A Complete Guide to New Complexity and its Core Composers

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
  • 🎶 Support the channel:
    🎼 lentovivace.bandcamp.com
    🎼 / classicalnerd
    0:00 Introduction
    9:51 Brian Ferneyhough
    21:55 Michael Finnissy
    33:09 Chris Dench
    45:31 Richard Barrett
    53:18 James Dillon
    58:42 Conclusion
    This was requested by DerSibbe, Charlie powell, Mishibijiw Piano, Guy Berreby, 洪孟思 , harpynerpy, and Alice Wyan, whose patron bonus DOUBLED the weight of this request. See all requests at lentovivace.com/classicalnerd....
    📚 Sources/further reading:
    “Brian Ferneyhough” by Lois Fitch (Intellect, University of Chicago Press, 2013)
    “Brian Ferneyhough: Collected Writings” edited by James Boros and Richard Toop (Routledge, 1995)
    “Uncommon Ground: The Music of Michael Finnissy” edited by Henrietta Brougham, Christopher Fox, and Ian Pace (Ashgate, 1997)
    “Modern Music and After (3rd Edition)” by Paul Griffiths (Oxford University Press, 2010)
    “The Concept of New Complexity: Notation, Interpretation and Analysis” by Stuart Paul Duncan (DMA dissertation, Cornell University, 2010)
    “Re-Complexifying the Function(s) of Notation in the Music of Brian Ferneyhough and the ‘New Complexity’” by Stuart Paul Duncan (Perspectives of New Music, Winter 2010, Vol. 48 No. 1)
    “On Complexity” by Richard Toop (Perspectives of New Music, Winter 1993, Vol. 31 No. 1)
    “Brian Ferneyhough's Lemma-Icon-Epigram” by Richard Toop (Perspectives of New Music, Summer 1990, Vol. 28 No. 2)
    “Developing an Interpretive Context: Learning Brian Ferneyhough's Bone Alphabet” by Steven Schick (Perspectives of New Music, Winter 1994, Vol. 32 No. 1)
    “Michael Finnissy's History of Photography in Sound: Under the Lens” by Christopher Fox (The Musical Times, Summer 2002, Vol. 143 No. 1879)
    • Michael Finnissy about...
    www.scorefollower.org/feature...
    “Discontinuous Dialogues: Chris Dench in Conversation with Bruce Petherick” by Chris Dench (Context, Vol. 15/16)
    • The Labyrinthine World...
    chrisdench.com
    fdleone.com/2018/05/01/chris-...
    bostonmicrotonalsociety.org/in...
    “Portfolio of Original Compositions: Music of Possibility” by Richard Barrett (PhD thesis, University of Leeds, 2017)
    “Resistance and Reflection: Richard Barrett in the 21st Century” by Arnold Whittall (The Musical Times, Autumn 2005, Vol. 146 No. 1892)
    “Everything is Connected: Richard Barrett at 60” by Tim Rutherford-Johnson (Tempo, July 2020, Vol. 74 No. 293)
    “Codex: Embodied Communication in Richard Barrett’s Scores for Improvisation” by Hannah Reardon-Smith (Directions of New Music, February 2017, Vol. 1 No. 1)
    “Contemporary British Composers 3: James Dillon: Currents of Development” by Keith Potter (The Musical Times, May 1990, Vol. 131 no. 1767)
    “James Dillon: String Quartets as Complex Causal Network” by Michael Spencer (Contemporary Music Review, Vol. 33): eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/82872...
    “Interview: James Dillon” by Amanda MacBlane: static1.squarespace.com/stati...
    www.rednoteensemble.com/wp-co...
    assets.cla.umn.edu/wbaq/music...
    “Divisions Without Hierarchy: Four-Dimensional Modeling of Submeter and its Use in Empirical Analysis of the Musics of the New Complexity” by Aaron J. Kirschner (PhD dissertation, University of Utah, 2017)
    ----------
    Music:
    - Brian Ferneyhough: Transit, performed by the London Sinfonietta conducted by Elgar Howarth [original upload: rGFHH2YW8CQ]
    - Thomas Little: Dance! #2, performed by Rachel Fellows, Michael King, and Bruce Tippette
    - Brian Ferneyhough: Dum Transisset I-IV, performers unknown [original upload: 06dUqMrd5aQ]
    - Brian Ferneyhough: Time and Motion Study II, performed by Neil Heyde and Paul Archbold [original upload: rW2b4ByT8dM]
    - Brian Ferneyhough: Bone Alphabet, performed by James Beauton [original upload: eyedqvWwY5Y]
    - Michael Finnissy: String Trio, performed by the Gagliano Trio [original upload: NE3gEI2s33I]
    - Michael Finnissy: Piano Concerto No. 2, performed by Michael Finnissy, orchestra unknown [original upload: O0TaBKLEhuc]
    - Chris Dench: severance, performed by Geoffrey Morris [original upload: RbD-BUHkx-U]
    - Richard Barrett: codex I, performed by Ensemble Studio6 [original upload: ptEa_Zkk4jU]
    - James Dillon: echo the angelus, performed by Noriko Kawai [original upload: UuCZhVwIf_U]
    ----------
    Contact Information:
    Questions and comments can be directed to:
    nerdofclassical [at] gmail.com
    Facebook:
    / classicalnerd
    Instagram:
    / the_classical_nerd
    ----------
    All images and audio in this video are for educational purposes only and are not intended as copyright infringement. If you have a copyright concern, please contact me using the above information.

