Sunday, 10 February 2008

visual context of music



The Visual Context of Music

"A musical notation is a language which determines what you can say;

what you want to say determines your language." [Cornelius Cardew

1961]

'Cantorinus ad Eorum Instructionem' Luce Antonii Junte, 1540.

*I think* that the image of the hand was meant as a mnemonic device to

be used

in staggered singing of hymns so as to remember the allowed notes...or

something.

"Robert Fludd (1574-1637). Opera, [Francofurti : Goudae], Oppenhemii,

J. Th. de Bry et haeredes, C. F. et G. Fitzer, P. Pammazenius,

1617-1638."

Gabriel Sizes

'Etude Exp�rimentale d'Acoustique Musicale' 1920

[me: I have no idea]

Randy Raine-Reusch 'Leaves 2' 1993.

"This score can be performed aurally, visually, kinesthetically,

synesthetically, interactively, literally, symbolically, or

philosophically."

Toru Takemitsu 1962 'Study for Vibration' (from 'Corona for

Pianists').

"The performance may start at any point of the perimeter no matter

clockwise or counterclockwise." [nb. There's a chance this was

mislabelled and is actually by Sylvano Bussotti]

Murray Sch�fer 1977

'Divan I Shams I Tabriz' for Orchestra, seven singers and electronic

sounds.

'Bird Gong Game' ~1990s Barry Guy

Cornelius Cardew 'Treatise' (detail) 1967.

George Crumb 'Makrokosmos II - 12. Agnus Dei [Symbol] Capricorn'.

1973.

George Crumb 'Makrokosmos I - 12. Spiral Galaxy [Symbol] Aquarius'.

1973.

'The Art of Fugue' bookart by Elizabeth Harington.

[A literary use or response to the fugue can be found in Joyce's 11th

episode in Ulysses ('Sirens') in which the wording and chapter

structure attempted - with some poetic license - to mimic or work

within the rules of the fugue. Unsurprisingly, a quick search on

'Sirens' revealed that John Cage, a leading musical experimentalist

and graphic score 'artist' names James Joyce as an influence. See:

'James Joyce and Avant Garde Music' � Scott W. Klein 2004 at the

Contemporary Music Centre.]

'For Andrea section 4' Kerry John Andrews [detail]

Screen capture from See Music Project: Kircher/Monteverdi.

This post had been left on the backburner for many months. Graphical

scores are a modernist trend so of course copyright and commercial

interests means that there are not as many examples online as I had

otherwise hoped.

* Wikipedia has a very basic introduction to experimental music.

* The Block Museum's 'Pictures of Music' exhibition at Northwesten

University in Illinois has a great presentation about the history

and exponents of graphical scores. Alas, all the links to large

images are dead, as they were months ago when I first checked out

the site.

* The first 3 images above come from a wonderful exhibition in

french at La Biblioth�que de Toulouse (click on 'expos virtuelle')

- 'Entre les lignes de la port�e : quand la musique se donne �

voir' - something like: 'Between the lines of the range: when the

music is seen.' Lots of rare music book images and music samples.

* A Young Person's Guide to 'Treatise' - Cornelius Cardew.

* Score gallery at a Japanese site.

* Barry Guy graphical scores at Maya Recordings.

* The Experimental Music Catalogue (including the Journal of

Experimental Music).

* The official George Crumb homepage.

* The New Music Box on George Crumb - pdf scores at the bottom of

the page.

* 'A Performer Drawn to the Piano's Wild Side' [New York Times] :

Why Margaret Leng Tan has 16 toy pianos and three Steinways in her

Brooklyn apartment.

* Karlheinz Stockhausen homepage. (googleimages)

* Graphic scores by Randy Raine-Reusch at Asza.

* Kerry John Andrews graphic scores at the Digital Art Museum.

* John Kannenburg graphic scores.

* The final image above comes from the See Music Project - we have

finally worked out the loading glitch (truncated URL). It's a

flash program that definitely requires a high speed connection and

is well worth a look.

* What does music look like? The Shape of Song.

* 'The Art of Fugue' bookart by Elizabeth Harington.

Many thanks variously for known and unknown assistance to Panopticist,

Waggish, Giornale Nuovo, Languagehat and Boynton.

Some of the links will play music. As always, click the above images


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