a spectrum of private scores

I’ve started to do something here, and it got a little out of hand. But I’m just going to post it now anyway, in the hopes that it might stir something up, or recognize an existing stir that has been going on under the radar for some time now. Private is one word for the pieces I’m writing about, informal is another. Not requiring instrumental expertise might be an apt phrase. Non-performative is in the spirit of it, but there are contradictions. Imaginary is a term that only applies to some of them. These pieces come in all different shapes, but I found that I care about them all and I wanted to think about them together from a (non-)performative angle. Maybe it’s my own resistance to performance that makes them so appealing to me. Feel free to step in if you feel things could be better explained or, even better, if you can offer more pieces to add to the mix.

Closet Music (Music for imaginary performance) has issued an open call for works, with a submission deadline of July 15th. The Closet Music Book is now available, and I’m going to get myself a copy when I’m next in the UK. The contributors are listed at the link, and several samples from the project are available online. It’s an excellent initiative by Janet Oates. A less formal attempt to collect this sort of work has recently surfaced as Imaginary Sound Works. The submissions tend to be text scores. (“Supplementary images, links and other online materials are accepted, but not encouraged.”)

These are the first of such collections from multiple contributors that I’m aware of, but imaginary scores have quietly been around for a while. Amnon Wolman’s imaginary pieces and Michael Pisaro’s Braids: for (silent) reader are two examples. Peter Ablinger’s Sehen und Hören series is subtitled “Music without Sounds,” and these pieces do not rely on words either. (Doug Barrett has written a really useful article on this work called Window Piece.)

Then there are pieces that are to be realized in sound, but not as a performance, for example Tom Johnson’s Private Pieces: Piano Music for Self-Entertainment. Text scores making use of natural settings or objects have eliminated the most significant barriers to a non-musician’s private performance of the work: notation and instruments. Christian Wolff’s Stones (p. 9 of the Prose Collection) can be performed in almost any configuration. The other pieces in the Prose Collection are generally available to anyone who is interested. Dean Rosenthal’s Stones/Water/Time/Breath is dedicated to Wolff, and is invitingly open in its configuration.

Some pieces involve listening to actual sounds without (intentionally) producing sounds. Should I even give the most prominent example? (4’33”) Max Neuhaus’s LISTEN and Craig Shepard’s sound walks are two other examples. David Dunn’s Purposeful Listening in Complex States of Time is quite specific in very surprising ways. Then there are Peter Ablinger’s Listening Piece in 2 Parts, Weiss/Weisslich 8, 25, 25b, 29, and a number of others. Manfred Werder’s 2010(1) may be another example.

Some pieces are presented as actions, but aren’t likely to be carried out casually. Much of the Fluxus work and Stockhausen’s Aus den Sieben Tagen come to mind. But then again, many of the more demanding scenarios have been attempted, including Stockhausen’s instruction in Gold Dust to spend four days in solitude without eating. Stockhausen tended to get positive results from his more extreme expectations. On the other end of the seriousness spectrum, the Twitter account Text Score a Day sends out daily missions which are more humorous and speculative than actually performative.

Michael Baldwin sends out the sole copies of the scores of his ephemeral scores project by post, with the understanding that they may or may not be realized, and that any realization is completely out of his hands. Jennifer Walshe has started a project called THMOTES. The scores are delivered through a free Android/iOS app called Snapchat, and then quickly disappear. “The results of that brief interaction,” she writes, “are in your kind and capable hands/brain.”

As I’m trying to work out this little spectrum from work for the mind’s ear to unperformed sounds, to sound made by the listener only, I realize that I’ve mixed these modes in my own work. In one piece, memories of sounds, imagined sounds, and actual noises in the environment are all streams of activity which can be followed. Pauline Oliveros’s Ear Piece (Word Events, p. 115) asks about listening both speculatively (“What will you hear in the near future?”) and concretely, in the here and now of the reader.

Warren Burt has done a similar exercise to this one, but I’d have to say much more thoughtfully, and in a more far-reaching way, in a 2009 essay called Ways of Listening.

resource guide 6: James Tenney

books and articles by Tenney:
From Scratch: Writings in Music Theory
Hierarchical temporal gestalt perception in music: a metric space model
Meta-Hodos and Meta Meta-Hodos: A Phenomenology of 20th Century Musical Materials and an Approach to the Study of Form (download)

