Category: Reviews
Late night line-up
| I’ve been avoiding this year’s Proms on principle – the principle that there’s not been anything very tempting on. But I was enticed out by yesterday’s late night mix of English and American Experimentalism, and there was lots to enjoy in the performances by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under Ilan Volkov.
John Cage’s First Construction in Metal is a classic, but one rarely heard live. It is a bit of a jolt to realise that the piece is 71 years old, but its gamelan-like soundworld still sounds fresh, even if it is rhythmically a bit four-square. This was a an early example of Cage structuring his music according to a rigid, pre-ordained durational plan, an idea he took to full fruition in the Sonatas and Interludes for Prepared Piano, in which the music feels less constrained by the rhythmic template. For all the sound and fury of the opening, the most effective moments were where the thundersheets had a break and stillness and even silence were thrown into the mix. |
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| Cornelius Cardew, figurehead of English Experimentalism, was represented by an early orchestral work Bun no.1, the graduation piece from his studies with Petrassi in Rome. It is unfortunate when the title is the best thing about a piece, but that was the case with this overcooked parade of up-to-the-minute (in 1964) orchestral textures, lacking any coherence or sense of direction.
This article first appeared at soundandmusic.org. See all postings by The Earwig. |
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