Rise, Ancient Song

I have been listening a lot to this motet, Adesto dolori meo, Deus, by the late-Renaissance Flemish com­poser Alexander Utendal re­cently. The rising chro­matic line that forms the basis for the opening im­it­ative entries is mind-blowing in its de­ploy­ment, dis­playing fresh­ness and in­genuity des­pite being nearly 500 years old. By the time the sop­rano reaches her top D and the har­mony reaches its widest point, I am al­ways struck by the feeling of some­thing having gradu­ally come to­wards me, emer­ging from a mist. Utendal seems to be a re­l­at­ively un­known figure, but there are a few in­ternet re­sources, in­cluding: videos on YouTube of Oltremontano and the Capilla Flamenca per­forming some of his works; some people have help­fully re­pro­duced Hellmut Federhofer’s Grove Dictionary of Music art­icle here and here (Flemish mu­si­co­lo­gist Ignace Bossuyt dis­agrees with Grove’s date of birth, sug­gesting c. 1543 – 5 as cor­rect); and if you search the old Google you’ll pull up the odd other thing, in­cluding a few things in Dutch.

This re­cording is of my father’s group The Art of Music, a group of (usu­ally) six singers living and working in Luxembourg who have now been going for over fif­teen years with varying per­sonnel and who spe­cialise in the per­form­ance of music from the Renaissance and Middle Ages.


Alexander Utendal Adesto dolori meo, Deus
The Art of Music (Flash Compact Editioun FCE 209/504)

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Gaza Cantos

Robert Guy’s final re­cital as an un­der­graduate at the University of Manchester took place at 14:00 on Thursday 28 May in the Martin Harris Centre for Music and Drama, re­peating the pro­gramme he gave in Wrexham two weeks pre­vi­ously: Max Bruch’s Romanze, Op. 85, and Paul Hindemith’s Viola Sonata in F, Op. 11 No. 4, ac­com­panied by Harvey Davies, sand­wiching the second per­form­ance of my new piece for solo viola, Gaza Cantos.

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Gaza Cantos @ Wrexham Arts Festival

Friend and fre­quent mu­sical col­lab­or­ator Robert Guy gave a viola re­cital as part of the Wrexham Arts Festival on Saturday 9th May, 2009. The pro­gramme in­cluded Hindemith, Bruch and a new work, Gaza Cantos, that I wrote for him.

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Excavations @ Vaganza New Music Day

My piece for nine strings, Excavations, drawing in­spir­a­tion from 350 year-old Henry Purcell’s fantazias that was work­shopped by the Manchester Camerata in October of last year and has since been heavily re­vised, was given a bril­liant first per­form­ance at Vaganza New Music Day Deserts and Canyons: John McCabe at 70 under the baton of Robert Guy. Click here to listen to a re­cording from that concert.

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»Der Komponist hat nichts zu sagen, er hat was zu schaffen«

Helmut Lachenmann in Stuttgart, 13.02.2009

The Neckar river running through Stuttgart.I was vis­iting Stuttgart, ho­metown of com­poser Helmut Lachenmann, to hear a con­cert of his music presented in the Stadtkirche of the suburb Bad-Canstatt. It seemed like a good omen when, at the head of the menu in the tra­di­tional Schwäbische Stube (I sup­pose this the local equi­valent of an American burger bar or an English tea shop) where we ate, I found a John Cage quotation:

I can’t un­der­stand why people are frightened of new ideas.
I’m frightened of the old ones.

Fantastic, even the dirndl–wearing wait­resses are fa­miliar with their avant-garde com­posers,’ I thought, tucking into creamy spätzle and rich pork (nothing too new there then, Stockhausen would have been disappointed).

