Gerard Pape

(b. 1965)

mode 67

Electroacoustic Chamber Music

$14.99

mode 67 Gerard PAPE: Electroacoustic Chamber Works – Arditti Quartet, Voxnova, Ensemble 2e2m/Paul Mefano, Daniel Kleintzy

In stock

Electroacoustic Chamber Music
Aufnahme: Salzburg, Festival Aspekte, 1994 (Live-Aufnahme) ; Paris, La Muse en Circuit, 1996 ; Paris, Théatre Dunois, 1995 (Live-Aufnahme) ; Paris, Studio recording, 1997 ; Paris, Centre Pompidou, 1997 (Live-Aufnahme). Janet Pape (S) ; Nicholas Isherwood (B) ; Cécile Daroux (Fl) ; Daniel Kientzy (Sax) ; Gerard Pape (Zuspielaufnahme) ; Paul Mefano (Dir) ; Arditti String Quartet ; Ensemble 2e2m ; Ensemble Vox Nova. Recorded in 1997.

Two Electro-Acoustic Songs  (1993)   (10:50)
   Time Caught in a Net
   On the Road at Night
     Janet Pape, soprano
     Cécile Daroux, flute
     Gerard Pape, tape & sound projection

Le Fleuve du Désir  (1994)   (12:39)
     The Arditti Quartet
     Gerard Pape, tape

Monologue  (1995)   (32:16)
     Nicholas Isherwood, bass
     Gerard Pape, tape & sound projection

Battle  (1996)   (8:17)
     Vox Nova
     Gerard Pape, tape

Makbénach  (1996-97)   (10:20)
     Daniel Kientzy, saxophone
     Ensemble 2e2m conducted by Paul Mefano
     Gerard Pape, tape & sound projection

Composed between 1993-97, this second volume of works by Gerard Pape on Mode continues his richly darkly dramatic style with new compositional turns. Born in Brooklyn, now living in Paris, Pape is the director of the Atelier UPIC – an electronic music studio utilizing the unique UPIC computer developed by Iannis Xenakis – since 1991. While a resident of Ann Arbor, Michigan he ran Sinewave Studios, a state of the art New Music and Electronic Music studio and organized of the annual TWICE Festival of New Music, featuring composers such as Berio, Cage, Crumb and Xenakis.

The performers on this disc are a veritable who’s-who of European New Music specialists. Pape sites these compositions as influenced by Xenakis, Giacinto Scesli and Julio Estrada. Indeed, they combine the power of Xenakis with the microtonal explorations of Scelsi. All works, with the exception of Le Fleuve, interact the performers with vivid use of electronics and/or tape, many composed on the UPIC computer.

The evocative texts range from Samuel Beckett to Clive Barker. Battle is a scene from Pape’s upcoming opera based on Barker’s Weaveworld, to be premiered in France in 1

Language : Selections sung in Hebrew.