Karlheinz Stockhausen, "Ensemble"
Composition Seminar Karlheinz Stockhausen
ENSEMBLE
For a player and tape or short wave transmitter.
Side A
Side B
Process planning: Karlheinz Stockhausen
Composition realization: members of the composition seminar
Musicians from the Hudba Dneska Ensemble, Bratislava;
Aloys Kontarsky, Hammond organ,
Harald BojÈ, Alden Jenks, David Johnson, Petr Kotik: controllers

ENSEMBLE is an experiment in adding a new concept to the traditional "concert". We are used to comparing different pieces played sequentially. In ENSEMBLE "pieces" of 12 composers are played simultaneously.
These "pieces" are musical objects ("works") not fully worked out. They are sound objects (produced on tape or with a short wave transmitter), with individual control, action and reaction models, and notated "events", which are introduced by the composers to the ENSEMBLE play in the process of the actual performance.
Each composer has composed for one musician and tape or short wave transmitter. The total plan and the introduction of the parts for its synchronisation with the ENSEMBLE were established by Stockhausen. The twelve systems and their coordination were formulated during daily meetings. The resulting four hour process is more than the addition of the "pieces": it is a composition of compositions, fluctuating between the complete isolation of the different events and the total dependence of each layer, and between extreme determinism and full improvisation.
On top of the 12 composers and musicians, who play together as "duos" - distributed throughout the room - four other musicians are responsible for using mixers to amplify and spacialize definite details and moments of the process via microphones and eight loudspeakers. Also, the position of the listener is not fixed. He can move in the room and thus establish his acoustical perspective.
The simultaneity of the compositions requires also that certain "pieces" should be heard together and related through superimposition.
This "verticalisation" of the perception of events and the relativisation of a definitive form ("piece" signed by an individual) happens not only in the field of music. -- Notes by Karlheinz Stockhausen
Darmstadt International Music Institute
22nd International Seminar for New Music 1967, director Ernst Thomas
The LP version of "Ensemble" was realized in the WDR Electronic Music Studio between August 26 and September 22, 1971. The available material was:
- Recording of the rehearsal on August 28, 1967 from 19:00-23:00 (6 stereo tapes, about 4 hours duration)
- Recording of the concert on August 29, 1967 from 19:00-23:00 (6 stereo tapes, about 4 hours duration)
The challenge for me was to reduce a four-hour performance to 50-60 minutes, and therefore I proceeded as follows.
1. I wanted as much as possible to keep the formal pattern that we had developed during the Seminar
2. I wanted to keep a balance between the deterministic, less deterministic and non-deterministic material.
My working method was as follows:
1. I listened to all tapes of both recordings. The material that seemed to me adequate, I copied.
2. This selected material was listened to again, cutting out some sections, so that a series of musical events remained, which I deemed relevant.
3. In the third process - the most difficult one - this material was cut, faded in and out and mixed occasionally according to my vision (retaining the time plan in its basic structure) -- Notes by Mesias Maiguashca

ENSEMBLE
For a player and tape or short wave transmitter.
Side A
Side B
Process planning: Karlheinz Stockhausen
Composition realization: members of the composition seminar
Musicians from the Hudba Dneska Ensemble, Bratislava;
Aloys Kontarsky, Hammond organ,
Harald BojÈ, Alden Jenks, David Johnson, Petr Kotik: controllers
| Composer | Musician | |
| Flute | Tomas Marco | Ladislav Soka |
| Oboe | Avo Somer | Milan Jezo |
| Clarinet | Nicolaus A.Huber | Juraj Bures |
| Basoon | Robert Wittinger | Jan Martanovic |
| French horn | John McGuire | Jozef Svenk |
| Trumpet | Peter R.Farmer | Vladimir Jurca |
| Trombone | Gregory Biss | Frantisek Hudecek |
| Violin | Jurgen Beurle | Viliam Farkas |
| Violoncello | Mesias Maiguashca | Frantisek Tannenberger |
| Double Bass | Jorge Peixinho | Karol Illek |
| Percussion | Rolf Gelhaar | Frantisek Rek |
| Hammond Organ | Johannes G.Fritsch | Aloys Kontarsky |

ENSEMBLE is an experiment in adding a new concept to the traditional "concert". We are used to comparing different pieces played sequentially. In ENSEMBLE "pieces" of 12 composers are played simultaneously.
These "pieces" are musical objects ("works") not fully worked out. They are sound objects (produced on tape or with a short wave transmitter), with individual control, action and reaction models, and notated "events", which are introduced by the composers to the ENSEMBLE play in the process of the actual performance.
Each composer has composed for one musician and tape or short wave transmitter. The total plan and the introduction of the parts for its synchronisation with the ENSEMBLE were established by Stockhausen. The twelve systems and their coordination were formulated during daily meetings. The resulting four hour process is more than the addition of the "pieces": it is a composition of compositions, fluctuating between the complete isolation of the different events and the total dependence of each layer, and between extreme determinism and full improvisation.
On top of the 12 composers and musicians, who play together as "duos" - distributed throughout the room - four other musicians are responsible for using mixers to amplify and spacialize definite details and moments of the process via microphones and eight loudspeakers. Also, the position of the listener is not fixed. He can move in the room and thus establish his acoustical perspective.
The simultaneity of the compositions requires also that certain "pieces" should be heard together and related through superimposition.
This "verticalisation" of the perception of events and the relativisation of a definitive form ("piece" signed by an individual) happens not only in the field of music. -- Notes by Karlheinz Stockhausen
Darmstadt International Music Institute
22nd International Seminar for New Music 1967, director Ernst Thomas
The LP version of "Ensemble" was realized in the WDR Electronic Music Studio between August 26 and September 22, 1971. The available material was:
- Recording of the rehearsal on August 28, 1967 from 19:00-23:00 (6 stereo tapes, about 4 hours duration)
- Recording of the concert on August 29, 1967 from 19:00-23:00 (6 stereo tapes, about 4 hours duration)
The challenge for me was to reduce a four-hour performance to 50-60 minutes, and therefore I proceeded as follows.
1. I wanted as much as possible to keep the formal pattern that we had developed during the Seminar
2. I wanted to keep a balance between the deterministic, less deterministic and non-deterministic material.
My working method was as follows:
1. I listened to all tapes of both recordings. The material that seemed to me adequate, I copied.
2. This selected material was listened to again, cutting out some sections, so that a series of musical events remained, which I deemed relevant.
3. In the third process - the most difficult one - this material was cut, faded in and out and mixed occasionally according to my vision (retaining the time plan in its basic structure) -- Notes by Mesias Maiguashca

Labels: Avant Garde Project, jodru, Karlheinz Stockhausen
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