Stuttgart is also the birth­place of G. W. F. Hegel and Max Horkheimer, es­tab­lishing its philo­soph­ical cre­den­tials, in a sense it is the home of dia­lect­ical thinking. To po­ten­tial Marxist chagrin how­ever, per­haps Stuttgart’s most famous products are cars, es­pe­cially those tending to­wards the lux­urious (both Porsche and Mercedes ori­ginate here). This is also the heart­land of Lutheranism and Labour move­ments –  Lachenmann the latest in a long line of up­right ‘L’s.

Bezirksrathaus Bad Cannstatt next door to the church where the  concert was held.On a cold evening I found the church hosting the con­cert early and slipped in­side out of the icy air. A few people had already gathered: a group of white-haired ladies and a couple of eager young fans. On stage sat Lachenmann deep in dis­cus­sion with Ewald Liska, a com­poser, singer and radio pro­ducer just two years Lachenmann’s ju­nior, who would in­ter­view the com­poser in between pieces during the con­cert. By the ad­vert­ised start time of 8 o’clock the church had filled, with an audi­ence of all ages spilling onto the bal­conies above – an en­thu­siasm per­haps ex­plained by the fact that this was, so to speak, a home crowd, but non­ethe­less an en­thu­siasm dif­fi­cult to ima­gine on English shores for Harrison Birtwistle or Robin Holloway, for ex­ample. Nor is Stuttgart a cul­tural desert. That evening Kristjan Järvi was con­ducting the Radio-Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart in a pro­gramme of Bernstein, Rachmaninov and – as is the laud­able wont of German or­ches­tras – a premiere: a per­cus­sion con­certo en­titled Industrial by 43-year-old Moritz Eggert.

At 73, Lachenmann is an elder statesman of the avant-garde music scene. Since the death of Stockhausen, some see him as the de facto leader of new music in Germany, but he was never cut out for lead­er­ship. Lachenmann’s music is nothing if not sub­versive and the wry glint in his eye as he speaks hints at a deep-rooted wish to upset the amassed ap­ple­carts of the Western clas­sical tra­di­tion. However, this is never an aim­less drive to de­struc­tion but a keenly fo­cused and thor­oughly ana­lytic ex­am­in­a­tion of con­ven­tion and how it must change – how it can be res­cued from the ‘orgy of stu­pefac­tion’ that is the everyday. All very con­cep­tual, per­haps, but the music is beau­tiful and the trans­form­a­tions it sub­jects its listeners and per­formers to are un­deni­able, matched only by Lachenmann’s tech­nical bril­liance in building be­guiling and dra­matic struc­tures through pure pro­ces­sual trans­form­a­tions of sound material.

It is rare to see Lachenmann still per­form at the piano as he used to around the world, but in Stuttgart he gave a per­form­ance of Ein Kinderspiel [Child’s Play], seven short pieces for piano, which he premiered at the key­board in Toronto in 1982. They may be his among his simplest works, written for his daughter Akiko, but as he pointed out af­ter­wards, though child­like and often playful, they are often too tiring for chil­dren to per­form, and cer­tainly weren’t in­tended as ped­ago­gical ex­er­cises. They are thor­ough in­vest­ig­a­tions into the pos­sib­il­ities of piano res­on­ance (a realm he has ex­plored fur­ther in his mo­nu­mental Ausklang for piano and or­chestra) and he com­pared the piece with Morton Feldman’s The Viola in My Life. Ein Kinderspiel, he said, was ‘the piano in my life, and at a par­tic­ular time as well’ – the piece be­longs to a par­tic­ular period of ex­per­i­ment­a­tion with sound pos­sib­il­ities. His per­form­ance was crystal clear – quite an achieve­ment given the church acoustic – though he spoke later of the dif­fi­culties in making such dense pieces work in this acoustic. Ironically, only Glockenturm [Bell Tower] of the move­ments was really marred by the wet acoustic. The move­ment ex­ists more or less en­tirely in the varying res­on­ances that emerge from a chro­matic cluster that re­mains con­stant throughout, but by the time the cluster chord echoed away into the eaves, the altered res­on­ance had also flown its ivory nest.