Комментарии • 435

  • @ClassicalNerd
    @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +30

    *Show notes:*
    0:27 The support of patron *Alice Wyan* _doubled_ the weight of this request! If you want to speed up the process of making certain videos, consider becoming a patron for as little as $2/month.
    15:28 Ferneyhough’s “filtering” procedures date back to his 1967 wind sextet _Prometheus,_ another indication of how well-formed his language was, even as a young composer.
    28:02 Composers typically use lots of extended techniques in a score, or avoid them altogether, as their occasional inclusion usually sounds “off.”
    29:45 Conlon NANcarrow, technically … which means that everyone I’ve ever heard say it in real life has been wrong.
    31:43 While Tchaikovsky’s true end will likely never be known, Finnissy believes that news of Tchaikovsky’s sexuality was about to hit the St. Petersburg press, hence the plot of _Shameful Vice._
    34:32 Not to be confused with the _album_ from whence the piece came, also called _City of Glass._
    36:13: The timeline is a little confusing here; _helical_ is listed in various places as a 1975, 1976, 1978, and 1993 composition. I believe that this reflects the various iterations of the score over the years. Dench’s official Web site (link in the sources in the video description) has the date at 1975.

    • @Jorge-xf9gs
      @Jorge-xf9gs Год назад

      Thanks for reinstating it's the piece and not the album.

    • @kliwadenko
      @kliwadenko 7 месяцев назад

      hi! thanks a lot for this video. I was wondering where I can find the Finnissy quote about "socially determined" in 29:06

  • @Tantacrul
    @Tantacrul 2 года назад +20

    Excellent stuff!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +5

      Thank you! That really means a lot.

  • @DeflatingAtheism
    @DeflatingAtheism 2 года назад +149

    “Sometimes musicians will re-notate Ferneyhough's scores to be more playable. Ferneyhough doesn't like this. This makes Ferneyhough mad. You won't like Ferneyhough when he's mad.”

    • @danieltrevino8855
      @danieltrevino8855 2 года назад +20

      brian ferneymad

    • @jimstantinople
      @jimstantinople 2 года назад +22

      @@danieltrevino8855 houghs mad

    • @losgatossonmuychidos
      @losgatossonmuychidos 2 года назад +4

      @@jimstantinople lmaoooo

    • @edwardgivenscomposer
      @edwardgivenscomposer Год назад +3

      O god. Does he then threaten to play some of his music? I'll be good.

    • @JohnBorstlap
      @JohnBorstlap Месяц назад

      Being unplayable, or hardly playable, is part of Ferneyhough's aesthetics: the immense effort and neurotic stress that goes with the attempts at performance, is the type of 'expression' that F wants. Of course that is a sign of serious neurosis, being transferred to the players and from there, to the audience.

