Les médias liés à cet évènement

Tracking the creative process in Trevor Wishart’s Imago - Michael Clarke, Frédéric Dufeu

9 octobre 2015 26 min

A framework for sustainability and research of interactive computer music repertoire - Jeremy Baguyos

9 octobre 2015 30 min

Enquête sur les frequency-shifters dans les œuvres mixtes - Alain Bonardi

9 octobre 2015 27 min

Assessing the impact of feedback in the composition process: an experiment in leadsheet composition - Daniel Martín, Benjamin Frantz

9 octobre 2015 31 min

The composer as evaluator: reflections on evaluation and the creative process - Annelies Fryberger

9 octobre 2015 29 min

Créer sous les micros. Quand la lecture répétée d'une œuvre fait advenir son interprétation - Benoît Haug

9 octobre 2015 27 min

From perfection to expression? Exploring possibilities for changing the aesthetics and processes of recording classical music

9 octobre 2015 30 min

Understanding the creative process in the shaping of an interpretation by eight expert musicians - Isabelle Héroux

9 octobre 2015 28 min

Genre as frame in elite performers' interpretative decision-making - Sheila Guymer

9 octobre 2015 27 min

The authorship of orchestral performance - Cayenna Ponchione-Bailey

9 octobre 2015 33 min

Improvised meetings between New York and Kolkata: A collaborative analysis of a transcultural study - Amandine Pras, Caroline Cance, Gilles Cloiseau

9 octobre 2015 28 min

Gestural interfaces and creativity in electronic music: A comparative analysis - Baptiste Bacot

9 octobre 2015 31 min

Technical influence and physical constraint in the realisation of Gesang der Jünglinge - Sean Williams

9 octobre 2015 30 min

Melodic Variation and Improvisational Syntax in an Aka Polyphonic Song - Rob Schultz

9 octobre 2015 23 min

Life through a lens: a case study evaluating an application of the concepts of affordance, effectivities and the hallmarks of human behavior to an experiment in ‘intuitive’ composition for voice and accordion - Chloë Mullett

9 octobre 2015 28 min

Creating new music across cultural boundaries: mbira and string quartet - Amanda Bayley

9 octobre 2015 29 min

Sur les rôles de Heinz Holliger dans la genèse de la Sequenza VII de Luciano Berio (FR) - Nicolas Donin

9 octobre 2015 29 min

Historically informed? The creative consequences of period instruments in contemporary compositions - Emily Payne

9 octobre 2015 28 min

Cipriano de Rore’s Setting of Petrarch’s Vergine Cycle and the Creative Process - Jessie Ann Owens

9 octobre 2015 26 min

Table ronde 1 : Friedemann Sallis, Music Sketches (2015) - Jonathan Cross, Nicolas Donin, William Kinderman, Jessie Ann Owens, Friedemann Sallis

9 octobre 2015 01 h 10 min

Igor Stravinsky’s Compositional Process for Duo Concertant (1931–32)

9 octobre 2015 27 min

Jimi Hendrix’s Fire from Studio to Live, and Back: The Song as a Work in Progress - Alessandro Bratus

9 octobre 2015 25 min

Analyser la sociogenèse d’une manière d’écrire singulière : l’exemple de l’écriture improvisatrice chez Déodat de Séverac (FR)

9 octobre 2015 25 min

Models, Figures, and Modernity in the Process of Composition of Claude Debussy’s Sonate pour violoncelle et piano: The Case of 'Sérénade' (EN) - François Delecluse

9 octobre 2015 30 min

Comment Debussy réinvente-t-il les opérateurs de la modernité ? Modèles, figures et modernité dans la composition de la Sonate pour violoncelle et piano de Claude Debussy : l’exemple de la « Sérénade » (VF) - François Delecluse

9 octobre 2015 30 min

Choosing the Right ‘Notes’ in Synchronized Swimming: Practical and Stylistical Consequences (EN) - Irina Kirchberg

9 octobre 2015 29 min

Opter pour les bonnes « notes » en natation synchronisée : conséquences pratiques et stylistiques (FR) - Irina Kirchberg

9 octobre 2015 29 min

Creating and Re-Creating: What Remediation Entails (EN) - Julie Mansion-Vaquié

9 octobre 2015 19 min

Création et re-création, les enjeux du changement de support (FR) - Julie Mansion-Vaquié

9 octobre 2015 19 min

Collaboration in Computer Music. An Analysis of the Role Played by Musical Assistants Obtained Through Semi-Structured Interviews (EN) - Laura Zattra

9 octobre 2015 24 min

Computer Music et collaboration : enquête sur le rôle créatif des assistants musicaux à partir d’entretiens semi-structurés (FR)

9 octobre 2015 24 min

On Heinz Holliger’s Roles in the Creative Process of Luciano Berio’s Sequenza VII (EN) - Nicolas Donin

9 octobre 2015 29 min

Analysing the Socio-Genesis of a Distinctive Writing Technique: Improvisatory Writing by Déodat de Séverac (EN) - Alexandre Robert

