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Morton Feldman Essays

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The remaining copies of the edition show slight traces of yellowing at the edges. This does not affect the reading.
 

 

Contents/Inhalt

 

Prolog

  • About/Über Jiddishkeit

Drei Essays about/über Morton Feldman

  • Morton Feldman – der Ikonoklast (Walter Zimmermann)

  • About the early work/Über das Frühwerk (Frank O’Hara)

  • Stringquartet“ – Über das Spätwerk (Heinz-Klaus Metzger)

Collected Essays by/Gesammelte Essays von Morton Feldman

  • Autobiography/Autobiographie

  • Geschichtslektion des Herrn Schuller

  • Ein Leben ohne Bach und Beethoven

  • Die Avantgarde: Fortschritt oder Stillstand

  • Vertikale Gedanken (Vertical Thoughts)

  • Predeterminate – Indeterminate/Vorbestimmt – Unbestimmt

  • Boola Boola

  • In Memoriam: Edgard Varèse

  • Strawinsky

  • Conversations without Stravinsky/Gespräche ohne Strawinsky

  • Some Elementary Questions/Einige elementare Fragen

  • Give My Regards to Eighth Street/Grüß’ mir die ,,Eighth Street“

  • Neither – Nor/Weder – Noch

  • Zwischen den Kategorien (Between Categories)

  • The Anxiety of Art/Die Angst vor der Kunst

  • After Modernism/Nach der Moderne

  • Lost Times and Future Hopes
    Verlorene Zeiten und zukünftige Hoffnungen

  • A Compositional Problem/Ein kompositorisches Problem

  • Essay

  • More Light/Mehr Licht

  • Der letzte Künstler

  • Crippled Symmetry/Verkrüppelte Symmetrie

  • Statements

Lectures/Vorträge 1984

  • XXX Anecdotes & Drawings/XXX Anekdoten & Zeichnungen

  • Darmstadt Lecture/Darmstadt-Vortrag

Anhang

  • List of Compositions/Werkliste

  • Bibliographie (Paul van Emmerik)

Epilog

  • Conversation between/Gespräch zwischen
    Morton Feldman & Walter Zimmermann

Browse these categories as well: Books, Morton_Feldman, Walter Zimmermann

Walter Zimmermann: Desert Plants

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"Desert Plants" was a cult book in the seventies because it brought the first information about the US-American composer-performer scene to Europe. Numerous examples of sheet music and entire scores enrich this insight into a time of experimentation that needs to be brought back into consciousness.

The book, which has been reprinted unchanged, is dedicated to Carol Byl, who at the time transcribed the tapes largely literally in order to maintain the "stream of consciousness". The cover picture was drawn by Michael von Biel.

The edition is accompanied by a CD which makes the surviving sound documents available in restored form as mp3 files, including the famous telephone conversation with La Monte Young. Thus the original voices from 1975 can be heard – a contemporary document.

Walter Zimmermann's interview partners are Morton Feldman, Christian Wolff, John Cage, Philip Corner, Jim Burton, Phil Glass, Steve Reich, Robert Ashley, Alvin Lucier, Joan La Barbara, Pauline Oliveros, David Rosenboom, Richard Teitelbaum, Larry Austin, James Tenney, J. B. Floyd (about Conlon Nancarrow), La Monte Young, Charlemagne Palestine, Charles Morrow, Garrett List, John Mc Guire and Ben Johnston (about Harry Partch).

 

23 Sentences from DESERT PLANTS

MORTON FELDMAN: Something that is beautiful is made in isolation.

CHRISTIAN WOLFF: I try wherever possible to discourage competitive sort of careerism.

JOHN CAGE: So that it takes an old fogey like myself to suggest again as Thoreau did all of his life, revolution.

PHILIP CORNER: A lot of people hang up to restrictions which are not only in the external institutions. They are in your own mind.

PHIL GLASS: The quintessence of harmonic music is in cadence for me.

STEVE REICH: You must love music or be a duck.

ROBERT ASHLEY: If you record a conversation with fifty people in the United States about their ideas, and if you get into each conversation really deeply, that when you get to the end, you will have one of me, one of Steve Reich, but you will have fifty of yourself.

ALVIN LUCIER: But when you stutter, you scan the language. You are scanning your past.

JOAN LA BARBARA: You know, instead of trying to direct the voice, I try to let the voice direct me.

