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by Frank O'Hara
The last ten years have seen American composers, painters and poets assuming leading roles in the world
of international art to a degree hitherto unexpected. Led by the painters, our whole cultural milieu has
changed and is still changing. The "climate" for receptivity to the new in art has improved correspondingly,
and one of the most important aspects of this change has been the inter-involvement of the individual arts
with one another. Public interest in the emergence of a major composer, painter or poet has, in recent years,
almost invariably been preceded by his recognition among other painters, poets and musicians. The influence
of esthetic ideas has also been mutual: the very extremity of the differences between the arts has thrown
their technical analogies into sharp relief. As an example of what I mean by this, we find that making the
analogy between certain all-over paintings of Jackson Pollock and the serial technique of Webern clarifies
the one by means of the other - a seemingly "automatic" painting is seen to be as astutely controlled by
the sensibility of Pollock in its assemblage of detail toward a unified experience as are certain of Webern's
serial pieces. And it is interesting to note that initial public response to works by both artists was involved
in bewilderment at the seeming "fragmentation" of experience. Although these analogies cease to be helpful if
carried too far, it is in the framework of these mutual influences in the arts that Morton Feldman could cite,
along with the playing of Fournier, Rachmaninoff and Tudor and the friendship of John Cage, the paintings of
Philip Guston as important influences on his work. He adds, "Guston made me aware of the 'metaphysical place'
which we all have but which so many of us are not sensitive to by previous conviction."
I interpret this "metaphysical place", this land where Feldman's pieces live, as the area where spiritual
growth in the work can occur, where the form of a work may develop its inherent originality and the personal
meaning of the composer may become explicit. In a more literal way it is the space which must be cleared if
the sensibility is to be free to express its individual preference for sound and to explore the meaning of
this preference. That the process of finding this metaphysical place of unpredictability and possibility can
be a drastic one is witnessed by the necessity Feldman felt a few years ago to avoid the academic ramifications
of serial technique. Like the artists involved in the new American painting, he was pursuing a personal search
for expression which could not be limited by any system.
This is in sharp, contrast to the development, of many of Feldman's contemporaries, for example Boulez and
Stockhausen, whose process has tended toward elaboration and systematization of method. Unlike Feldman's their
works are eminently suited to analysis and what they have lacked in sensuousness they invariably may regain in
intellectual profundity and in the metaphysical implications of their methods. But if we speak of a metaphysical
place in relation to Feldman, it is the condition under which the work was created and which is left behind the
moment a given work has been completed.
Feldman's decision to avoid the serial technique was an instinctive attempt to avoid the cliche's of the
International School of present day avant-garde. He was not to become an American composer in the historical-reminiscence
line, but to find himself free of the conceptualized and self-conscious modernity of the international movement.
Paradoxically, it is precisely this freedom which places Feldman in the front rank of the advanced musical art of our time.
A key work in the development away from serial technique is the "Intersection 3" for Piano (1953). A graph piece,
it is totally abstract in its every dimension. Feldman here successfully avoids the symbolic aspect of sound which
has so plagued the abstract works of his contemporaries by employing unpredictability reinforced by spontaneity -
the score indicates "indeterminacy of pitch" as a direction for the performer. Where others have attempted to reverse
or nullify this aural symbolism (loud-passion, soft tenderness, and so on) to free themselves. Feldman has created
a work which exists without references outside itself, "as if you're not listening, but looking at something in
nature". This is something serialism could not accomplish. This freedom is shared by the performer to the extent that
what he plays is not dictated beyond the graph "control" - the range of a given passage and its temporal area and
division are indicated, but the actual notes heard must come from the performer's response to the musical situation.
To perform Feldman's graph pieces at all, the musician must reach the metaphysical place where each can occur, allying
necessity with unpredictability. Where a virtuoso work places technical demands upon the performer, a Feldman piece
seeks to engage his improvisatory collaboration, with its call on musical creativity as well as interpretative
understanding. The performance on this record is proof of how beautifully this can all work out; yet, the performer
could doubtless find other beauties in "Intersection 3" on another occasion.
"Projection 4" for Violin and Piano (1951) explores an entirely different area of musical experience. A graph also
(see illustration) its marvelous austerity is achieved mainly through touch, and I will quote the note to the performer
as an example of how the individual area of experience in these graph pieces is indicated to the performers:
Note:
The violin part is graphed above that for the piano. Dynamics are throughout equal and low. For the violinist:
Timbre is indicated: 1 harmonic; P pizzicato; A = arco. Relative pitch (high, middle, low) is indicated: = high; = middle; = low.