  • @wids
    @wids 2 года назад +25

    Man dude youre really out here enriching us for free. Thank you

  • @james.t.herman
    @james.t.herman 2 года назад +13

    This is a great survey. I can't say this kind of music does anything for me, but I'm glad to have it explained.

  • @hansmartin828
    @hansmartin828 2 года назад +157

    I liked this video and would be interested in a similar content about spectralist composers.

    • @body_drift
      @body_drift 2 года назад +6

      Yes! Definitely!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +22

      Duly noted: lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html

    •  2 года назад +2

      Yess, that would be interesting! 😄

    • @georgeioan9223
      @georgeioan9223 2 года назад +1

      Totally! Would be really informative!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +4

      Erik has reached his limit of 5 active requests, but George's has been duly noted: lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html

  • @grantveebeejay535
    @grantveebeejay535 2 года назад +55

    Out of all the many episodes you have produced this is my favourite Thomas. Your grasp of the combined aesthetics and techniques used of these more modern composers is excellent because you have context reaching back centuries through western music composition. This point of reference adds such depth and clarity, not to mention "context" to this very significant episode. It inspires deep internal pondering about where classical music needs to move toward in order to survive. Wherever that place is I hope it makes one as an appreciator feel as much as think. Bravo Thomas!

  • @body_drift
    @body_drift 2 года назад +5

    This video is one of my favourites!!! Great research and structure. Definitely worthy of multiple viewings.

  • @fartwrangler
    @fartwrangler Год назад +3

    To paraphrase, I believe it was Gardner Read, "the composer who vaguely notates the possible, or meticulously notates the impossible, then avers that the agonized approximation produced by the performers is exactly what he intended, is guilty of unconscionable sham." :)

  • @skylarlimex
    @skylarlimex 2 года назад +5

    thanks so much for this video! it's crazy how much effort was put into this and i am very grateful for the content that you are putting out to a wider audience! please continue doing what you do

  • @kevycanavan
    @kevycanavan 2 года назад +9

    I’m never going to feel guilty about writing something a bit outlandish for a few bars ever ever again.

  • @Montcalf091
    @Montcalf091 2 года назад

    Incredible work, best of it's kind on youtube! I've learned about new complexity in my musicology classes, but I've learned a lot of new things from this video.

  • @mattia.a_p
    @mattia.a_p 2 года назад +3

    Really looking forward to watch this! Thank you!

  • @andy.pitcher
    @andy.pitcher 2 года назад

    really lovely work, this feels like something that can be combed through many times over to find new information without it feeling like work.

  • @codascheuer8426
    @codascheuer8426 2 года назад +38

    For the longest time, I was trying so hard to understand new complexity. After watching this video, I still don’t get it, but I can appreciate it more.

    • @fnamelname9077
      @fnamelname9077 2 года назад +16

      You do get it. There isn't anything to it. It's just Post-Modern humor.
      The "audience" is the punchline. The *second audience* is a more rarefied group of viewers who watch the first audience, and feel superior to them.
      In a sense, whether it's putatively "comedy", "painting", "music", or anything else - it's all actually Performance Art. In which you are an unpaid, unaware performer.
      In a sense, this kind of art achieves the final goals of performance art. It unites the total control of the creator, with the absolute realism of performers who don't know that they are performing.

    • @insight827
      @insight827 2 года назад +11

      @@fnamelname9077 I would disagree, I would say it's not making fun of audiences so much as musical systems, or a specific kind of musical system (notation). Also, I would argue that it's more modern than postmodern. But that's just my opinion.

    • @bazingacurta2567
      @bazingacurta2567 Год назад +1

      @@insight827 I agree. It's not postmodern at all. It doesn't have any of the qualities (nor the defects) of postmodern music. It is just modernism gone rancid.

    • @theangryginger7582
      @theangryginger7582 Год назад

      And yet you have an irrational time signature in your pfp...

    • @codascheuer8426
      @codascheuer8426 Год назад

      @@theangryginger7582 I do use irrational meters in my music sometimes, but that doesn't make it new complexity. My music is FAR from being called new complexity.

  • @f52_yeevy
    @f52_yeevy 2 года назад +3

    This is going to be so interesting, thank you!

  • @luccaseixasoliveira
    @luccaseixasoliveira 2 года назад +1

    Thanks! I was long waiting for this video.