PAULINE OLIVEROS: I’m aware of my own physiology. And then I’m hearing it as a whole, and I’m aware of the various rates that are going on, the kinds of breaks in concentration that occur and how they are corrected.

DAVID ROSENBOOM: What I’m looking at really is the existence of regularly pulsing energy.

RICHARD TEITELBAUM: I played the same synthesizer for ten years. Me and it are very close to each other.

LARRY AUSTIN: Ives’ main thing, I feel, was the concept of layering and getting us out of the idea that the sounds always had to come from the same place; that is, right in front of you.

JAMES TENNEY: I realized in writing these pieces that this was one way to avoid drama, which I’m still trying to find ways to avoid.

J. B. FLOYD about NANCARROW: Somebody actually brought up what was going to happen to the piano roles after he died; and he said, “Why? Do you want one?”

LA MONTE YOUNG: You can always say that you wanted La Monte Young, but it was impossible. He was so mercenary, he wanted money.

CHARLEMAGNE PALESTINE: I’m searching for sort of this golden sonority.

CHARLES MORROW: The high art itself is a form of power consciousness, that in a way one listens to the high art in the same way that one walks around being a flirt.

GARRETT LIST: The only way for a one-world kind of feeling is where each nationality, each locality, has its own strength; so that people don’t need to have to take from another place.

FREDERIC RZEWSKI: It’s still true that most Americans care more about the price of meat than they do about the exploitation of Bolivian miners.

JOHN MC GUIRE: But sooner or later I am sure that I will return to America.

BEN JOHNSTON about HARRY PARTCH: He was really willing to be as direct and as simple and as corny as you like, as people are when they aren’t trying to be concert artists.

 

Browse these categories as well: Books, Morton_Feldman, Alvin Lucier, Christian Wolff, James Tenney, John Cage, Pauline Oliveros, Philip Corner, Robert Ashley, Walter Zimmermann, Frederic Rzewski

Walter Zimmermann: Schatten der Ideen

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  • Schatten der Ideen (1993) for piano quartet
  • Ursache und Vorwitz (1993-94) for horn, violin, cello, piano, percussion and tape
  • Distentio (1992)  for string trio (from "About Time 2")
  • Shadows of Cold Mountain 3 (1997) for flute, oboe and clarinet
     

The influence of two American composers – John Cage and Morton Feldman – has been decisive on Walter Zimmermann. With Cage, it was his music from the late forties – works like the String Quartet, the Suite for Toy Piano and the Six Melodies - that caught his attention: works underpinned by precise numerical construction, yet with an engaging directness of expression. Feldman has been an inspiration to Zimmermann's lyrical impetus, and Cage to his constructivist urges. Yet the two do not always co-exist comfortably, and it is partly the constant conflict and confrontation of the two which ensures that, far from being a ‘displaced American’, he is a quintessentially mid-European creator. The result is a totally individual sound; ‘detached’ in tone, yet often strangely touching. Its sparse, yet highly precise notation actually makes great demands on the performer, and the resulting ‘introverted virtuosity’, as Zimmermann calls it, remains a hallmark of his music.

Further to Zimmermann’s highly regarded reputation in Europe, John Cage recognized his unique voice and commissioned Zimmermann to compose scores to a number of dances for the Merce Cunningham Dance Company.

Distentio is musically based on the philosopher Aurleius Augustinus’ thoughts and meditations about time. Each movement corresponds to a version of these thoughts – the glissando movement (the past), the pizzicato (the present), and the harmonics (as the most unreal sounds, with the future).

Schatten der Ideen is a study in unison, where the piano functions as a shadow of the strings or vice a versa. Ursache und Vorwitz, is a study in curiosity and is based on a renaissance engraving of a man who, driven by curiosity, puts his head through the earth's crust to catch a glimpse of the cosmos behind it. The work concludes with an endless “cosmic” glissando.

Shadow of Cold Mountain 3 translates the gestural – calligraphic images of artist Brice Marden into sound – a world of color and sound reflected in a series of interference and difference tones.

The four works on this disc are performed by one of Germany’s leading chamber groups, Ensemble Recherche. Founded in 1984, they are dedicated to contemporary music. Each member of the ensemble performs as a soloist and chamber musician, forming various ensembles within the group including both string trio and woodwind (flute, oboe and clarinet).

