Morton Feldman: For Frank O'Hara; Bass Clarinet & Percussion; De Kooning

On this CD:

1. For Frank O'Hara, for flute, clarinet, percussion, piano, violin & cello
Composed by Morton Feldman
Performed by New Millennium Ensemble
Conducted by Bradley Lubman

2. Bass Clarinet and Percussion, for bass clarinet, cymbals & gong
Composed by Morton Feldman
Performed by New Millennium Ensemble

3. De Kooning, for horn, piccolo, piano, violin & cello
Composed by Morton Feldman
Performed by Daniel Grabois, New Millennium Ensemble

4. Instruments 1, for alto flute, oboe, trombone, celesta & percussion
Composed by Morton Feldman
Performed by Benjamin Herrington, New Millennium Ensemble
Conducted by Bradley Lubman

Morton Feldman: For Frank O'Hara; Bass Clarinet & Percussion; De Kooning, Music, Morton Feldman, Bradley Lubman, New Millennium Ensemble, Daniel Grabois, Thomas Kolor, Benjamin Herrington, Chamber, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Mixed Chamber Ensemble with Keyboard, Quintet for Mixed Instruments without Keyboard, Trio for Mixed Instruments without Keyboard
Feldman: For Frank O'Hara; I Met Heine on the Rue Fürstenberg
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A classic Feldman recording reissued
  • Short Feldman - What a Concept!
Feldman: For Frank O'Hara; I Met Heine on the Rue Fürstenberg

Manufacturer: Disques Montaigne
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

All Works by FeldmanAll Works by Feldman | Feldman, Morton | ( F ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
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ASIN: B00004WKJA
Release Date: 2000-10-10

Tracks:

  1. Routine Investigations
  2. The Viola In My Life II
  3. For Frank O' Hara
  4. The Viola In My Life I
  5. I Met Heine On The Rue Furstenberg

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A classic Feldman recording reissued.......2004-01-25

This disc was the first in the ensemble recherche's series of recordings for the Montaigne label and focused on the 1970s music of Morton Feldman. The five pieces here document Feldman's return to conventionally notated music and the development of his slow, quiet, abstract yet melodic style over the subsequent years.

The four pieces that make up The Viola in My Life date from 1970 and 1971, and on this disc we hear the first two (the third is for viola and piano, the fourth is a viola concerto). The first is for viola, flute, percussion, piano, violin and cello and is made from fragmentary melodies and Webernian harmonies, though in the closing stages two repeated figures (a falling minor third in the flute and a rising pizzicato figure in the cello) become more important. If the first of the pieces in this series is still marked by the austerity of Feldman's late 1960s works, the second--which adds clarinet and celesta to the instrumentation of the first--is very different in its emphasis on a singing melodic line in the viola. The important figures from the end of the first piece return about half way through the work, dominating the second half, though the viola's melodies never cease.

I met Heine on the Rue Fürstenburg was written in 1971, and stylistically lies somewhere in between the first two Viola in My Life pieces. Scored for wordless mezzo-soprano, flute doubling piccolo, clarinet doubling bass clarinet, percussion, piano, violin and cello, this parallels the Viola pieces in the manner in which the lead melodic role is taken by the singer, though the melodic line is more abstract than in the second Viola piece. The music also has a more pensive atmosphere, one that is accentuated in the extraordinary 1973 work For Frank O'Hara, a memorial to the late poet for flute doubling piccolo and alto flute, clarinet, two percussionists, piano, violin and cello. Here, there is a constant undercurrent of tension generated by the ominous drum rolls in the background. The musical progress is extremely slow, with only fragmentary melodies and harmonies, and when a single fff breaks in on the snare drum, the effect is astonishing.

Routine Investigations, written in 1976 for oboe, trumpet, piano, viola, cello and double bass, shows Feldman beginning to move away from his 1970s style towards the Turkish rug-inspired pattern pieces of his last ten years. The rhythms are more regular than in the earlier pieces (though they are still more complex than they appear to be), the instrumental sound harsher. The closing bars are particularly striking, taking a brief melody that was common to many of Feldman's 1970s pieces and tossing it from one instrument to another.

This was my first Feldman disc, and it was the perfect introduction to the composer; none of these pieces have the extreme length of later Feldman, and the musical processes and textures have a transparency--perhaps an inheritance from Webern--that remains very appealing. As one would expect from the ensemble recherche, the performances are quite outstanding. Recommended with enthusiasm.

