Keith Jarrett, Gidon Kremer, Staatsorchester Stuttgart, Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra - Arvo Part: Tabula Rasa [Vinyl 1LP]
Polityka prywatności
Zasady dostawy
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Współczesna Muzyka Klasyczna
premiera polska: 2024-09-13
opakowanie: Gatefoldowe etui
opis:
Opis wydawcy
W 1984 roku ECM wprowadziło nowe brzmienie do muzycznego świata wydając dzieło Tabula Rasa Arvo Pärta, pierwszy album wydany jako zapoczątkowanie serii New Series. Teraz, z okazji 40. rocznicy powstania cyklu New Series, reedycja winylowa z załączoną książeczką przedstawia płytę w jej oryginalnej postaci. Album jest udokumentowaniem spotkania wybitnych i czołowych artystów w historii wytwórni ECM Records: Arvo Pärta, Gidona Kremera i Keitha Jarretta.
In celebration of Arvo Pärt's 75th birthday (on 11 September), ECM New Series and the composer's publisher Universal Edition have joined forces to present a special deluxe limited edition version of Tabula rasa. This recording launched the New Series in 1984, and the interpretations of Pärt's unique compositions by a cast including Gidon Kremer, Keith Jarrett, Dennis Russell Davies and Alfred Schnittke changed the landscape of contemporary music.
This epochal recording is being reissued together with a 200-page book that includes previously unpublished facsimile manuscripts in Pärt's hand, as well as study scores of 'Tabula rasa', 'Cantus in memory of Benjamin Britten', and 'Fratres' in versions for violin/piano and 12 cellos - all the pieces that comprised the now-legendary Tabula rasa album. Additionally the book includes Wolfgang Sandner's original liner notes, a new introductory essay by Paul Griffiths, photos, discography and work list.
This highly attractive edition will be of intense interest to newcomers to Arvo Pärt as well as to those who loved this music the first time around. Moreover it will provide illumination for musicians and music students. It closely follows the release on ECM New Series of the world premiere recording of Pärt's Symphony No 4 (4763957).
good-music-guide.com
When you listen to the music of Arvo Pärt, you need to forget everything you thought you knew about music.
In the Western world, we know that music must have a beginning, a purpose and an end. It is built on melody, harmony, rhythm and timbre. Music is for entertainment, pleasure, and intellectual stimulation.
In the music of Arvo Pärt, these elements are not important. His music is very different to anything else ever written. He has defined a new style, an entirely new music.
Arvo Pärt was born in Estonia in 1935. He has composed music since the 1950's, music which in Soviet-controlled country was alternately praised or banned, but was completely unknown in the West until the 1980's.
His early works show the experimentation of youth - there is the influence of Shostakovich and Prokofiev, and the twelve-tone style of Schoenberg.
In 1977, he wrote a trio of works that were to define his own style, and set his future course of composition. In that year he wrote the three works that made him famous in the West, the three works that are still regarded as his best, and the three works that appear on this week's CD; Fratres, Cantus for Benjamin Britten and Tabula Rasa.
Arvo Pärt is deeply religious, a follower of the Eastern Orthodox Christian faith. Almost all of his music is based on some spiritual idea. Pärt's music, along with that of the Polish Henryk Gorecki and the English John Taverner has become known as “holy minimalism”. While he term is not quite accurate, all three explore spiritual themes, (they were quite independent in their development) and their music has a common serenity.
Arvo Pärt's is probably the most unique. He often dispense with melody and common harmony. He explore simple patterns, almost mathematical progressions. His silences are as expressive as his sounds. And yet he achieves a lot with very little. While superficially very simple in structure, you come away from a performance profoundly moved. There is a depth to his music that defies explanation.
Much of his music since 1977 is based on the concept of “tintinnabulation”. The word come from Latin for “little bells”. Tintinnabulation is the literal and metaphorical sounds of bells. The bell-like sound-idea is represented by two apposed voices. The base voice plays a single tonic triad, over and over, forming a harmonic base and an unchanging anchor. Over that is played the second voice, a motif moving step-wise through the scale.