9 octobre 2015 25 min

E-sketch analysis: Marco Stroppa’s Chroma between the late ’80s and early ’90s - Giacomo Albert

9 octobre 2015 28 min

Roundtable 1: Friedemann Sallis, Music Sketches (2015) - Jonathan Cross, Nicolas Donin, William Kinderman, Jessie Ann Owens, Friedemann Sallis

9 octobre 2015 01 h 10 min

WORKSHOP 2 : Gestes et expérimentations: composition et interprétation de Sonant 1960/... (1960) et Dressur (1977) de Kagel - Jean-François Trubert, Gaston Sylvestre, Willy Coquillat

9 octobre 2015 01 h 36 min

The Body in the Composition and Performance of Art Music

0:00/0:00

Serious art music may seem to have lost its relational aspect and to be veering off into modernist oblivion lost in the noise of exponential technological development. Whether or not this is fanciful, there’s no doubt there are challenges — the challenges of engaging audiences with art music, of devising creative process aimed at presentation, and of dealing with the gulf between art music and other musics that seem to only benefit from ever-spreading and changing technologies.

One composer who has relentlessly claimed to ignore these, has, paradoxically, been solving them throughout a long career that is now establishing him as one of the most important living musical minds. Harrison Birtwistle claims he is unable to care for the audience, yet paradoxically, his audiences are often strikingly engaged, despite the hard edges of the sound. What is happening; and how does it work?
For relational music in the sociological sense, there are many examples: the call and response of our black musics, our concertante forms, religious musics of all denominations. But Birtwistle is more interested in the ‘relational’ inside the musical process. The relationships Birtwistle preoccupies with are not social, but those of the senses — the negotiations that occur between sight, hearing, and most significantly, touch in musical performance. The body, long split off from art music, has been quietly (actually not so quietly) integrating back via Birtwistle’s musical thinking.

Harrison Birtwistle’s Pulse Field (1977), was an innovative collaboration that reformulated the traditional relationship of music and dance movement. Birtwistle took paper and pencil into the studio and composed, as he put it ‘on the floor of the theatre’. The piece has been referred to by several of the Birtwistle scholars, yet has remained little understood. I believe Pulse Field to be an important creation, not only from a theoretical, and aesthetic point of view, but above all, as a model of creative process aimed unlocking the power contained in pure musical attention of performers (and listeners). In its present form, the score can only be fully understood by taking into account the creative process which took place during the collaboration period. The secret of this process has been locked in the Rambert Archive until this year as the newly established facility opened at London’s Southbank. The Rambert Archive makes available materials extending back to Marie Rambert's relationship with Stravinsky/Diaghilev, and incorporates the continuing tradition of composer/choreographer collaboration into the present century.

Birtwistle's notion of ritual applied to the performance of abstract music is now highly developed. Pulse Field, by no means the first instance of this development, none the less represents an early experiment that clearly demonstrates how fundamental musical elements and theatrical intuition can work together. I have described and explained this in my study, incorporating ideas from Nicholas Cook's Analysing Musical Multimedia (1998).

Since Birtwistle was focussed on attempting a reformulation of the traditional relations between dance and music in western classical dance, I proposed a theory of interaction that links the notion of tactus with the fundamental essence of balletic movement drawn from its major theorists: Noverre, Blasis, and, in the twentieth century, Lopukhov. I found that there was a significant relationship between the two media through movement in the vertical plane. I have described the aural and visual context of Pulse Field and applied the proposed theory as a way of understanding the composer’s approach to composition and performance. The research established that the theory of interaction at the level of tactus not only provides a key to understanding the ‘common practice’ of traditional ballet, but makes clear Birtwistle’s radical reformulation of this practice.
What is particularly interesting about Birtwistle, is the inherent theatricality in his musical thinking. Pulse Field’s abstract musical and physical elements, illustrate musical innovation that need not rely on text for drawing attention. Investigating the collaboration, revealed a model that allows for the widest possible range of media relationships without completely losing all connection beyond the incidental, as with the Cage/Cunningham approach. The array creative processes included the relationship of entrainment, of independent elaboration of the media, of the incorporation of theatrical effects, of improvisation — the possibilities are wide open. The key question of musical attention involves the senses including that of touch so that the focussed, physical self, is written into the music.

The theoretical approach involving the work's functioning as spectacle, has repercussions for the presentation and reception of art music. The way in which Birtwistle engaged his performers with the notes and with each other, produced a powerful engagement with the listener/viewer.

intervenants

informations

Type
Séminaire / Conférence
durée
21 min
date
9 octobre 2015
note de programme
TCPM 2015

IRCAM

1, place Igor-Stravinsky
75004 Paris
+33 1 44 78 48 43

heures d'ouverture

Du lundi au vendredi de 9h30 à 19h
Fermé le samedi et le dimanche

accès en transports

Hôtel de Ville, Rambuteau, Châtelet, Les Halles

Institut de Recherche et de Coordination Acoustique/Musique

Copyright © 2022 Ircam. All rights reserved.