5 violins, 2 violas, 3 cellos, 2 double basses
Pays-Bas, la Haye, Conservatoire Royal.
The open-string orchestra consists of twelve soloists. The ensemble  has all the chromatic tones over a range of nearly four octaves at its  disposal. But for a melody of four consecutive tones four players are  required. 
The work was written for a group of string players at the  Conservatory, a kind of teaching project for ensemble playing and  counting. 
As regards the composition technique, I employed symphonic  procedures: recurring motives, a developing musical motion, and  something like a recapitulation. I had not used techniques like these  since the fifties, and they could be my answer to the neo-romantic  movement: young composers writing once again for the symphonic  orchestra. In this sense the Symphony is ambiguous, using ‘symphonic’  techniques while an open-string orchestra will never sound like a real  symphony orchestra. 
This work has benefited from that discrepancy – in other words, for a symphony orchestra I would have written a different work.
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