Liner notes are by Richard Toop and the composer.

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Walter Zimmermann: The Echoing Green. Chamber Works 1986-89

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  • Wüstenwanderung (1986) for piano
  • Geduld und Gelegenheit (1987–1989) for cello and piano
  • Lied im Wüstenvogelton (1987) for bass-flute and piano
  • The Echoing Green (1989) for violin and piano


Like Morton Feldman, whose music he acknowledges as an influence, Zimmermann (born 1949) is fascinated by the relationship between painting and music, and how material of an apparently simple nature played by apparently "normal" instruments is capable of almost infinite subtlety.

Frankfurt’s HCD Ensemble are also members of Germany’s infamous Ensemble Modern. They are joined here by the superb violinist Peter Rundel and cellist Michael Bach.

Wüstenwanderung [Wandering in the desert] is almost unplayable because the superimposed layers – which have their own tempi and encompass the entire pitch range of the piano, producing a constant crossing of lines.

Geduld und Gelegenheit [Patience and opportunity]. The cycle deals with a Renaissance hieroglyph, the reading of which leads to the conceptual range of opportunity, time, virtue, happiness, patience.

Lied im Wüstenvogelton [Song in the Tone of a Desert Bird]. The bass flute sounds out the tones of a children’s song in infinite slowness. The pianist whistles the original in brief fragments. Otherwise the song only emerges in transformations, which eventually make room for a new song.

The Echoing Green. The children’s song “Ich bin das ganze Jahr vergnügt” [I am happy all year long] serves as a basis for a process of transformation and dissolution, whereby it never emerges in its original form anywhere in the piece.

Browse this category: Walter Zimmermann

Walter Zimmermann: Synastria

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  • Kore (2010) für Flöte, Harfe, Schlagzeug, Klarinette, Klavier
  • Ataraxia (1988) für Klavier und Orchester
  • Klangfaden (1983) für Bassklarinette, Harfe, Glockenspiel mit Klingstein
  • Saitenspiel (1983) für 18 Instrumente


Philosophical writings from antiquity have frequently underlaid Zimmermann’s work of recent years, particularly in relation to notions of time an ‘harmonia’ [...] Another recurrent theme in later works is that of the ‘broken unison’ (both melodic and rhythmic), which clearly has an allegorical/social dimension as well as a musical one [...] The isolated performance of single of his pieces emphasises their ‘otherness’ in relation to the main trends in new German music, whereas the hearing of several pieces together reveals a remarkably rich and coherent personal work. (Richard Toop)
Frankfurt’s HCD Ensemble are also members of Germany’s infamous Ensemble Modern. They are joined here by the superb violinist Peter Rundel and cellist Michael Bach.

Wüstenwanderung [Wandering in the desert] is almost unplayable because the superimposed layers – which have their own tempi and encompass the entire pitch range of the piano, producing a constant crossing of lines.

Geduld und Gelegenheit [Patience and opportunity]. The cycle deals with a Renaissance hieroglyph, the reading of which leads to the conceptual range of opportunity, time, virtue, happiness, patience.

Lied im Wüstenvogelton [Song in the Tone of a Desert Bird]. The bass flute sounds out the tones of a children’s song in infinite slowness. The pianist whistles the original in brief fragments. Otherwise the song only emerges in transformations, which eventually make room for a new song.

The Echoing Green. The children’s song “Ich bin das ganze Jahr vergnügt” [I am happy all year long] serves as a basis for a process of transformation and dissolution, whereby it never emerges in its original form anywhere in the piece.

Browse this category: Walter Zimmermann

Walter Zimmermann: Voces abandonadas

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  • Voces abandonadas (2001–2006)

 

Walter Zimmermanns Musik ist oft introvertiert, bisweilen grüblerisch stockend, aber auch hintergründig intim. Durchströmender Atem, große Gesten oder emphatische Formen sind ihr fremd. Zimmermann fand seinen Ort abseits der Strömungen der Avantgarde von Darmstadt und Köln; den neoexpressionistischen Tendenzen, die in den 1970er Jahren einsetzten, stand er distanziert gegenüber. Er erstrebte Simplizität, orientierte sich am Individualismus US-amerikanischer Komponisten, auch an der Diatonik des frühen Cage. Seine Werke sind individuell, zugleich eigen und  unverwechselbar.

