Xenakis, UPIC, Continuum: Electroacoustic & Instrumental works from CCMIX, Paris


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CCMIX Paris: New Electroacoustic Works

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mode 98/99  Xenakis/UPIC/Continuum: New Electroacoustic and Electroacoustic Music from CCMIX Paris: Iannis XENAKIS: Mycenae Alpha; Polytope de Cluny; plus works by Jean-Claude Risset, Julio Estrada, Curtis Roads, Brigitte Robindoré, Nicola Cisternino, Daniel Terruggi, Takehito Shimazu, and CCMIX’s director Gerard Pape. 2-CD set with 56-page book

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CCMIX Paris: New Electroacoustic Works
"Music computer-generated using the UPIC (Polyagogic Computer Instrument of CEMAMu), with additional acoustic accompaniment. Previously released as a compact disc. (viewed Feb. 7, 2013). Roland Auzet, Claire Talibart, percussion (3rd work) ; Daniel Kientzy, saxophone (4th work) ; Nicholas Isherwood, bass (5th work) ; SWF Orchestra of Baden-Baden ; Olaf Henzold, conductor (7th work) ; Kazuko Takada, san-gen, voice (10th work) ; Arditti Quartet (13th work). Recorded in 2009.

Iannis XENAKIS (1922-2001)
Mycenae Alpha (1978) for UPIC   (10:00) *
Polytope de Cluny (1972) for 8-channel tape   (24:45)

Brigitte ROBINDORÉ (b.1962)
L’Autel de la Perte et de la Transformation (1993)
for UPIC   (8:33)
Comme Etrangers et Voyageurs sur la Terre (1994)   (11:27)
for 2 percussionists & UPIC
Roland Auzet, Claire Talibart, percussion

Jean-Claude RISSET (b.1938)
Saxatile (1992) for soprano saxophone & UPIC   (7:45)
Daniel Kientzy, saxophone

Nicola CISTERNINO (b.1957)
Xöömij (1997) for bass voice & UPIC   (11:57)
Nicholas Isherwood, bass

Julio ESTRADA (b.1943)
eua-on (1980) for UPIC   (7:44)
eua-on-ome (1995) for orchestra   (10:42) *
SWF Orchestra of Baden-Baden, Olaf Henzold,
conductor

Daniel TERRUGI (b.1952)
Gestes de l’écrit (1994) for UPIC   (11:00)

Takehito SHIMAZU (b.1949)
Illusions in Desolate Fields (1994) for voice, san-gen
& UPIC
   (13:27)
Kazuko Takada, san-gen & voice

Curtis ROADS (b.1951)
Purity (1994) for tape   (7:13)
Sonal Atoms (1998)   (3:41)

Gérard PAPE (b.1955)
Le Fleuve du Désir III (1994) for string quartet
& UPIC
   (12:41)
The Arditti Quartet

All FIRST RECORDINGS unless indicated by *

This 2-CD collection documents more than 20 years of works composed on the unique computer music system called “UPIC”, and the evolution of the computer music center founded specifically to promote it – Les Ateliers UPIC, now called CCMIX.

The UPIC system was conceived by Iannis Xenakis in the early 1950s; the first version of UPIC was built by Xenakis’ research center, the CEMAMu, in the late 1970s, and the system continues to be developed to this day. Instead of a keyboard to perform the music, the UPIC’s performance device is a mouse and/or a digital drawing board. These are used to trace the composer’s graphic score into the UPIC computer program, which the ninterprets the drawings as real time instructions for sound synthesis-the composition/performance of a graphic musical score and real-time sound synthesis are unified by the UPIC’s approach.

Xenakis’ Mycenae Alpha, the first work entirely realized on the UPIC, opens the set, which also includes the first issuance of his legendary Polytope de Cluny. In 1980, Julio Estrada composed his one and only UPIC work, eua’on, an experience that resulted in a veritable revolution in the composer’s approach. Also included is his large orchestral work eua’on’ome, an orchestral realization of the original UPIC score.In the 1990s, the UPIC system fascinated a whole new generation of composers including Brigitte Robindoré, Takehito Shimazu, Nicola Cisternino and Gerard Pape (CCMIX’s director). Jean-Claude Risset and Daniel Teruggi, coming, respectively, from the direct computer music synthesis, and the “acousmatic” approaches, also found ways to make the UPIC system their own in the 1990s.

Rounding out this collection are recent works by Curtis Roads and Xenakis’ classic tape composition Polytope de Cluny. These works have been included to demonstrate that Xenakis’ legacy-both in his own electroacoustic music as well as in his theoretical influence on other important electroacoustical composers, such as Roads-goes far beyond the UPIC system.

In 2000, Les Ateliers UPIC changed its name to CCMIX (Center for the Composition of Music Iannis Xenakis) in homage to this great creator.