Richard Teitelbaum (1939-2020)
Dal Niente (1997)
pour piano MIDI, échantillonneur et ordinateur
œuvre électronique
- Informations générales
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Date de composition :
1997
Dates de révision : 1997 , 1997
- Durée : 22 mn 7 s
- Dédicace : «to the memory of Aki Takahashi’s husband, the noted music critic Kuniharau Akiyama, and to some of the American experimental composers—Cowell, Cage, Feldman, Nancarrow and Tudor—whose music he loved, and did so much to make known in Japan»
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Date de composition :
1997
- Genre
- Musique soliste (sauf voix) [Synthétiseurs ou ancêtres (Ondes Martenots ...)]
- soliste : clavier électronique/MIDI/synthétiseur
Information sur la création
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Date :
1997
Lieu :Japon, Yokohama et Takefu
Interprètes :Aki Takahashi, piano.
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Date :
1998
Lieu :États-Unis, New York, Merkin Hall
Interprètes :Aki Takahashi, piano ; Richard Teitelbaum, électronique.
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Date :
octobre 2000
Lieu :États-Unis, Irvine (CA), Center for Contemporary Music, Mills College and Eclectic Orange Festival, Orange County Philharmonic Society
Interprètes :Aki Takahashi ; Ursula Oppens.
Information sur l'électronique
Dispositif électronique : autre dispositif électronique, échantillonneur - sampler
Observations
« …dal niente… is dedicated to the memory of Aki Takahashi’s husband, the noted music critic Kuniharau Akiyama, and to some of the American experimental composers — Cowell, Cage, Feldman, Nancarrow and Tudor — whose music he loved, and did so much to make known in Japan. Most of those who founded this tradition no longer walk among us, but the beauty of their ideas and creations continues to inspire. In an “homage” to them, I have sought to adopt some of their attitudes and concepts: from Henry Cowell, an awareness of new sounds and harmonic structures, and the invention of unusual methods of obtaining them; from Cage, an openness to whatever eventuality the chance nature of the universe brings to us; from Feldman, an intense awareness of the sheer beauty of sound; from Nancarrow, the use of machines to create musical patterns and structures beyond the humanly playable, and pleasure in their wild exuberance; and from Tudor, the inspiration to invent new instrumental systems and to consider such a configuration itself to be the score of the music. In my piece, I have employed today’s digital electronics to realize or elaborate these ideas in ways that only such technology makes possible: a real-time iterative computer system “listens” to the material played by the pianist on a specially adopted MIDI piano, and responds instantaneously with transformations of what it hears, as well as additional utterances of its own »
(livret du disque Richard Teitelbaum Piano Plus – Piano Music 1963-1998, New World Records, n. 80756-2; https://nwr-site-liner-notes.s3.amazonaws.com/80756.pdf)
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