Iannis Xenakis

(1922-2001)

mode 53

Xenakis Edition 1-Ensemble Music 1

$14.99

mode 53 Iannis XENAKIS: Ensemble Music 1–Plektó (1993, 1st recording); Eonta; Akanthos; Rebonds; N’Shima–ST-X Ensemble/Bornstein.

In stock

Xenakis Edition 1-Ensemble Music 1
Includes program notes. Mode Records: mode 53 (additional no. on container spine: X-1) Program and biographical notes in English, French, and German ([24] p.) inserted in container. Streaming audio. The 1st work for flute, clarinet, piano, percussion, violin, and violoncello; the 2nd work for piano, 2 trumpets, and 3 tenor trombones; the 3rd work for soprano, flute/alto flute/piccolo, clarinet/bass clarinet, piano, 2 violins, viola, violoncello, and double bass; the 4th work for percussion solo; the 5th work for 2 amplified peasant voices, 2 amplified horns, 2 tenor trombones, and amplified violoncello. Title from image of compact disc cover on Web page (viewed Nov. 21, 2008) STX-Ensemble Xenakis USA ; Charles Zachary Bornstein, conductor. Recorded live at The Thread Waxing Space, New York, N.Y., June 21, 1995. Also available as compact disc; previously issued as Mode mode 53.

ST-X Ensemble/Charles Zachary Bornstein

Plektó

(1993) for ensemble.
(first recording)

Eonta

(1962-64) for piano solo,
2 trumpets & 3 trombones.  Justin Rubin, piano

Akanthos

(1977) for soprano
and ensemble.  Susan May, soprano

Rebonds

(1987-89) for percussion solo.  Robert McEwan, percussion

N’Shima

(1975) for 2 amplified peasant voices, 2 amplified horns, 2 trombones and amplified cello.

Catherine Aks & April Lindevold, voices

Xenakis’ oeuvre is unique in modern music–it is music of great visceral power, energy and sheer sound. Music fromanother world. Music that grabs the listener, riveting his attention.

Conductor Charles Zachary Bornstein is a Xenakis specialist. Bornstein learned that of the 700 to 800performances of Xenakis’ music worldwide each year, only a handful were in America. He formed New York’s ST-XEnsemble (named after Xenakis’ series of ST- compositions from the 1960s) in 1994 to fill the void.

Mode Records also fills a void with the first release in a new series with Bornstein and the ST-X Ensemble ofXenakis’ ensemble works.

This program includes ALL of Xenakis’ works for ensemble and voice–a varied recital spanning many periods ofXenakis’ compositional style. The revolutionary Eonta is like no music before or since: cascading notes like falling starstogether with waves of sound from the brass. Akanthos is full of primeval mystery. Rebons an incredible crowd-pleaser forvirtuoso solo percussion. N’Shima a ritual of chanting voices (singing Hebrew syllables) against a backdrop of roaringbrass and solo cello. Finally, the most recent work of Xenakis to be recorded, Plekto, also receives its first recording.

Recorded in concert, capturing the virtuosity of the ensemble and its conductor, this recording transmits thetremendous raw energy and excitement of Xenakis’s music performed live.

Language : Works including voice are textless (nonsense syllables) or sung in Hebrew.

Reviews

Iannis Xenakis
Ensemble Music 1

ST-X Ensemble / Charles Bornstein
Mode 53

Iannis Xenakis
Ensemble Music 2

ST-X Ensemble / Charles Bornstein
Mode 56

The model Xenakis utilised for the piece was that of light refracted through water, with the piano representing water and the brass portraying near blinding light, but this is no picture postcard representation. Splashy piano writing trickles everywhere with the power of 1000 simultaneous waterfalls. Underneath, muted brass enter imperceptibly until their reflection becomes a resonant reality; tidal waves of brass later overwhelm the piano as the two battle for supremacy. Another significant masterpiece is the Hebrew based N’Shima (1975) for two voices and instruments. The microtonal vocal writing is kept determinedly untamed for the niceties of the trained voice, and the clustery brass and amplified cello accompaniment equals their raw expressivity.

Then – rare in Xenakis – a joke, as a naked tonal fanfare in the ensemble appears without reason. Plektó (1993) is oddball again, featuring the pianist ricocheting clusters against a web of counterpoint from flute, clarinet, violin and cello. Xenakis usually locks counterpoint into his familiar sound masses, but here lines jut out provocatively. A mediating percussion part glues the whole raggedy enterprise together.
— Philip Clark, The Wire, July, 2006

Iannis Xenakis
Ensemble Music 1 & 2

Mode 53, 56

He Composes Differently, Therefore He Exists
At a time when so many composers have given up on radical innovation, the Greek composer Iannis Xenakis, who turns 75 this year, has become a heatening figure. His music, as represented in new recordings, is hardly less uncompromising than it was in the 1950’s, though it is certainly richer and more adept, probably because his successes while retaining an extraordinary imperviousness to his mistakes.