The core of the evening’s pro­gramme was Lachenmann’s Second String Quartet Reigen se­liger Geister per­formed by the Lotus Quartet on a cross-shaped plat­form (no sym­bolism in­tended, I don’t think) in the centre aisle of the church, with the per­formers at the cross’ tips fa­cing each other. Lachenmann spoke of the quartet as the ‘gradual trans­form­a­tion from flautato playing to piz­zicato’, but a purely tech­nical ana­lysis cannot do justice to the spir­itual nature of this ‘at­tempt at com­pos­i­tion’. The opening pas­sages re­turn re­peatedly to the scordatura open strings of the in­stru­ments, which Lachenmann con­ceives more and more as a ‘super-instrument’ over the course of the work. This re­turn seems – des­pite the un­con­ven­tional tuning – to hint at more tuneful climes, per­haps purely through the open string timbre, which for most of the time is shrouded by breathy, overtone-laden bow strokes. This widens into an elec­tric glit­tering of har­monic glis­sandi that must be one of the single most beau­tiful pas­sages in music of the last 50 years. What fol­lows might be seen as the real drama, where dia­lect­ical pro­cesses are triggered and the trans­form­a­tion from bow to hand takes place. One-by-one the players de-tune their strings and lower their in­stru­ments to their knees to use what looked like old credit cards to strum the strings – a pas­sage in which Lachenmann treats the quartet as a ‘super-guitar’. The drama here is palp­able as the music’s heart­beat slows al­most to a stand­still and oc­ca­sional cracks and crunches break a tense si­lence. The creaking of pews and the dis­tant tolling of the church bells (which in fact seemed to serve only to heighten the at­mo­sphere) were made palp­able by the struggle to an­ti­cipate the next sound. Here, a story Lachenmann had told earlier about re­cording John Cage’s 4’33’’ with a class at the Pädagogische Hochschule in Ludwigsburg seemed to res­onate. He had asked stu­dents to per­form Cage’s piece and he re­corded this per­form­ance. This so­li­cited two re­ac­tions: first some would laugh at the si­lence, but then others began to listen. Once re­corded, he played the class the tape of the piece sev­eral times. Soon, they be­came aware of the sounds present in the si­lence and the logic that con­nected them be­came clear. The Ludwigsburg train would cres­cendo in and then out, there was the hum of traffic, all sounds that we sup­press from our con­scious per­cep­tion, but once re­corded and heard re­peatedly began to be real­ised as music.

Fortunately, Reigen se­liger Geister need not be listened to re­peatedly to work its magic. After ap­par­ently shat­tering at the listener’s feet, it gradu­ally re­as­sembles and glides up­wards with a gra­cious creaking be­fore van­ishing into a high breathing of vi­olin har­monics in an un­deni­ably af­fecting con­clu­sion. Sofia Gubaidulina has written about the spir­itual im­plic­a­tions of up­wards move­ment in music and has cat­egor­ized it as tech­nique in her own music for sym­bol­ising the move­ment to­wards heaven. She has even re­ferred to Lachenmann’s music when trying to ex­plain her own con­cep­tion of spir­itu­ality in music. Lachenmann’s re­li­gious be­liefs are some­thing he has not touched on in his ex­tensive writ­ings, though his early Marxist tend­en­cies and skilful avoid­ance of a ques­tion about church music from con­cert or­gan­iser Jörg Hannes Hahn sug­gest they are cer­tainly not straight­for­ward, but the sub­ject of the Second String Quartet does in­cor­porate spir­itual ele­ments  – the ‘se­liger Geister’ of the title – and in the church con­text it was hard to avoid a feeling that the work somehow re­vealed a tran­scend­ental journey.