Ungewöhnliche Quellen motivieren ihn zum Komponieren. Anregungen bezieht er aus der antiken Mythologie, aus Sinnbildern der Renaissance, aus Philosophie, Literatur und bildender Kunst.

Auf der vorliegenden CD spielt Nicolas Hodges Klavierwerke aus den Jahren 2001 bis 2006. Klaviermusik erlaubt die Reihung struktureller Einheiten; sie ist für Zimmermann eine Art Laboratorium seines  kompositorischen Handelns. „Voces abandonadas“ basiert auf zwei  Sammlungen von Aphorismen des argentinischen Lyrikers Antonio Porchia.

Die 514 Sentenzen oder Aphorismen der „Voces abandonadas“ hat Zimmermann in Klangembleme übertragen: „Das ganze Buch mit seinen zwei Serien wird in 514 Klavier-Sentenzen übersetzt, die meistens nur einen Takt, oft nur einen Bruchteil eines Taktes oder nur eine Fermate lang dauern und bruchlos ineinander übergehen. Im Kompositionsprozess wurden die Sentenzen in der gleichen Reihenfolge, wie sie in der Vorlage stehen, reflektiert.“ (Zimmermann)

Philosophische Schriften lagen in den letzten Jahren häufig den Werken Zimmermanns zugrunde, besonders im Verhältnis zu Begriffen von Zeit und "Harmonie". Ein weiteres wiederkehrendes Thema in späteren Werken ist das des " gebrochenen Einklangs" (sowohl melodisch als auch rhythmisch), was sicher eine allegorische/soziale Dimension als auch eine musikalische hat. [...] Die isolierte Aufführung einzelner seiner Stücke betonen ihr Anders-Sein im Verhältnis zu Haupttrends in der Neuen Musik Deutschlands, wohingegen sich ein bemerkenswert reiches und persönliches Werk enthüllt, wenn man verschiedene Stücke zusammen hört. (Richard Toop)

Browse this category: Walter Zimmermann

Walter Zimmermann: Voces

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CD1

  • Dialogue des deux Roses  (2005) for 2 sopranos, mezzosoprano, countertenor, 2 baritones and violoncello
  • Himmeln (2007) for soprano solo
  • Echoes  (2000) for mezzosoprano, bass flute, basset horn, violin, viola, violoncello
  • The Edge  (1994) for mezzosporano, clarinet, violoncello, piano, playback
  • Numbers  (2000) for mezzosporano, alto flute, Oboe d’Amore, basset horn, violin, viola, violoncello, Hackbrett
  • Paradoxes of Love  (1987) for soprano and soprano saxophone

CD2

  • Aus der Bibliothek des Meeres  (2006) for soprano and soprano saxophone
  • vertont  (2007) for soprano and soprano saxophone  4:00
  • Sheva Tehoval, soprano; Magda Łapaj, soprano saxophone
  • … vergebens sind die Töne … [I, II]  (2015–2016) for baritone and piano
  • Stern [I]
  • Schatten [I]
  • verbannt [I]
  • überAll  [I]
  • Wespe  [II]
  • Wabe [II]
  • Klang [II]
  • Segel [II]
  • Emaille [II]
  • Dialogue des deux Roses (2005, new version 2011)  for 2 sopranos, mezzosoprano, countertenor, 2 baritones, Baroque flute, Baroque violin, 2 Viola da Gamba
  • Das irakische Alphabet [original version] (2005)
  • Self-Forgetting / Selbstvergessen (1982/92)

CD3

Freunde. Schalkhäusser-Lieder (1979–84)

  • Muckn-Blues – Mosquito Blues
  • Carol’s Dream
  • Ami-Schicks
  • Geburtstagsgrüße – Birthday Greetings
  • Die Gitarre blieb liegen – The guitar was left there
  • Drums weg
  • Der Aztekenstein – The Aztec Stone
  • Miss TL
  • Über das einzelne Weggehen – Going Alone
  • Forty Chords for Jon
  • Krikel Krakel – Scribble-Scrabble
  • Sang
  • Quasi Swazi
  • Thumbstraße 68
  • Kein Tanzbär mehr sein – No longer a Dancing Bear
  • Zwischen den Stühlen – Between the Chairs
  • Ich moch di fei immer nu – I Still Like You
  • Kehraus-Galopp – Last Dance Galopp

Walter Zimmermann, voice & piano; Gabriele Emde, harp & electronics; Gerd Leibeling, electric guitar & concertina; Guido Conen, drums & glockenspiel

 

Voces is a collection of rare recordings documenting many of Walter Zimmermann’s compositions for voices from 1979–2016. The words set to music range from Meister Eckhart and Hadewijch to Michail Lermontov, Ossip Mandelstam, Edmond Jabès, Tomas Tranströmer, Felix Philipp Ingold and Robert Creeley (with Creely’s voice accompanying the musicians).