Any tone within the ranges indicated may be freely chosen by the player. Multiple stops are indicated by numbers within the squares.
Duration is indicated by the amount of space taken up by the square of rectangle each box (: :) being potentially 4 icti. The single
ictus or pulse is at the tempo of 72 or thereabouts. For the pianist: The 1 indicates playing without sounding (for the release of
harmonics). Pitches, their number and duration are indicated as for the violinist. A comparison, of these two graph pieces, whose
ambiances are so totally dissimilar, gives an idea of the great compositional flexibility possible with graph notation.
Unpredictability is used in a different way still in the "Piece for Four Pianos" (1957). This work, scored in notation
rather than graph, begins simultaneously for all four pianos, after which the following notes may be played to the end
by each of the pianists at time intervals of their mutual or individual choice. Feldman has said. "The repeated notes
are not musical pointillism, as in Webern, but they are where the mind rests on an image - the beginning of the piece
is like a recognition, not a motif, and by virtue of the repetitions it conditions one to listen." As we proceed to
experience the individual time-responses of the four pianists we are moving inexorably toward the final image where
the mind can rest, which is the end of the piece. In this particular performance it is as if one were traversing an
enormous plain at the opposite ends of which were two huge monoliths, guarding its winds and grasses.
In all of Feldman's recent work the paramount image is that of touch - "The use of the instrument must be as sensitive as
the application of paint on canvas." (Which brings us back to Rachmaninoff, Fournier and Tudor.) In some pieces the entrance
into the rhythmic structure is left entirely to the performer, and it is in this area that unpredictability enters and the
performer must create the experience with an application of paint on canvas.
On the other hand, one of the most remarkable pieces recorded, here is "Structures for String Quartet" (1951). It is a
classical string quartet without sonata development, without serial development, in general without benefit of clergy.
Like Emily Dickinson's best poems, it does not seem to be what it is until all questions of "seeming" have disappeared
in its own projection. Its form reveals itself after its meaning is revealed, as Dickinson's passion ignores her dazzling
technique. As with several other Feldman pieces, if you cannot hear "Structures", I doubt that studying the score would be
a help, though it is a thoroughly notated field of dynamic incident, whose vertical elements are linked shy a sort et by
contrapuntal stimulation of great delicacy and tautness.
In an oeuvre which so insistently provides unpredictability with opportunities for expansion and breath, the question of
notation at all arises, for the graph would seem to provide an adequate control for the experience and a maximum of differentiation.
But differentiation is not Feldman's point, even in the graph music: the structure of the piece is never the image, nor in
eschewing precise notation of touch is Feldman leaving the field open for dramatic incident whereby the structure could become
an image (as in Boulez). Notation is, then, not so much a rigid exclusion of chance, but the means of preventing the structure
from becoming an image in these works, and an indication of the composer's personal preference for where, unpredictability
should operate. Also John Cage remarked in this connection. "Feldman's conventionally notated music is himself playing his
graph music". And of course the degree of precision in the notation is directly related to the nature of the musical experience
Feldman is exposing. This notation can be very precise, as in "Extensions 1" for Violin and Piano (1951), which indicates an
increasing tempo of inexorable development from beginning to end by metronomic markings, as well as the dynamics and expressive
development.
Although the traditionally notated works are in the majority on this record ("Extensions 4, Two Pianos" for Two Pianos,
"Three Pieces" for String Quartet), I have gone into the use of unpredictability in this music at such length in order
to reach a distinction about its use in much contemporary music. In Feldman's work unpredictability involves the performer
and the audience much in the same way it does the composer, inviting an increase of sensitivity and intensity. But in much
of the extreme vanguard music in America and Europe, particularly that utilizing tape and electronic devices along with
elements of unpredictability, the statistical unpredictability has occurred in the traditional manner during the making of
the piece; it has been employed preconceptually as a logical outgrowth of serial technique and it is dead by the time you
hear it, though the music is alive in the traditional sense of hearing. What Feldman is assuming, and it is a courageous
assumption, is that the performer is a sensitive and inspired musician who has the best interests of the work at heart.
This attitude leaves him free to concentrate on the main inspiration-area where the individual piece is centered.
What he finds in these centers - whether it is the sensuousness of tone and the cantilena like delicacy of breathing in
"Three Pieces" for String Quartet (1954-56), or the finality of the "dialogues" in "Extensions 4" for Three Pianos (1952-53) -
is on each occasion a personal and profound revelation of the inner quality of sound. The works recorded here already are an
important contribution to the music of the 20th Century. Whether notated or graphed, his music sets in motion a spiritual life
which is rare in any period and especially so in ours.
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