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Index of Artists
Browse by Artist: ABLINGER, PETER
Artist:
ABLINGER, PETER
Title:
Grisailles (1-100) für drei Klaviere (1991-93)
Label:
HAT[NOW]ART (SWITZERLAND)
Format:
CD
Price:
$17.50
Catalog #:
HAT 132
"The throbbing standstill as changing tinge of light, as a slow change (of light and therefore of space and time), fifty minutes long. 'Grisailles 1-100' for three pianos consists of various levels of overlapping sound-layers. Repeated octaves and small, barely audible sounds made by fingers darting across the keys seem to be two of these levels. Peter Ablinger composed twenty-four layers to start with -- each one following its own time and structure --before these were being combined in a preliminary score." -- Christian Scheib. First recording of this work, by Hildegard Kleeb (piano), recorded 12/98.
Artist:
ABLINGER, PETER
Title:
33-127
Label:
MODE
Format:
CD
Price:
$15.00
Catalog #:
MODE 206CD
"From orchestral works to installations, Peter Ablinger's oeuvre explores the differences between reality and our perception of reality. In '33-127' (for electric guitar and CD), Ablinger confronts the rational, human division of sound into musical scales with the complex acoustical reality of any given moment -- its 'noise.' In each of the 95 pieces that make up
33-127
, these two realities come face to face again and again: scale, noise, scale; scale, noise, scale... In each piece, a scale descends, with gentle and unpredictable irregularities of both rhythm and pitch, from the top of the electric guitar's range to the bottom. The sound of the instrument is clean, clear, and precise. At some point in each of these tranquil, neutral scales -- all but one of them, anyway -- a cacophony of recorded street noise bursts in, which the guitar, now louder and rougher in tone, doubles, playing an orchestrated spectral analysis of this recorded noise. Just a moment of this though, or a few seconds; then the scale resumes as if nothing has happened. This common use of scales in Ablinger's music is perhaps influenced by his background in graphic design, including his studies with Roman Haubenstock-Ramati, who composed many graphically notated scores. The basicness of a scale, like a stroke from a pencil, functions as a degree zero of human making. Noise, or rather, 'rauschen' (the German term) has been a prominent part of Ablinger's music for more than 20 years. For Ablinger it is never simply a matter of mastering or claiming noises for musical purposes, but rather of acknowledging and confronting the place of all sounds in the general 'noise' of reality. In '33-127,' the guitar is neither the soloist nor the protagonist. It and the 'rauschen' are equals in seemingly endless near-repetition, building up to a sublime incomprehensibility."
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