Soundings 13 / Amazon
Computer Music Experiences
Form in 20th Century Music
A History of Consonance and Dissonance
John Cage and the Theory of Harmony
On “crystal growth” in harmonic space

reference:
CMC Composer Showcase
Facebook page
Plainsound page
UbuWeb page
writings

scores:
chronological listing
Bore Publishing
Canadian Music Centre
Frog Peak
Sonic Art Editions

articles, books, journal issues:
Contemporary Music Review: The Music of James Tenney
The Early Works of James Tenney
An examination of the theories and compositions of James Tenney, 1982-1985
A Few More Words About James Tenney: Dissonant Counterpoint and Statistical Feedback
Metaphors on Vision: James Tenney and Stan Brakhage, 1951-1964
North American Spectralism: The Music of James Tenney
Perspectives of New Music: A Tribute to James Tenney
Rhythmicon Relationships, Farey Sequences, and James Tenney’s Spectral CANON for CONLON Nancarrow

video and audio:
Brakhage

James Tenney as a Compositional Instructor
Oral History of American Music, June 10, 12, 1988
March 1989 interview (excerpt)
Morning Concert: Composer Jim Tenney (January 12, 1976)
movie
Postcards from the Edge (excerpts)

pieces:
Interim (1952/1998)
comment

Poem (1955)

String Quartet In One Movement (1955)

Variations in A (on a theme by my father) (1955)
openbook

Improvisation (1956)
openbook

Trio (1957)
openbook

Monody (1959)

Collage #1 (“Blue Suede”) (1961)
comment play

Analog #1: (Noise Study) (1961)
comment play

Entrance/Exit Music (with George Brecht and George Maciunas) (1962)
SoundCloud
cassette

Dialogue (1963)
comment play

Ergodos I (1963)

Phases (1963)
comment play

Stochastic String Quartet (1963)

Stochastic Quartet (1963)
YouTube

CHAMBER MUSIC (1964)
openbook

Ergodos II (1964)
comment play SoundCloud

Ergodos II with Instrumental Responses (1964)
SoundCloud

RESPONSE (1964)
SoundCloud

String Complement (1964)
SoundCloud

Music for Player Piano (1964)
comment YouTube play SoundCloud

Postal Pieces (Scorecards) (1965-71)
comment comment openbook

Scorecard No. 5: Maximusic (1965)
YouTube SoundCloud
CD

2ND THERMOCOUPLE 1965 theater piece (1965)
openbook

Collage #2 (“Viet-Flakes”) (1966)
play YouTube

Fabric for Ché (1967)
comment play

Scorecard No. 6: Swell Piece (1967)
Vimeo

For Ann (rising) (1969)
comment play SoundCloud

Three Rags for Pianoforte: (“Raggedy Ann”, “Milk and Honey” [Mielle’s Rag], “Tangled Rag”) (1969)

QUIET FAN for ERIK SATIE (1970/71)
cassette

For 12 Strings (rising) (1971)
Vimeo

Hey When I Sing These 4 Songs Hey Look What Happens (1971)
cassette

Scorecard No. 1: Beast (1971)

“For percussion perhaps, or …. ” (1971)
YouTube

Scorecard No. 4: KOAN (1971)
YouTube Vimeo

Scorecard No.7[a]: Swell Piece No. 2 (1971)
YouTube YouTube SoundCloud

Scorecard No.7[b]: Swell Piece No. 3 (1971)
Vimeo

Scorecard No. 9: Cellogram (1971)
YouTube YouTube Vimeo

Scorecard No. 10: Having Never Written a Note for Percussion (1971)
SoundCloud Vimeo Vimeo Vimeo

CLANG (1972)
CD

Quintext I-V: Five Textures (1972)
YouTube
Some Recent THOUGHTS for Morton Feldman,
CLOUDS for Iannis Xenakis,
A Choir of ANGELS for Carl Ruggles,
PARABOLAS and HYPERBOLAS for Edgard Varèse,
SPECTRA for Harry Partch

Homage to Perotin (In the Phyrgian Mode) (1973)
openbook

Chorale for Violin and Piano (1974/98)

Chorales for Orchestra (1974)
CD

Spectral CANON for CONLON Nancarrow (1974)
comment YouTube play

THREE PIECES for Drum Quartet: (1974)
WAKE for Charles Ives
YouTube YouTube
HOCKET for Henry Cowell
YouTube
CRYSTAL CANON for Edgard Varèse
YouTube YouTube SoundCloud

Harmonium #1 (1976)
SoundCloud

Harmonium #2 (1977)
YouTube SoundCloud SoundCloud

Harmonium #5 (1978)
CD

Saxony (1978)
Three Indigenous Songs (I. No More Good Water (Jaybird Coleman); II. KOSMOS (Walt Whitman); III. Hey when I sing these 4 songs Hey look what happens)
SoundCloud

Chromatic Canon (1980)
Vimeo

Listen…! (1981/84)

Septet (1981/2000)
comment YouTube play

deus ex machina (1982)

Bridge (1982-84)
CD

KOAN (for string quartet) (1984)

CHANGES: 64 Studies for 6 Harps (1985)
comment

Water on the Mountain…Fire in Heaven (1985)

The Road to Ubud (1986/2001)
CD

Critical Band (1988/2000)
play

Rune (1988)

