Harrison Birtwistle Studies. Edited by David Beard, Kenneth Gloag, and Nicholas Jones

2016 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 669-673
Author(s):  
Christopher Mark
Keyword(s):  
New Sound ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 83-120
Author(s):  
Geraldine Finn

This paper has been written as both a celebration of the music of Harrison Birtwistle-"the most forceful and uncompromisingly original British composer of his generation" according to the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians - and as a response, at once playful and polemic, to the critics and commentators who struggle to name, claim, frame and contain it within the familiar categories and tropes of contemporary music interpretation. My particular focus is Panic which is exemplary in this respect and what Birtwistle cognoscendi have a habit of referring to as 'his background to 'explain' the idiosyncratic difficulty and difference of his work, as in the quotation cited as my subtitle.


Tempo ◽  
1999 ◽  
pp. 36-43

American Music Wilfrid MellersRautavaara narrating with 12 tones (and CDs) Guy RichardsHarrison Birtwistle in recent years Robert Adlington


Tempo ◽  
1969 ◽  
pp. 2-6
Author(s):  
Tim Souster

“I haven't heard a good new opera or a good new symphony for—eighteen months.” Thus Kit Lambert the pop impresario in Tony Palmer's television film All my Loving, making, one would think, no outrageous claim, that is if one allows that he has not heard of Harrison Birtwistle and Cornelius Cardew. But one must realise that Lambert's view is the basis of a total dismissal of modern ‘classical’ music; for him pop is new heir to the classical tradition. A like view is held by Mr. Palmer, who on the strength of a moderately successful film (success of course was inherent in its subject-matter) and of some pretentious writing in the Observer, has been endowed with a certain ‘authority’. For him, the Pink Floyd outdo Cardew and Stockhausen in ‘modernity’, and even the Who's ‘Magic Bus’ (an inferior reworking of their brilliant ‘Talking about my generation’) puts Stravinsky's Symphony in Three Movements in the shade. I shall not waste space on these comparisons, but mention them as an illustration of how the pop world can be blinded to what lies outside it. Lambert and Palmer are the victims of their own high-power distribution techniques whereby nothing gets through without a hard sell. The commercial basis of pop has two important consequences in this context. First, the common ground which exists between genuine musicians in the pop and ‘straight’ fields is being obscured to the detriment of every one by promotional smokescreens.


Tempo ◽  
1998 ◽  
pp. 12-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Hall

By alternating his Nine Movements for String Quartet with his Nine Settings of Paul Celan (for soprano, two clarinets, viola, cello and double bass) to produce Pulse Shadows, Harrison Birtwistle created not only his longest work for the concert hall but also his most moving and affirmative.


2020 ◽  

Paul Klee gehört nicht nur zu den prägendsten Malerpersönlichkeiten des 20. Jahrhunderts, sondern hatte auch eine starke Affinität zur Musik. So schrieb er unter anderem Musikkritiken, spielte als Amateur hervorragend Geige und verkehrte mit vielen Komponisten. Mit seinen Werken und seinen theoretischen Schriften wie den Unterrichtsmaterialien am Bauhaus inspiriert er bis heute zahlreiche Komponistinnen und Komponisten. Dieser Band präsentiert Texte über musikalisch beeinflusste und die Musik beeinflussende Werke Klees, insbesondere seine Beschäftigung mit Johann Sebastian Bach sowie die Rezeption seines gestalterischen Denkens im aktuellen Musikschaffen von Pierre Boulez bis Harrison Birtwistle. Bisher unbekannte Quellen, zahlreiche Abbildungen und Neuinterpretationen verhelfen dabei zu neuen Sichtweisen.


2006 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 273-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID BEARD

Premièred at Glyndebourne in October 1994 and subsequently performed in the UK, Austria, Germany and Holland, The Second Mrs Kong was the result of a collaboration between the American writer Russell Hoban and British composer Harrison Birtwistle. The opera's reception has tended to emphasise the disparity between Hoban's diverse and eclectic interests, which emerge not only in the libretto but also in his novels and essays, and Birtwistle's more introspective and linear approach. Possible connections between Hoban's aesthetics and Birtwistle's music have generally been disregarded. I argue, however, that the opera's main aesthetic concerns – namely, the mediation of images through ideas and the workings of image-identification in diverse media – are shaped by a productive exchange between librettist and composer. The clearest expression of this interaction is the love between Kong, who embodies ‘the idea of’ King Kong from the 1933 RKO film, and Pearl, a character drawn from Vermeer's iconic painting Girl with a Pearl Earring. The representation of these visual icons in The Second Mrs Kong is inflected by Birtwistle's own views on images, by his attempts to find musical analogues for visual techniques, as revealed especially in his sketches, and by his lively engagement with Hoban's ideas.


Tempo ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 66 (262) ◽  
pp. 2-11
Author(s):  
Martin Kier Glover

AbstractAlthough The Triumph of Time is one of Birtwistle's most celebrated early pieces very little has been written about it to date. Probably the most comprehensive analytical review appeared in Michael Hall's 1984 biography Harrison Birtwistle. This was largely valuable for presenting, in the context of a well-informed account of the composer's early output, particular aspects of Birtwistle's intention. Others have added little, while some remarks made by the composer in various interviews have seemed so strangely contradictory that they can only be evaluated by an independent idea of how the structure works from the evidence of the score itself. The method of approach becomes a major aspect of the discussion and analysis presented. In considering the dramatic superstructure, the way detail fits into this, and the relationship with the eponymous Bruegel etching, the aim of the current article has been to consider the work ‘on its own terms’ as far as possible.


2021 ◽  
pp. 316-356
Author(s):  
Paul Giles

Taking its title from Australian novelist Alexis Wright’s description of her novel Carpentaria as a ‘long song, following ancient tradition’, this chapter considers how antipodean relations of place interrupt abstract notions of globalization as a financial system. The first section exemplifies this by focusing on Australian/American director Baz Luhrmann, whose version of The Great Gatsby (2013), filmed in Sydney, resituates Fitzgerald’s classic novel within an antipodean context. The second section develops this through consideration of Wright’s fiction, along with that of New Zealand/Maori author Keri Hulme, so as to illuminate ways in which spiral conceptions of time, where ends merge into beginnings, contest Western epistemological frames. In the final section, this ‘long song’ is related to the musical aesthetics of Australian composer Peter Sculthorpe and English composers George Benjamin and Harrison Birtwistle. The chapter concludes by arguing that musical modes are an overlooked dimension of postmodernist culture more generally.


1984 ◽  
Vol 125 (1693) ◽  
pp. 136
Author(s):  
Andrew Clements

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