Performers include: Claudia Barainsky, Tehila Nini Goldstein, Sheva Tehoval / Magda Łapaj, Peter Schöne / Jan Philip Schulze, Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart, KNM Ensemble, Walter Zimmermann and Band and the musicians of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company with David Tudor, Takehisha Kosugi, D’Arcy Gray, John D. S. Adams.

A rare recording from 1982 was recently discovered:  “Freunde/Friends” sung and played by  Zimmermann and his rock/pop/new music band during their U.S. Tour in Los Angeles, showing a very different musical side of Walter Zimmermann.

This deluxe 3-CD set comes with a 144-page book containing the complete song texts (with translations) and essays by Albert Breier and Christopher Fox. Lavishly illustrated with photos and art by Nanne Meyer. Packaged in a slipcase.

Browse this category: Walter Zimmermann

MusikTexte 1 – October 1983 (xerox) | MusikTexte

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Peter Garland

  • Peter Garland: Musician of the Americas (Walter Zimmermann)

  • „Nostalgia of the Southern Cross“ für Harfe oder Klavier (Peter Garland)

  • Werkverzeichnis

Kommentar

  • Haben Sie ein Thema? (Ernstalbrecht Stiebler)

Porträt

  • Der Komponist Volker Heyn (Rudolf Frisius)

    • Werkverzeichnis

Analyse

  • die liedkompositionen von theodor w. adorno (mathias spahlinger)

  • „Kreuz der Straße“ (1921) für eine Singstimme und Klavier (Theodor W. Adorno)

  • Die szenische Kantate „Jowaegerli“ von Dieter Schnebel (Ulrich Dibelius)

  • Ein Hörrelief zu den „Glassworks“ von Philip Glass (Marcus Spies)

Gespräch

  • Klaus Huber über „Erniedrigt, geknechtet, verlassen, verachtet“ (Reinhard Oehlschlägel)

  • Rolf Riehm über „Machandelboom“ (Wolfgang Hamm)

  • Karlheinz Stockhausen zum „Donnerstag“ aus „Licht“ (Robert HP Platz)

Werk

  • „2 6 9“ (1983) für Chor und Schlagzeug (Reiner Bredemeyer)

  • „Muoyce“ (1978/82) für einen Sprecher und Tonbandkassetten (John Cage)

  • „pornophonie“ (1983) für Klavier (gerhard rühm)

Essay

  • Anton Webern heute (Reinhard Oehlschlägel)

Dokument

  • Webern und Mahler (René Leibowitz)

Bericht

  • Warschauer Herbst 1983 (Ulrich Dibelius)

  • Zehn Jahre Ferienkurs für zeitgenössische Musik in Gera (Hanns-Werner Heister)

  • Achter Cantiere Internazionale d’Arte in Montepulciano (Georg-Friedrich Kühn)

  • Internationale Sommerakademie für zeitgenössische Musik in Viitasaari (Gisela Gronemeyer)

Buch

  • Die Schriften von Hanns Eisler im Deutschen Verlag für Musik (Frieder Reininghaus)

  • Die IGNM-Studie von Anton Haefeli bei Atlantis (Max Nyffeler)

Platte

  • Wie ein Soundtrack eines Kubrick-Films (Monika Lichtenfeld)

    • Philip Glass: The Photographer

    • Meredith Monk: Turtle Dreams

    • Lubomyr Melnik: The Lund – St. Petri Symphony

    • Michael Galasso: Scenes

    • Glenn Branca: Symphony No. 3 („Gloria“)

Browse these categories as well: Journal, John Cage, Mathias Spahlinger, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Klaus Huber, Dieter Schnebel, Walter Zimmermann

MusikTexte 3 – Februar 1984

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Josef Anton Riedl

  • Versuch über Josef Anton Riedl (Hans Rudolf Zeller)

  • Zu einigen Arbeiten von Riedl (Nicolaus A. Huber)