Tableaux Vivants (1990)
CD

Pika-Don (“flash-boom”) (1990)
1. Alamogordo
2. Hiroshima

Spectral CANON for CONLON Nancarrow (Extended) (1991)

Three New Seeds (1991)
openbook
CD

Ain’t I a Woman? (1992)
comment

Cognate Canons (1993)

FLOCKING (1993)
YouTube
CD

Form 1 (1993)
SoundCloud

Form 2 (1993)
YouTube

Form 3 (1993)
YouTube

Form 4 (1993)
YouTube

Ergodos III (1994)

In a large, open space (1994)
openbook YouTube YouTube SoundCloud

Spectrum 1-8 (1995, 2001)

Three Pages in the Shape of a Pear (1995)
SoundCloud

Diapason (1996)

Diaphonic Study (1997)

Diaphonic Toccata (1997)

Diaphonic Trio (1997)

Seegersong #1 (1999)

Seegersong #2 (1999)

Song’n’Dance for Harry Partch (1999)
comment

Prelude and Toccata (2001)
video excerpts

To Weave (2003)
Vimeo
CD

Essay (After a Sonata) (2003)

Just Another Bagatelle (2004)
Vimeo

Panacousticon (2005)
comment

Arbor Vitae (2006)
YouTube

(Spectral Variations)

resource guide 5: Helmut Lachenmann

interviews and writings:
November 1998
April 2004
April 2008
June 2008
Des Paradis éphémères
Musik als existentielle Erfahrung: Schriften 1966-1995 (German Edition)

Sonic Mosaics: Conversations with Composers

Three Questions for Sixty-Five Composers

video profiles:
Musica Viva 3 – Helmut Lachenmann: Furcht und Verlangen

WHERE I HAVE NEVER BEEN BEFORE (trailer)

reference:
Breitkopf & Härtel pages (including bibliography)
IRCAM pages
upcoming events

sources:
Der Atem des Wanderers: Der Komponist Helmut Lachenmann

Contemporary Music Review Volume 23, Issue 3-4
Contemporary Music Review Volume 24, Issue 1
Das Politische in den Kompositionen von Helmut Lachenmann und Nicolaus A. Huber

Musik-Konzepte, Heft 61/62
Helmut Lachenmann: Musik mit Bildern?.

Identity and Difference: Essays on Music, Language and Time

pieces:
Fünf Variationen über ein Thema von Franz Schubert (1956)
Spotify YouTube

Echo Andante (1961-62)

Wiegenmusik (1963)
comment Spotify YouTube
DVD

Szenario (1965)
YouTube

Streichtrio (1965, rev. 1993)
play

Intérieur I (1965-66)
comment Spotify YouTube

Trio fluido (1966-67, rev. 1968)
Vimeo YouTube YouTube play

Consolation I (1967, rev. 1990, 1993)

Notturno (Musik für Julia) (1966-68, rev. 1990)
YouTube

Consolation II (1968)

temA (1968)
comment comment play SoundCloud

Air (1968-69, rev. 1994)

Pression (1969-70)
Spotify Vimeo

Dal niente (Intérieur III) (1970)
comment Spotify Vimeo

Guero (1970, rev. 1988)
comment Spotify Spotify Spotify YouTube
DVD

Kontrakadenz (1970-71)

Gran Torso (1971-1972, rev. 1978, 1988)
comment Spotify Spotify

Klangschatten—mein Saitenspiel (1972)

Fassade (1973, rev. 1987)

Schwankungen am Rand (1974-75)
Spotify

Accanto (1975-76, rev. 1982)
Spotify YouTube

Salut für Caudwell (1977)
Spotify SoundCloud SoundCloud

Les Consolations (1967-68/1977-78)
YouTube

Tanzsuite mit Deutschlandlied (1979-80)

Ein Kinderspiel (1980)
comment YouTube Spotify
DVD

Harmonica (1981-83)
YouTube

Mouvement (1982-84)
comment YouTube play

Ausklang (1984-85, rev. 1986)
comment

Toccatina (1986)
YouTube
CD 1 / 2

Staub (1985-87)

Allegro Sostenuto (1986-88, rev. 1989)
comment Spotify SoundCloud

Tableau (1988-89)
comment YouTube

II. Streichquartett, ‘Reigen seliger Geister’ (1989)
comment YouTube

‘..zwei Gefühle…’, Musik mit Leonardo (1991-92)
comment Spotify
DVD

Das Mädchen mit den Schwefelhölzern (1990-96, rev. 1999)
Vimeo YouTube

Serynade (1997-98, rev. 2000)
comment SoundCloud YouTube

NUN (1997-99, rev. 2002)
YouTube

Sakura-Variationen (2000)
comment

III. Streichquartett, ‘Grido’ (2000-01)
comment Vimeo YouTube

Schreiben (2002-03)
play

Concertini (2005)
comment YouTube

…got lost… (2007/8)
text comment