Artikulation (Ligeti)

Artikulation is an electronic composition by György Ligeti. Composed and notated in January and February 1958, the piece was prepared and recorded on magnetic tape from February to March with the assistance of Gottfried Michael Koenig and Karlheinz Stockhausen's assistant, Cornelius Cardew, at the Studio for Electronic Music of the West German Radio (WDR) in Cologne.[1] The piece consists of various types of sounds, "in conditions of aggregation."[1] It "can be heard as a conversation without words."[2] Ligeti explains in notes to the listening score (see below):

The piece is called 'Artikulation' because in this sense an artificial language is articulated: question and answer, high and low voices, polyglot speaking and interruptions, impulsive outbreaks and humor, charring and whispering.[1][3][4]

The (3:53-55 long)[5] piece, in quadraphonic sound, was premiered March 25, 1958 at WDR Cologne's 'Musik der Zeit' concert series and September 4, 1958 at Darmstadt.[6] It was heard again March 1993 at the New England Conservatory,[7] while for recordings it has been mixed down to stereophonic sound.

Background

Ligeti had just fled from Budapest to Cologne in 1956,[8] and Artikulation is the only one of three electronic pieces written in Cologne which remain in Ligeti's catalogue.[9] He completed only two works in the electronic medium, however—Glissandi (1957) and Artikulation (1958)—before returning to instrumental music. A third work, originally entitled Atmosphères but later known as Pièce électronique Nr. 3, was planned, and though the technical limitations of the time prevented Ligeti from realizing it completely, it was finally realized in 1996 by the Dutch composers Kees Tazelaar and Johan van Kreij of the Institute of Sonology.[10] See: List of compositions by György Ligeti. In composing Artikulation Ligeti, like many composers around him, was inspired by, "the age-old question of the relationship between music and speech," their approach greatly inspired by phoneticist Werner Meyer-Eppler.[11] AllMusic's Blair Sanderson describes Artikulation as, "difficult to judge from its brevity and similarity to other tape experiments of the time."[5]

Composition

Ligeti used both chance, such as in selection of sound segments, and an overall plan; all related to phonetics.[12] "Part serial, part empirical, part aleatoric."[6] Ligeti used technology including sine wave, white noise, and impulse generators, as well as filters.[6]

First I chose types [of noise, or artificial phonemes] with various group-characteristics and various types of internal organization, as: grainy, friable, fibrous, slimy, sticky and compact materials. An investigation of the relative permeability of these characters indicated which could be mixed and which resisted mixture.[12]

Having conceived of many various possible and artificial phonemes, created recordings of them, and grouped them into various categories and bins, Ligeti created a formula (and many tables) to determine the maximum length of each tape used (the louder the shorter), and then went through a process of grabbing randomly, without-looking, similar "phonemes" out of their bins, combining them into "texts", and then cutting these in half, down to "words".[6][12][13]

Despite this process, the piece has been described as, "spontaneous, even witty,"[6] "humorous,"[14] and as, "influential."[15] Holmes argues that though Ligeti abandoned electronic music after Glissandi and Artikulation, "it seems clear he could not have conceived some of his later works [such as Atmosphères] had he not learned the techniques of composing with slowly modulating textures and timbres that came with producing tape music."[12]

Listening score

Fred Lerdahl argues that discretization is necessary not only for musical analysis but also for perception even by learned listeners, and thus that pieces such as Artikulation are inaccessible.[16] In contrast, in 1970 graphic designer Rainer Wehinger (State University of Music and Performing Arts Stuttgart) created a "Hörpartitur" or "score for listening" for the piece, representing different sonorous effects with specific graphic symbols much like a transcription. Despite Ligeti's original notation, consisting of a large number of charts and tables,[17] this score, approved by the composer, has been described as having, "a unique and appealing aesthetic," and as being, "easy to follow when viewed aligned with the music."[18] As shown in the key to the score:

Wehinger...focuses on the main sonic characteristics: uses a timeline measured in seconds; shapes and colors instead of the notes on a staff; different colors that represent variations in timbre and pitch; dots that are standing for impulses and combs for noise.[4]

The depiction of frequency using the y-axis may be, "very approximate."[19] The score was later synced to the music and posted on YouTube.[3] Though Holmes finds, "the artistic value in visualizing this work...plain to see,"[12] Taruskin argues the score is, "decorative or celebratory...rather than...practical."[11]

Tom Service of The Guardian argues that even prior to Wehinger's score and its animation, "Ligeti himself imagined the sounds of Artikulation conjuring up images and ideas of labyrinths, texts, dialogues, insects, catastrophes, transformations, disappearances."[8]

See also

References

  1. György Ligeti, Rainer Wehinger (1970). Artikulation: An Aural Score by Rainer Wehinger, p.7-8. Mainz: Schott.
  2. Alexander J. Morin. ed. (2002). Classical Music: The Listener's Companion, p.515. Hal Leonard. ISBN 9780879306380.
  3. kris (Aug. 22, 2009). "Artikulation with a visual score", Phidelity.com.
  4. "Artikulation [1958]", FldvariBooks.com.
  5. Teldec at AllMusic
  6. Richard Steinitz (2011). Gyorgy Ligeti: Music of the Imagination, page unmarked. Faber & Faber. ISBN 9780571261116. "syllables", "words", "sentences", "language".
  7. Alex Ross (March 20, 1993). "Ligeti 1993: Searching for Music's Outer Limits", New York Times (at TheRestisNoise.com).
  8. Tom Service (2009). "Ligeti - the multimedia experience ...", TheGuardian.com. "He escaped the Soviet invasion of Budapest in 1956."
  9. Louise Duchesneau and Wolfgang Marx (2011). György Ligeti: Of Foreign Lands and Strange Sounds, p.130, n.33. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 9781843835509.
  10. Jennifer Joy Iverson, " Historical Memory and György Ligeti's Sound-Mass Music 1958–1968", PhD diss (Austin: University of Texas at Austin, Butler School of Music, 2009): 92.
  11. Richard Taruskin (2009). Music in the Late Twentieth Century: The Oxford History of Western Music, Vol. 6, p.52. Oxford. ISBN 9780199796007.
  12. Thom Holmes (2012). Electronic and Experimental Music: Technology, Music, and Culture, p.368-70. Routledge. ISBN 9781136468957.
  13. Elliott Antokoletz (2014). A History of Twentieth-Century Music in a Theoretic-Analytical Context, p.371. Routledge. ISBN 9781135037307. "Sounds to texts to words to languages to Articulation."
  14. Antokoletz (2014), p.420.
  15. "György Ligeti", PolarMusicPrize.org.
  16. Fred Lerdahl (1988/1992). "Cognitive Constraints on Compositional Systems", p.235. Contemporary Music Review 6, no. 2:97–121.
  17. Richard Toop (1999). György Ligeti, p.60. Phaidon. ISBN 9780714837956. Artikulation is, "an essentially lively cheerful work."
  18. Yotam Mann. "Artikulate: Ligeti Style for Any Audio", Vis.Berkeley.edu.
  19. Christian Dimpker (2013). Extended Notation: The Depiction of the Unconventional, p.214. LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 9783643903020.
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