Atomic Ruin

Watch on vimeo

Note from Andrew Walker (the author):

This was a very unique location to shoot and something most people don’t get to experience. The location is a incomplete nuclear power station in Western Washington…Satsop. The power plant is also second largest municipal bond default in U.S. history. Walking around in the cooling towers was like being inside of an alien structure. Also the acoustics in the cooling towers was also very unique. The equipment I used was a Kessler Second Shooter along with a new slider system I was testing out in the location. The rig was prefect for getting in and out of some of these locations. I used 2 Nikon D810 DSLRs to capture this.

Music: “Time”
Artist: Hans Zimmer
Album: “Inception” soundtrack
Special Thanks to Kessler for providing the Second Shooter and the 8020 Kessler Cart.

 

August 6, 2015

August 6, 2015 – Click to enlarge
Hiroshima

V for Varoufakis

Incipit: A Tale of Two Cities

Tales of two cities - cover

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way—in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only.

[Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities, 1859]

Era il tempo migliore e il tempo peggiore, la stagione della saggezza e la stagione della follia, l’epoca della fede e l’epoca dell’incredulità; il periodo della luce, e il periodo delle tenebre, la primavera della speranza e l’inverno della disperazione. Avevamo tutto dinanzi a noi, non avevamo nulla dinanzi a noi; eravamo tutti diretti al cielo, eravamo tutti diretti a quell’altra parte – a farla breve, gli anni erano così simili ai nostri, che alcuni che li conoscevano profondamente sostenevano che, in bene o in male, se ne potesse parlare soltanto al superlativo.

[Trad. di Silvio Spaventa Filippi]

Dispacci dal fronte interno

Dispacci dal fronte interno [Dispatches from the homefront] is a work by Andrea Valle for feedback system including ad libitum strings, printer and live electronics.

Audio from strings, printers and environment is not only manipulated live, but some features are extracted and used to control not only the same sound processing but also the real-time generation and print on the fly of musical notation to be performed by the player.

In short, the performer receives “dispatches” which content depends on what s/he is playing.

From SONIC SCREENS, an event by U.S.O. Project (Matteo Milani, Federico Placidi) in collaboration with O’ and Die Schachtel
Milan, 01/12/2012

An excerpt from the premiere by:
Èdua Amarilla Zádory – Violin
Ana Topalovic – Violoncello

Video courtesy Gianmarco Del Re

Dispacci dal fronte interno from Andrea Valle on Vimeo.

Petites esquisses d’oiseaux

messiaen01

Since I have just updated some posts on bird songs and Messiaen’s interpretation of them, I thought I’d post his Little Bird Sketches in the 1985 version for a piano (there is also a version for two pianos).

Messiaen had already found the convergence between his two passions, ornithology and music. Already in 1951 he had composed a virtuoso piece for flute and piano used as an admission test for flute at the Paris conservatory (remember that the Paris conservatory is at a higher level and is equivalent to our own specialization academy). The piece was called Le merle noir and is his first work entirely inspired by the song of a bird (some fragments were included in previous works).

In 1953 he composed Réveil des oiseaux (The awakening of the birds) for orchestra, composed almost exclusively of transcriptions of the songs of the birds that the author could hear between midnight and noon in the mountains of the Jura Massif.

From this time he got into the habit of incorporating these transcriptions in all his works, as well as writing collections entirely dedicated to this subject (Oiseaux exotiques (Exotic birds) for piano and chamber orchestra, 1955-1956, La Chouette hulotte for piano, 1956, the monumental Catalog d’oiseaux (Catalog of birds) for piano, 1956-1958, La Fauvette des Jardins for piano, 1970-1972, Un Vitrail et des oiseaux (A stained glass and birds) for piano and orchestra, 1986, up to these Petites esquisses d’oiseaux (Little sketches of birds) for one or two pianos, 1985-1987). As works they are not simply collections of transcriptions, but real symphonic poems. Paul Griffiths observed that Messiaen was a more conscientious ornithologist than any of the composers who had preceded him, and a more attentive musical observer of birdsong than all previous ornithologists.

Indeed, Messiaen’s transcription work is accurate and takes into account musical problems that often escape scientific ornithology. He himself explains:

The bird, being much smaller than we are, with a heart that beats faster and nervous reactions much faster, sings at extremely fast tempos which are absolutely impossible for our instruments; therefore I am obliged to transcribe it at a slower tempo. Moreover, this speed is associated with extreme acuity, being a bird able to sing in such high registers as to be inaccessible to our instruments; therefore I transcribe the song one, two or even three octaves below. And that’s not all: for the same reason I am obliged to suppress those too small intervals that our instruments could not play. So I replace these intervals of the order of one or two paragraphs with semitones, but respecting the scale of values ​​between the different intervals, that is, if any paragraph corresponds to a semitone, then a true semitone will correspond to a whole tone or an interval of third; everything is enlarged, but the ratios remain unchanged, nevertheless what I give is correct.