  • @AsgerAlstrupPalm
    @AsgerAlstrupPalm 11 месяцев назад

    This is so densely packed with information that I used the slow playback speed of RUclips for the first time in my life! The presentation is excellent but give us a moment to breathe. When a key point is made, a pause would be nice to allow to let it sink in. Keep up the good work

  • @melasonos6132
    @melasonos6132 2 года назад

    Always great. This is a really fascinating one. Thank you so much. You definitely introduced me to multiple things here. In fact, I rely on you for my music education, so keep doing it, haha.

  • @musicalintentions
    @musicalintentions 2 года назад +4

    Wow, thank you. I learned a lot from this installment.

  • @sabaneyev
    @sabaneyev 2 года назад +2

    amazing !! thank you so much for this !!

  • @jacobpapa2393
    @jacobpapa2393 2 года назад

    Truly fantastic scholarship + excellent video and presentation quality = Classical Nerd
    Thanks for the awesome videos!

  • @josephososkie3029
    @josephososkie3029 2 года назад +5

    I refer people to the classical Merle Hazard group’s piece “ Gimme some of that old atonal music”. On RUclips.

  • @georgeioan9223
    @georgeioan9223 2 года назад +2

    Wow, looking forward to this one!

  • @alcyonecrucis
    @alcyonecrucis 2 года назад +4

    Thanks classical nerd, there’s not many of us so it’s great to see your videos!

  • @stevennewlin8640
    @stevennewlin8640 2 года назад +1

    Fascinating. Thanks for the ferneyhough guidance

  • @gianangelobolzonello1052
    @gianangelobolzonello1052 Год назад +1

    This channel is PURE GOLD.

  • @hazujh7
    @hazujh7 2 года назад +1

    Awesome! :D Love the way you explain things and will stay tuned for the next videos (: I'd love to see more stuff about composers from the second half of the 20th century on
    And it would be marvelous to have also videos on composers rooted on the 21st century and on the now! haha

  • @andreasvandieaarde
    @andreasvandieaarde 2 года назад

    Wow, this is insanely interesting - your output is outstanding

  • @MichaelSidneyTimpson
    @MichaelSidneyTimpson Год назад

    your series is excellent, thanks so much!

  •  2 года назад

    Another fantastic video Thomas!

  • @Olivier-Jaquet
    @Olivier-Jaquet Год назад +1

    5:11 I had the chance to study with Roger Redgate at Goldsmiths. Great to see him on your video ! Although I am not an atonal composer, at all, but It was great to learn loads of new compositional technics and what a breath of fresh air to approach music in such a different way.

  • @andrewlord3398
    @andrewlord3398 2 года назад +1

    oh my goodness. Don't know how i stumbled on this - but it is fantastic content!

  • @shark_username
    @shark_username 2 года назад +2

    Bless you and your work

  • @ianmoore5502
    @ianmoore5502 2 года назад

    Best bus ride video ive ever listened to and watched
    Wonderful introductory material to a world that used to be so foreign but now seems obvious. Thank you!
    Also:
    Neeeeerrrrd :p

  • @facanono
    @facanono 2 года назад +1

    Such a great video, it would be nice to see another like this but with maximalism and the similarities and diferences with new complexity
    (I see that it was already requested one of spectralism so im looking foward to that to)
    Tks for these videos

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +2

      "Maximalism" simply isn't an analyzable musical movement in the manner of minimalism, spectralism, or New Complexity. It's a label that's been applied to a wide swath of different composers who have less in common with one another than these five.
      I will add this as a vote toward a spectralism video, however!

  • @aflightofbumblebee749
    @aflightofbumblebee749 2 года назад

    I love how a lot of this music sounds!,,,,plus it looks beautiful too!....