In more than four decades of working with orchestras he has developed a keen imagination for sound, generated by new playing techniques or, more usually these days, by assembling chords that works as single colors. But harmony and voice-leading still mean very little to him, insistent pulsation and scatter shots remain his most characteristic kinds of rhythm, and his musical forms are chains of events: chains sustained by the excitement of each moment and the timing of each jump.

The expressive result is aggressive, or not so much aggressive as defiant. Mr. Xenakis’s music is not trying to hurt but rather to protect itself: to stake out its territory and fence off any possibility that it might beheard in traditional ways. Only by being emphatically different, according to Mr. Xenakis, can his music answer the call he makes on it, which is to demonstrate that he exists.

“Composition, action are nothing but a struggle for existence,” he tells Balint Andras Varga in Mr. Varga’s recently published “Conversations with Iannis Xenakis.” “If I imitate the past, I do nothing, and consequently I am not. I am sure that I exist only if I do something different.”

By no means is this just some sort of exhibitionism. Exhibitionism need an audience; Mr. Xenakis, one senses from this book, is alone with himself, and his triumphs, in terms of public acclaim and colleagues’ imitation, are an embarrassment. For to achieve complete victory in his “struggle for existence” he would have to create something so different that to anybody else it would be totally meaningless.

Even he has not gone that far, though he has regularly traveled a long way into the desert of incoherence, often by calculating his music so as to maximize disorder. This is the main thrust of his mathematical techniques:  his spinning numbers, like John Cage’s coin tossings, insure that notes are chosen and ordered by blind chance, or according to processes of change that have little to do with conventional musical perception.

What meaning remains will usually be crude, and it is striking that in his conversations with Mr. Varga, Mr. Xenakis so often equates beauty with savagery: in his fascination with weapons and armor, for instance, with the sea or with the bulls of the Camargue. In his music virtually the whole elaborate machinery of Western composition is set aside, and we are left with a brute vocabulary of other modernists – Stravinsky, Varèse, Harrison Birtwistle – avoidance of the immediate past leads to imagined contact with the archaic.

In the conversation book Mr. Xenakis recalls how, as a boy in Greece, he “went to the museum and tried to imagine how the statues would move if they suddenly came to life.”

“With what gestures?” he wondered. “How would they speak? What would the music of their language be like?” These are the questions his compositions have been answering.

Their answers, being removed from ordinary ways of doing things musically, requires particular efforts of virtuosity and imagination from performers if the music’s strength – its intense particularity – is not to seem mere incapacity. Happily there are musicians up to this challenge, and none more so than Charles Zachary Bornstein and his ST-X Ensemble, who gave us “Kraanerg” at Cooper Union in Greenwich Village in the fall and have now released two selections of smaller pieces on Mode CD’s. Each includes a 60’s classic – “Eonta” for piano and brass in one case, “Akrata” for symphonic winds in the other – along with more recent works.

Both recording convince by their own conviction; all the performances are hot. But the disc including “Eonta” (Mode 53) is a clear frontrunner.

It offeres the stark, urgent ritual “N’shima,” for two amplifies “peasant voices” with trombones, horns and cello; the percussion solo “Rebounds,” brilliantly played by Robert McEwan, and the best of all, “Akanthos,” a 10-minute drama of sibylline utterance in a context of clouds, braying and scrubbings of sound, all contrived, astonishingly, by an ensemble close to that of Ravel’s supersophisticated Mallarmé settings. The soprano Susan May is superb in producing the imprecations, formalized laughter, stunning octave leaps and final scanning of the horizon before wild yelps.

The other record (Mode 56), though, has the immense and strange attractions of “Échange,” a concerto for bass clarinet and ensemble, whose behemothian sounds glisten with harmonics.

It is remarkable how, in discussing some of these and other violently poetic works with Mr. Varga, Mr. Xenakis is unwilling to describe them as anything more than interesting sequences of interesting sounds. If the music is to assert his existence, perhaps it can do so only by being itself, and not by being about its composer, who must stand aside and let it happen.

“Eonta,” he recalls, came into his mind while he was at Tanglewood in Lenox, Mass., sitting in a boat with a pretty young woman. “We were surrounded by a forest, and I stroked the water with my hand,” he says. In the eventual eruptive work, though, listeners are left, as Mr. Bornstein’s note puts is, with “radiated light and cascading water”: a bucolic interlude has become fierce physics.
— Paul Griffiths, The New York Times, Sunday, January 26, 1997


Links

Iannis Xenakis on Mode:
Iannis Xenakis Profile/Discography

Atelier UPIC web site