Petites esquisses d’oiseaux (1985) – HÃ¥kan Austbø, piano

  1. Le Rouge-gorge (erithacus rubecula – pettirosso)
  2. Le Merle noir (turdus merula – merlo)
  3. Le Rouge-gorge
  4. La Grive musicienne (turdus ericetorum sinonimo di turdus philomelos – tordo bottaccio)
  5. Le Rouge-gorge
  6. L’Alouette des champs (alauda arvensis – allodola)

 

Stockhausen – Sounds in Space

I point out a nice blog dedicated to the analysis of Stockhausen’s works:

Stockhausen – Sounds in Space

Stockhausen Piano

IRCAM Prepared Piano

UPDATE 2023

The IRCAM Prepared Piano 2 is an IRCAM production in collaboration with UVI. This is a VST that simulates both the piano and the prepared piano, based on more than 12,000 high quality samples for a library of approximately 18 Gb. In addition to various types of piano, 45 types of preparation, extended techniques and effects are emulated, all well described at the link above. Price $ 209.

Anthèmes

Anthèmes refers to two related compositions for violin by French composer Pierre Boulez: Anthèmes I and Anthèmes II.

Anthèmes I is a short piece (c. 9 minutes) for solo violin, commissioned by the 1991 Yehudi Menuhin Violin Competition, and dedicated to Universal Edition’s director Alfred Schlee for his 90th birthday. In 1994, Boulez revised and expanded Anthèmes I into a version for violin and live electronics at IRCAM, resulting in Anthèmes II (c. 18 minutes duration), produced in 1997. (Expansion and revision of earlier works is common in Boulez’s compositional process; see also Structures.)

The title is a hybrid of the French “thèmes” (themes) and the English “anthem”. It is also a play on words with ‘anti-thematicism ‘: “Anthèmes” reunites the “anti” with the “thematic”, and demonstrates Boulez’s re-acceptance of (loose) thematicism following a long period of staunch opposition to it (Goldman 2001, 116–17).

Anthèmes I owes its structure to inspiration Boulez drew from childhood memories of Lent-time Catholic church services, in which the (acrostic) verses of the Jeremiah Lamentations were intoned: Hebrew letters enumerating the verses, and the verses themselves in Latin. Boulez creates two similarly distinct sonic worlds in the work: the Hebrew enumerations become long static or gliding harmonic tones, and the Latin verses become sections that are contrasting action-packed and articulated (though Boulez says that the piece bears no reference to the content of the verses, and takes as its basis solely the idea of two contrasting sonic language-worlds) (Goldman 2001, 119). The piece begins with a seven-tone motive, and trill on the note D: these are the fundamental motives used in its composition. It is also in seven sections: a short introduction, followed by six “verses”, each “verse” preceded by a harmonic-tone “enumeration”. The last section is the longest, culminating in a dialogue between four distinct “characters”, and the piece closes with the two “languages” gradually melding into one as the intervals finally center around the note D and close into a trill, and then a single harmonic. A final “col legno battuto” ends the piece in Boulez’s characteristic witty humour, a gesture of “That’s enough for now! See you later!” (Goldman 2001, 83, 118). [from wikipedia]

See also: Goldman, Jonathan. “Analyzing Pierre Boulez’s Anthèmes: ‘Creating a Labyrinth out of Another Labyrinth’“. Unpublished essay. [Montréal]: Université de Montréal, 2001. OCLC: 48831192.

Andrew Gerzso has for many years been the composer’s chief collaborator on works involving live electronics and the two men regularly discuss their work together. He describes the way in which all the nuances in this nucleus of works were examined in the studio in order to find out which elements could be electronically processed and differentiated. As a result, the process of expanding these works is based not only on abstract structural considerations (such as the questions as to how it may be possible to use electronic procedures to spatialize and to merge or separate specific complexes of sound),but also on concrete considerations bound up with performing practice: in a word, on the way in which the instrument’s technical possibilities may be developed along figurative lines.

IMHO, it is quite clear that the electroacoustic is limited to “dress” the instrumental part, albeit with effects well made. Anthème II is not a real electroacoustic composition and even a revision of the original. But it’s really helpful to students. See also this good page  from IRCAM and this one with Max patches.

From You Tube, Anthèmes before and after

Organ2/ASLSP (2015 check)

Sometimes I check if the German site where John Cage’s Organ2 / ASLSP is being performed, expanded to an incredible 639 (six hundred and thirty-nine) years, still exists and the answer so far is yes.

To find out more about this epic execution that began in 2001 and destined to end in 2640, I refer

Finally, here you can hear the epic 2006 note change at 8:36 in this audio clip. The last was in 2013 and the next is expected on September 5, 2020.

This is the organ used for execution.

HalberstadtBurchardiChurchOrganForOrgan2ASLSP