  • @KFMasterGrunt
    @KFMasterGrunt 2 года назад +7

    "And when I emerged from my solitude and crossed over this bridge for the first time, I did not believe my eyes and looked and looked again and said at last: 'That is an ear! An ear as big as a man!' I looked yet more closely: and in fact under the ear there moved something that was pitifully small and meagre and slender. And in truth, the monstrous ear sat upon a little, thin stalk - the stalk, however, was a man! By the use of a magnifying glass one could even discern a little, envious face as well; and one could discern, too, that a turgid little soul was hanging from the stalk. The people told me, however, that the great ear was not merely a man, but a great man, a genius. But I have never believed the people when they talked about great men - and I held to my belief that it was an inverse cripple, who had too little of everything and too much of one thing."
    Friedrich Nietzsche - Thus Spoke Zarathustra

    • @JohnBorstlap
      @JohnBorstlap Месяц назад

      This was Nietzsche's attempt to attack Wagner, who was indeed a genius. Nietzsche also had ambitions to write music (he had musical talents), but his stuff is unlistenable. They were friends for a short while and N had to thank W for awakening much of N's philosophical ideas. later-on, out of embarrassed revenge, he tried to make Wagner look small.

  • @orchestra92
    @orchestra92 2 года назад

    outstanding job, thank you!

  • @UtsyoChakraborty
    @UtsyoChakraborty 2 года назад +3

    A must watch video!

  • @thenewhindemithians8629
    @thenewhindemithians8629 2 года назад +13

    The musical irony being that the more complex the musical notation or instructions, the less the performer will be able to have fidelity to them in a concert situation.

    • @alkanista
      @alkanista 2 года назад +3

      I think that is the point, for some of these guys.

    • @jimit.4220
      @jimit.4220 Год назад +4

      Yeah that's not ironic, that's the point of ferneyhough's obsessive notation. He essentially gives the performers the choice of what elements to emphasise because it's impossible to play all of them.

  • @leroyFLH
    @leroyFLH 2 года назад

    Superb presentation. Bravo.

  • @buttclef
    @buttclef Год назад

    Thank you for your channel.

  • @lemanouchecbien1
    @lemanouchecbien1 Год назад

    I am new to the channel. I am blown away by the quality! I would just wish you could make a small list of disques that you would recommend. Thanks for your great work!

  • @johncoltranesethic18
    @johncoltranesethic18 2 года назад +12

    I had a really brief interchange with Chris Dench once and i can say he is a lovely soul. The stratification of meaning in his charts is something that is beyond remarkable. It's the Kabbalah of music making.

    • @topologyrob
      @topologyrob 2 года назад

      He's a great bloke isn't he?

    • @egapnala65
      @egapnala65 2 года назад +1

      He certainly seems to be the least up his own backside, his website shows he has a great love of ALL kinds of music far removed from the typical Adornoite dismissal of everything south of Boulez/Carter that seems to pervade the rest of the school.

  • @stevekudlo1464
    @stevekudlo1464 2 года назад

    Truly awesome educational experience!

  • @zacharydetrick7428
    @zacharydetrick7428 Год назад +1

    Great work, Thomas!

    • @growskull
      @growskull 3 месяца назад

      ofcourse i find a henry cow fan here haha

  • @Rattle301982
    @Rattle301982 2 года назад

    Thanks 👍 for the informative video sir!

  • @lambertronix
    @lambertronix 2 года назад +2

    this was excellent. i hadn't really looked into NC beyond ferneyhough and finnissy but dench immediately clicked for me as a kindred spirit.

  • @qalaphyll
    @qalaphyll 2 года назад

    what a wonderful video!

  • @nicholasjagger6557
    @nicholasjagger6557 2 года назад

    Fantastically interesting, and so much work. I shall treat myself to Michael Finnissy's 'History of...' and economise somehow, but for the glory of the internet, I wouldn't have had the joy of your RUclips work. I wouldn't mind knowing what is round the corner of your bookcase in terms of anything non-musical. Anyway, hope your composing work is going well too. Thanks Thomas!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад

      A bookshelf tour is on the docket for ... some time this year? Probably whenever the semester gets busy and I need an easy video to make.

  • @martinappleby764
    @martinappleby764 2 года назад +3

    Thanks. The potential of music to find new ideas , new ways of looking at things , never seems to end.

    • @grantco2
      @grantco2 2 года назад +5

      Now if only they were "better" ways...

    • @molybdaenmornell123hopp5
      @molybdaenmornell123hopp5 2 года назад +4

      I think it gets misguided when novelty is sanctified. At the end of the day, it's a relative property, depending on what you already know. The best music, to me, does not rely on being original, though it might be original incidentally.