  • Josef Anton Riedl im Gespräch (Reinhard Oehlschlägel)

  • „Claves II“ (1951) für Schlagzeug solo (Josef Anton Riedl)

  • Werkverzeichnis

Howard Skempton

  • Zu Kompositionen von Howard Skempton (Walter Zimmermann)

  • „Waltz“ (1984) für Klavier (Howard Skempton)

  • „Pendulum“ (1978) für Akkordeon (Howard Skempton)

  • „Beginner“ (1983) für Klavier (Howard Skempton)

  • Werkverzeichnis

Kommentar

  • Aufbruch zurück zur Oper (Ulrich Dibelius)

Improvisation

  • Die Poetik der Improvisation. „Second Structure“ – Version 1983 (Frederic Rzewski)

Analyse

  • Anmerkungen zu Helmut Lachenmanns „Harmonica“ (Ludolf Baucke)

Werk

  • „Lazarus I/II“ (1978) für Violoncello und Klavier (Klaus Huber)

  • Ausschnitt aus „The Desert Music“ (1984) für Chor und Orchester (Steve Reich)

Extempore

  • Neue Musik: ein urbanes Phänomen? (Henri Pousseur)

Film

  • Zur Enstehung des Films „Koyaanisqatsi“ von Godfrey Reggio und Philip Glass (Walter Bachauer)

Nachruf

  • Fritz Geißler

Bericht

  • Weltmusiktage in Aarhus (Reinhard Oehlschlägel)

  • Musiknytår 1984 in Kopenhagen (Jens Brincker)

Browse these categories as well: Journal, Klaus Huber, Helmut Lachenmann, Nicolaus A. Huber, Walter Zimmermann, Frederic Rzewski

MusikTexte 4 – April 1984 (xerox)

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Christian Wolff

  • Christian Wolff im Gespräch (martin daske)

  • Über politische Texte und neue Musik (Christian Wolff)

  • „For Cornelius. Eisler Ensemble Piece No. 1“ (Christian Wolff)

  • Werkverzeichnis

Kommentar

  • Bemerkungen zur gegenwärtigen Situation der neuen Musik
    in Westdeutschland (Dieter Schnebel)

Phantasie

  • Musikalische Fiktion (Vinko Globokar)

Analyse

  • „Crippled Symmetry“ von Morton Feldman (Gisela Gronemeyer)

Porträt

  • Zu Leben und Werk von Dane Rudhyar (Peter Michael Hamel)

  • Gedanken von und über den Komponisten Peter Michael Hamel (Tonius Timmermann)

  • Christfried Schmidt (Georg-Friedrich Kühn)

Werk

  • „Cello-Duo 1983“ (Johannes Fritsch)

  • „Beispiel“ (1983) Hörspiel (Yuval Shaked)

    • Werkverzeichnis

  • „Minaturen III“ (1984) für Baryton solo (Peter Michael Hamel)

Dokument

  • „Prélude“, opus 12,2 für Vierteltonklavier (Arthur Lourié) mit Anmerkungen (Juan Allende-Blin)

Essay

  • Zum musikalischen Futurismus in Russland (Detlef Gojowy)

Person

  • Für Ernstalbrecht Stiebler zum Fünfzigsten (Walter Zimmermann)

Bericht

  • „Echnaton“ von Philip Glass in Stuttgart (Reinhard Oehlschlägel)

  • Neunte Internationale Studienwoche für Vokal- und Orgelmusik in Sinzig (Ernst-Helmuth Flammer)

  • DDR-Musiktage 1984 in Ostberlin (Reinhard Oehlschlägel)

Buch

  • Nam June Paik. Fluxus Video von Wulf Herzogenrath bei Silke Schreiber (Reinhard Oehlschlägel)

Platte

  • „Opus clavicembalisticum“ von Kaikhosru Shapirji Sorabji bei Keytone Records (Hartmut Lück)

  • „Vexations“ von Erik Satie mit Reinbert de Leeuw bei Philips (Gisela Gronemeyer)

  • Klaviermusik von Josef Matthias Hauer bei Amadeo und 1750 Arch Records, Oakland

  • Schallplattenedition des INA/GRM, Paris (Rudolf Frisius)

Browse these categories as well: Journal, Christian Wolff, Dieter Schnebel, Walter Zimmermann
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