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Class 6

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Begins at around the same time as FLUXUS and beginnings of exploration of ... well as (later in his career) West African drumming and Indonesian gamelan music ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Class 6


1
Class 6
  • Contemporary Music

2
Minimalism
  • New genre that also arises in the 1960s
  • Begins at around the same time as FLUXUS and
    beginnings of exploration of extended techniques

3
Minimalism and the 1960s
  • In the last class, we discussed how the 1960s
    were a time of social upheaval in the US
  • FLUXUS was a sort of artistic upheaval that arose
    around the same time
  • Questioning prevailing standards

4
(continued)
  • Minimalism also questions prevailing standards,
    but in a different way
  • Questions atonality and serialism - why all the
    dissonance?
  • Questions Babbitts belief that contemporary
    classical music should be cloistered
  • More broadly, questions the values of Western
    music by using key aspects of Indian music,
    African music and rock

5
Minimalism
  • What does the name suggest?

6
What it sounds like
  • Extremely repetitive
  • Limited number of materials (that is, short
    phrases, small number of phrases, and so on)
  • Usually consonant

7
Listening log 24 Terry Riley, In C (1964)
  • How does this sound like it was made?
  • Is this pleasant or unpleasant to listen to? Why?

8
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9
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10
Terry Riley
  • 1935- (Colfax, California)

11
Terry Riley
  • Strongly interested in Indian classical music,
    which typically features a drone (a main pitch
    that never goes away)
  • and then improvisation based around that drone
  • Notes twist around the drone
  • That is very similar to what Riley does in In C,
    except he uses major key and regular pulse

12
Steve Reich
  • 1936- (New York)

13
Steve Reich
  • Has a traditional music background, studies
    12-tone music
  • Inspired by In C, as well as (later in his
    career) West African drumming and Indonesian
    gamelan music

14
Come Out, 1966
  • Plays a recording on two different channels that
    are playing at slightly different speeds
  • As time goes on, the two recordings begin to
    interact with each other in slightly different
    ways

15
Music as a Gradual Process
  • Performing and listening to a gradual process
    resembles
  • Pulling back a swing, releasing it, and observing
    it gradually come to rest
  • Turning over an hour glass and watching the sand
    slowly run through the bottom
  • Placing your feet in the sand by the oceans edge
    and watching, feeling, and listening to the waves
    gradually bury them.

16
Listening log 25 Reich, Come Out
  • Does this piece sound like those things? If so,
    in what sense?

17
Phasing
  • Reich writes instrumental music as well
  • Similar elements moved past one another in Come
    Out
  • Reich applies the same principle to his
    instrumental music
  • This is called phasing

18
Phasing
  • In contrast to serialism, phasing creates
    complexity that it is possible for the layman
    to hear and understand
  • Reich and other composers begin to use it in
    instrumental works that become wildly popular
  • (At least by contemporary-music terms)

19
Piano Phase (1967)
  • For two pianos playing the same figure over and
    over
  • One gradually gets off from the other
  • Creates an unusual psychoacoustic sensation
    (messes with your head)

20
Listening log 26 Reich, Piano Phase
  • Where would be the best place to listen to the
    piece?
  • Is there ever a point when you lose track and
    forget what instruments youre listening to?

21
Philip Glass
  • 1937- (Baltimore)

22
Glass
  • Studied at Juilliard, then in Paris
  • Travels to India and becomes interested in Indian
    music
  • Attempts to emulate rhythms of Indian music
    (additive rhythms)
  • Moves to New York in 1960s
  • Composes, and makes living as a cab driver

23
Glass
  • Forms his own ensemble and goes out on tour, like
    a rock band
  • Difference with usual composer-performer
    relationship in classical music
  • Different skill set required to play minimalist
    music
  • Intense concentration
  • Ability to reproduce same sound in a precise way

24
How Performers Play
  • Throughout 20th century, performance practice
    becomes more machine-like
  • Less vibrato
  • Less rubato
  • Without inflection
  • Minimalism, in particular, requires many exact
    repetitions

25
Pair Group Activity Rachmaninoff vs. Glass
Music in 12 Parts
  • Listen to these two examples and compare the role
    of the performer in each
  • Pay particular attention to the vocalist in the
    Glass piece

26
How they Play
  • Focus more on precision as 20th century continues
  • Less on overt emotion

27
How We Listen
  • Minimalism not always meant for active listening
  • Example Glass opera Einstein on the Beach lasts
    about five hours
  • Audience members free to enter or leave as they
    please

28
Machine Music
  • Less emotional
  • Less dependent upon the human things in
    performance
  • Reichs Process Music -- you set up the
    process, then let it go (like turning on an
    appliance)
  • You can partake in a performance even if you
    wont commit to hearing all of it--it is
    indifferent to you

29
In any case
  • Minimalism becomes very popular, and remains an
    important strain of American classical music

30
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