The effect is a shimmering, forever changing tonal landscape, shifting from consonance to dissonance and back again. These two voices are just sounds, but for Pärt they can represent the opposing ideas of light and dark, spirit and matter, salvation and damnation. Arvo Pärt
Arvo Pärt
“I have discovered that it is enough when a single note is beautifully played. This one note, or a silent beat, or a moment of silence, comforts me. I work with very few elements - with one voice, two voices. I build with primitive materials - with the triad, with one specific tonality. The three notes of a triad are like bells and that is why I call it tintinnabulation”- Arvo Pärt
The three works on this CD represent the essence of tintinnabula and Arvo Pärt. The first, Fratres (Latin for “brothers”) is in two forms. The first for violin and piano and the second for 12 cellos. This is ethereal music, floating, chant-like, purposeless yet full of meaning.
The Cantus in memory of Benjamin Britten is structurally simple, but hauntingly beautiful. On a background of tolling tubular bells, the strings play a simple descending minor scale. Not one, but many, all at different speeds. The result is mesmerising. This is not just a simple concert-parlour trick. Incredibly, it becomes overwhelmingly moving, a profound experience.
The final work, which lends its name to the entire CD is Tabula Rasa, Latin for “clean slate”. Whether the clean slate represents a spiritual awakeing, or the dawn of Pärt's new compositional style, or any other meaning is open to debate. The music is wondrous.
At about half an hour Tabula Rasa is the longest work on the CD. Written for the violinist Gidon Kremer, who plays on this recording, it is also scored for string orchestra and prepared piano (the piano strings are separated by rubber stoppers and metal screws to create a mysterious bell-like tone).
Tabula Rasa has two movements. The first called Ludis (“play”) is nimble, energetic, with unremitting momentum. On the background trademark chords plays out an ever-expanding melodic line that culminates in a devastating climax. The second movement Silentium is slower, more deliberate. The melody evolves slowly, aiming for resolution. But as it approaches its tonic end, it gets ever-slower, ever-quieter until the final note is left unplayed and just implied. Perfection is acheived by silence alone.
This is the original mid 1980's recording of Arvo Pärt's most famous works. It was the first ever released in the West and it caused an immediate sensation. Perhaps the time was ripe for this sort of music. Maybe the West was hungry for spirituality in an ever-materialistic world. Or maybe it is just very good music.
Arvo Pärt became a marketing phenomenon after this recording, perhaps even a bit of a victim of his own success. But for the most profound, essential Pärt, this is the CD to get, a CD that has changed people's lives.
Pärt's music reaches far beyond the conspiracy of connoisseurs who support most new classical music. He is a composer who speaks in hauntingly clear, familiar tones, yet he does not duplicate the music of the past. He has put his finger on something that is almost impossible to put into words—something to do with the power of music to obliterate the rigidities of space and time. One after the other, his chords silence the noise of the self, binding the mind to an eternal present.
– Alex Ross, The New Yorker
The album that brought Pärt’s name to the West, and to the world (…).
Back in 1984 Tabula rasa helped re-educate our ears and throw open the doors of our musical sensibilities to spatial domains that had otherwise been closed to us. This is without any shadow of a doubt one of the great recordings of the last century.
– Rob Cowan, Gramophone (2023)
muzycy:
Gidon Kremer violin
Keith Jarrett piano
Dennis Russell Davies conductor Staatsorchester Stuttgart
The 12 Cellists of the Berlin Philharmonic
Tatjana Grindenko violin
Alfred Schnittke prepared piano
Saulus Sondeckis conductor
Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra
utwory:
1. Fratres [11:28] by Keith Jarrett
2. Cantus In Memory Of Benjamin Britten [05:00] by Staatsorchester Stuttgart
3. Fratres (for 12 Celli) [11:49] by Cellists Of The Berlin Philh.
4. I. Ludus [09:36] by Tatjana Grindenko
5. II.Silentium [16:49] by Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra
more info: www.ecmrecords.com
Opis
- Wydawca
- ECM (DE)
- Kompozytor
- Arvo Pärt (b. 1935)
- Artysta
- Keith Jarrett, Gidon Kremer, Staatsorchester Stuttgart, Tatjana Grindenko, Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra
- Nazwa
- Arvo Part: Tabula Rasa [Vinyl 1LP]
- Zawiera
- Vinyl 1LP
- Data premiery
- 2024-09-13