Some music is speech,’ Lachenmann later said, ‘Bach, Schoenberg or Boulez for ex­ample,’ but he would rather create music where what was im­portant was ‘ob­ser­va­tion’, where there was ‘no text, but a situ­ation, al­most a met­eor­o­lo­gical situ­ation’. He spoke of the string quartet as a ‘walk, where the land­scape gradu­ally changes’ as we move through it and then sud­denly ‘the mo­ment comes where one stands still, where one really hears the land­scape for the first time’. This mo­ment in Reigen se­liger Geister he pin­points as the gentle scratch-tone bowing that leads up­wards and out of the piece (bb. 366 – 384). Lachenmann defines this as a mo­ment that oc­curs in most of his works where the mu­sical ma­terial falls into a nat­ural quasi-ostinato. He be­lieves this mo­ment is reached through a dia­lect­ical, al­most or­ganic pro­cess where the ma­terial works through its im­plic­a­tions to­wards a more or less in­ev­it­able resting point (like an ordered ther­mo­dy­namic system finding its way back to its nat­ural dis­order). Despite this con­cep­tion, the pro­cess is never ob­vious nor does the music be­tray its even­tual des­tin­a­tion; it is only on ar­rival that we per­ceive the ori­gins of our journey as leading in­ev­it­ably to this point. Perhaps this is a bad case of post hoc, ergo pr­opter hoc in the mind of the listener, but the ef­fect is un­deni­able. Lachenmann main­tains that without the pre­ceding music these states would be non­sensical, like a tree, devoid of ground to grow from, floating in the air. Despite all its convention-flipping sounds, the music does pos­sess an al­most Beethovenian logic. It is the musical-syntactical ne­ces­sity of each and every sound that binds the work to­gether and it is this that makes us hear music, not a scat­tering of strange ef­fects for the ear’s de­lect­a­tion. In a fashion sim­ilar to that of mu­sique con­crète, sounds are lib­er­ated in an egal­it­arian system where no one sonic at­tribute is given auto­matic pref­er­ence (as pitch is in tonal sys­tems); sounds are treated as in­di­vis­ible en­tities, whose com­pon­ents are dis­tin­guish­able in ana­lysis, but to the ear func­tion atom­ic­ally. The music lies in the al­chemy, turning lead to gold.

The final two pieces of the evening’s pro­gramme were Consolation I and Consolation II, two small-scale choral works from 1967 and 1968, per­formed with pan­ache by singers from the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst Stuttgart. Contemporary with some of Luciano Berio’s ex­per­i­ments in phon­etics, both these works demon­strate an in­terest in dis­as­sembling their re­spective texts through phon­etic ana­lysis that aims to re­veal an in­herent logic of sound con­struc­tion. Consolation II is par­tic­u­larly ef­fective in its set­ting of an 8th Century prayer, the Wessobrunner Gebet:

Mir gestand der Sterblichen Staunen als Höchstes
Das Erde nicht war, noch oben Himmel
Noch Baum, noch ir­gend ein Berg nicht war
Noch die Sonne, nicht Licht war
Noch der Mond nicht leuchtete
Noch das ge­waltige Meer
Da noch nir­gends nichts war
An Enden und Wenden
Da war der eine all­mächtige Gott

This med­it­a­tion on finding God in the noth­ing­ness be­fore time is dis­solved into a shud­dering land­scape of let­ters, hissing with a hollow wind, shiv­ering with rolled ‘R’s, stut­tering away into the noth­ing­ness where God can per­haps be found, ending on the ‘t’ of ‘Gott’, not sung but struck: two fin­gers coming to­gether in a quiet clap.

Quiet, as­sured end­ings. No thun­der­claps (though thun­derous ap­plause). Bombast neg­ated. Convention chal­lenged. Where to next? ‘Composition it­self,’ reads Lachenmann’s pro­gramme note, ‘as a form of human seeking, is flight […] a flight straight into the lion’s den. And therein lies the only way out.’

The Schlossgarten in the centre of Stuttgart, which contains the State Opera House.

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  • Microbiography

    Chris Swithinbank is a British-Dutch com­poser who works with both acoustic in­stru­ments and elec­tronic sounds. He is cur­rently a stu­dent at Harvard University with Chaya Czernowin.
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