Saturday, August 16, 2008

Horaţiu Rădulescu, "Byzantine Prayer"

-- Liner Notes Continued --

BYZANTINE PRAYER Opus 74 (1988) for Giacinto for 40 flutists with 72 flutes

This music was composed in Versailles shortly after the death of our friend, the composer and poet Scelsi, and should be listened to as a REQUIEM. The RITORNELLO LITANICO is alternating with three INTERMUNDI (alpha, beta, gamma).

The 40 flutists are distributed in 8 concentric groups, each of I, 2,3,5,X, 13,5,3 respectively : 1 octobass flute, 1 double bass flute and 1 bass, 3 alto flutes, 5 bass.

8.13 and 5 grand, 3 other alto flutes.

The circular sound movements and the chord eruptions entirely use the spatialisation of the 40 sources disseminated into audience. The ritornello pitches belong to a theorical A-spectrum. Compact spectral zones or ring-modulated spectrum components are explicitated by the 8 flute groups or by the whole mass of 40 flutists, fact that has obliged us to use a notation on two parallel pages which are complimentary and should be read simultaneously. The intermundi evolve within other 6 spectra, and use besides the 8 flutes'groups the dialogues (cori spezzati) of the flute's" outer star", "inner star" and flutes'tutti.

The opus 74 was commissionned 1988 by the Metz Festival where it was premiered by the Orchestre Franqais de FIGtes conducted, as here, by the composer.

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Thursday, June 26, 2008

Giacinto Scelsi, "Rotative"

Monday, June 09, 2008

Giacinto Scelsi, "Okanagon"

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Arditti/Scelsi, Quartet No. 3

Gorgeous recording of gorgeous music, courtesy of 194142434445, which also furnished the LaMonte Young & Street recordings we just posted. They describe themselves as an "Avant blog for experimental music fans", but they're threatening to stop posting because no one's paying attention. So give them a visit and keep the flow of killer avant music coming.

The Gorgeous Arditti

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Wednesday, November 03, 2004

Keep on rockin in the free world

We got a thousand points of light
For the homeless man
We got a kinder, gentler,
Machine gun hand


Nothing could be finer than if the states of Carolina had gone for Kerry this morning, but alas, we're stuck with what we've got. For the leftists who genuinely think that the sky is falling, I can think of no better anesthetic than a scathing live recording of Neil Young's anthem "Rockin' In the Free World". He leaves the vocal work to Eddie Vedder as he shreds his guitar with Pearl Jam on this one.

And for those who're wont to wallow, at least do it with some good music. Here's Giacinto Scelsi's Elegia per Ty (for viola and cello, 1958). Like Young, Scelsi knew the power of simplicity, and I'll take their cue by posting nothing more than pictures of today's heroes:



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