5 out of 5 stars Short Feldman - What a Concept!.......2002-11-22

Feldman has become famous chiefly for the works written in the last ten years of his life. This style, characterized by subtly repeating patterns and heroic length (a late Feldman piece that lasts 30 minutes is considered a miniature!). Or Feldman is associated with the Cage movement of the 50's and his openly aleatoric graphic scores. But the music he wrote in the 60s and 70s, with a few exceptions, is largely unknown. This disc is a remedy to this. And a lovely one at that.

All of the works on this disc date from the 70s, a period that is particularly underrepresented on disc. The earliest pieces, The Viola in My Life 1 and 2, date from 1970 and the latest, Routine Investigations dates from 1976. As is always the case with Feldman, the ensembles are imaginative and varied, constisting of combinations of winds, strings, soft percussion, piano and mallet instruments. (Feldman used to say that once he had chosen the instrumentation for his pieces, the work was basically done!) Feldman's style on these pieces is minimal in the most basic sense of the word. The traditional elements of music are eliminated or at least re-examined. There is very little melody to speak of. It is so minimal that, in the Viola In My Life 1, there is a two note "cuckoo" style pattern that takes on tremendous melodic force, just because the two notes are associated. Rhythm is precisely notated, but the effect is of a free floating tempoless meter. Harmony consists of soft tense dissonances, which function less like harmony and more like tone color. Form is flexible and almost undisernable in this context. Tone color takes on extreme importance. Feldman once said that he considered himself mostly an orchestrator. Listening to the gorgeous sounds on this CD, one is inclined to agree with him.

Each track displays something unique and interesting in Feldman's output. Routine Investigations is particularly interesting in that the later part of the piece is dominated by an almost "minimalist" ostinato, though without the motoric pulse associated with Glass or Reich. The piece is also more full of a sense of existential dread than most Feldman music. Both Viola In My Life tracks are essential Feldman. This was a beautiful series of works based on an instrument that Feldman felt a special bond with. For Frank O'Hara is the longest piece on the disc and is probably the most minimal and Webern-like of the tracks. And the Heine piece is also quite lovely.

Performances and recorded sound are exemplary on this Montaigne release as is usual for this company. And it is priced to sell. This is a wonderful addition to the Feldman discography and highly recommended to beginners and Feldman cognicetti alike.
Morton Feldman: For Frank O'Hara; Bass Clarinet & Percussion; De Kooning
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Nothing earth shattering here...
Morton Feldman: For Frank O'Hara; Bass Clarinet & Percussion; De Kooning

Manufacturer: Koch Int'l Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

QuintetsQuintets | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
TriosTrios | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
All Works by FeldmanAll Works by Feldman | Feldman, Morton | ( F ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
Chamber MusicChamber Music | Forms & Genres | Classical (c.1770-1830) | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Feldman: Crippled Symmetry
  2. Morton Feldman: Complete Violin|Viola and Piano Works / Christina Fong, Paul Hersey
  3. Morton Feldman: Rothko Chapel; Why Patterns?
  4. Morton Feldman: Composing by Numbers - The Graphic Scores, 1950-67
  5. Morton Feldman: Piano and Orchestra; Palais de Mari; Piano

ASIN: B00003XB80
Release Date: 2000-02-22

Tracks:

  1. For Frank O'Hara

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Nothing earth shattering here..........2000-03-16

It's a shame that this disc has nothing at all to sneeze about. All of these items have been released before, three out of the four more than once (Bass Clarinet and Percussion and Instruments 1 already appear on the Etcetera disc "The Ecstasy of the Moment"; DeKooning and For Frank O'Hara appear on the Wergo chamber music disc). There is a wealth of Feldman pieces that are still awaiting the light of CD day (such as Numbers, Between Categories, First Principles, and so on), so when I saw that this was coming I was very disappointed of the selections. This is not the first release of Feldman by this ensemble (see the disc "Here Comes Everybody"), and they do import other players for most of the pieces. The performances of tracks 1,3 & 4 are not bad really, but as I said, they have all been released before. The biggest disappointment of this disc, though, is Bass Clarinet and Percussion. The flaw of this performance (and it is consistent throughout) is that all of the bass clarinet portions that are notated in treble clef in the score are played an octave lower. With prior knowledge of this piece in two other recordings, it is now pretty well established (as far as things go) how this is played so there is no excuse!

Music Track:

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  9. Mozart: Symphonies 38, 39, 41
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