge of a compositional process.

program:

Adriana Holszky (* 1953)
Countdown (2007)
Scenic concert piece after texts by Ver du Bois
for countertenor, 8 alphorns, 4 trumpets, 4 trombones, 4 pianos, and 8 percussionists

countertenor Daniel Gloger
alphorn, trumpet Malte Burba, Georgbirner, Lutz Mandler, Paul Hübner
alphorn, trombone Armin Rosin, Dieter Eckert, Berthold Schick, Viacheslau Chumachenka
piano Markus Stange, Anna Zassimova, Yukiko Naito, Jürg Henneberger
percussion Thomas Hastreiter, Sebastian Hausl, Wolfram Winkel, Alexander Glöggler, Philipp Jungk, Martin Ruhland, Werner Hofmeister, Stefan Blum
conductor Rudiger Bohn

Music excerpts Interview with Adriana Hölszky
playing time 14:50 p.m

Conlon Nancarrow (* 1912)
study no. 41
for two phonolas (1981)

phonola Wolfgang Heisig, Rex Lawson

Music excerpts Interview with Wolfgang Heisig and Rex Lawson
playing time 14:45 p.m

Michael Lentz (*1964) / Ulli Winters (* 1965)
Boxing song over 12 rounds .
for a boxer, musical punch bags, piccolos, bass clarinets, electric guitar, percussion, subwoofer, beatboxer and two speakers

bass clarinet, piccolo Axel Kühn, Florian Riedl
electric guitar, subwoofer Gunnar Geisse
percussion Bastian Juette
speaker, conception, director Michael Lentz
speaker, conception Uli Winters
boxer Tim Kerger
beatboxer Dalibor

Music excerpts Interview with Michael Lentz and Uli Winters
playing time 14:38 p.m

Hans Zender (* 1936)
Logos fragments (2007)
for 32 singers and four orchestra groups

Fragment I (John I, 1–17)
Fragment V (Valentine)
Fragment II (John II, 1–11)
Fragment VI (Gospel according to Thomas)

SWR Vocal Ensemble Stuttgart
SWR Symphony Orchestra Baden-Baden and Freiburg
Conductor Sylvain Cambreling

Music excerpts Interview with Hans Zender
playing time 14:57 p.m

Oliver Messiaen (1908-1992)
A smile (1989)
for orchestra

SWR Symphony Orchestra Baden-Baden and Freiburg
conductor Sylvain Cambreling

Music excerpts Interview with Sylvain Cambrelig
playing time 14:51 p.m

Enno Poppe (* 1969)
cuneiform .
for orchestra

SWR Symphony Orchestra Baden-Baden and Freiburg
conductor Sylvain Cambreling

Music excerpts Interview with Enno Poppe
playing time 14:57 p.m

Younghi Pagh Paan (1945)
In luce ambulemus (2007)
for tenor solo and orchestra
to Latin texts from the letters of the Korean priest Yang-Eop Choe (1821–1861)

tenor Hubert Mayer
SWR Symphony Orchestra Baden-Baden and Freiburg
conductor Sylvain Cambreling

Music excerpts Interview with Youghi Pagh-Paan
playing time 14:52 p.m

Iannis Xenakis (1922-2001)
antikhthon (1971)
for orchestra

WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne
conductor Brad Lubman

Music excerpts Interview with Brad Lubman
playing time 14:52 p.m

Beat Furrer (* 1954)
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra (2007)

piano Nicholas Hodges
WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne
conductor Brad Lubman

Music excerpts · Interview with Nicolas Hodges
playing time 14:56 p.m

Gerard Pesson (1958)
Aggravations et Final (2002)
for orchestra

WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne
conductor Brad Lubman

Music excerpts Interview with Brad Lubman
playing time 14:44 p.m

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