    • @RozarSmacco
      @RozarSmacco 9 месяцев назад

      Unfortunately the actual sound is not only highly non-mellifluous it bears an uncanny resemblance to a cacophonous din.

    • @JohnBorstlap
      @JohnBorstlap Месяц назад

      @@molybdaenmornell123hopp5 Correct.

    • @usaroman
      @usaroman Месяц назад

      All this complexity is pure bull manure and then some more of the same. 💩💩💩

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings 2 года назад +1

    New Complexity was named for the English (how simplicist Australian spanked boy(took hundreds of pics way beforethat kind of thing was unquestionable)but now it takes many international diverse international trends. I love this channel ! I go to a lotta used bookstores -how can he afford all those harc covers and mostly how can he understand and have read and thought enough to understand all the issues he brings up . Ferneyhough,Finnisy,Xenakis and Birtwistle ain't easy stuff .Undergrad doesn't cover much about these guys . Wonderful to have his commentary along with the countless pages written on " New Complexity " masters and he spends time in giving us a thorough going over ! Darnstadt? Are they still having courses there I must find out . Manipulating Music ? I like that term. This dude really has reada lot . I want to hear is composition too!

  • @hauthot287
    @hauthot287 Год назад +1

    14:32 love how the most normal thing abt this is the time signatures

  • @magdalene2229
    @magdalene2229 Год назад

    So much Australia! Wasn't expecting my home to come up so much!

  • @bburroughs
    @bburroughs 2 года назад +2

    Fascinating overview of these overlooked composers! Interesting that the Grateful Dead came up (I think during the Chris Dench section): The Dead's charitable foundation (the Rex Foundation) has provided financial support to almost all of the composers in this video.

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад

      Fascinating-I see Finnissy listed in 1995 and Dench, Barrett, and possibly Dillon listed in 1994. I suppose Ferneyhough, with his academic jobs, didn't need the money.

    • @egapnala65
      @egapnala65 2 года назад

      As well as for Havergal Brian.

  • @DGA8787
    @DGA8787 2 года назад +2

    Valuable resources. For my 2 cents, i'd love to see ones on Ligeti, Grisey, and especially Pierre Schaeffer and in particular his "Traité des objets musicaux" and its outgrowths of spectromorphology and acousmatic musics. Thanks and please keep it up!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +1

      I did a video on Ligeti _way_ back in the day (so it kinda sucks compared to what I do today), but it's out there nevertheless. Tenney and Schaeffer have been duly noted at lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  Год назад

      @Damián López-de Jesús I've got way too much on my plate for that, sorry.

  • @ethanchambers02
    @ethanchambers02 2 года назад +6

    You should make a video on George Crumb; one of my idols and main sources of inspiration as a composer. He just passed away yesterday I believe, may he rest in peace

  • @JamesPDaley-mh7xc
    @JamesPDaley-mh7xc Месяц назад

    Excellent work as always!! Please do MAXIMALISM next !

  • @Galerieddot
    @Galerieddot 4 месяца назад

    Thank you.

  • @Alex0Hamilton
    @Alex0Hamilton 2 года назад +2

    Love this music.

  • @brendansweeney8341
    @brendansweeney8341 2 года назад +4

    This was awesome. Please do a Lachenmann video!

  • @alanhlozek831
    @alanhlozek831 2 года назад +1

    Greetings Thomas,
    Great work you are doing! I would just like to request that you please consider doing a video on living Latvian composer Peteris Vasks. A truly underrated gem of our time, IMO...
    I know you have a lot of requests, but I just wanted to add yet another penny to your bucket full of pennies ;)
    Thank you!

  • @EyeofAffinado
    @EyeofAffinado 2 года назад +2

    I joined a Facebook group about this subject and abandoned it due to pedantic stench of it all: I am sorry for all the people who still remain there.
    Ah and congratulations for your video

  • @raburauza_osu
    @raburauza_osu 2 года назад +2

    I've always looked up to composers like these (especially Ferneyhough, Dench and Finnissy). Their music is sadly very underrated. You did a really good job on the vid! Thank you. If I could make a request, maybe another American composer? (Maybe someone like Frederic Rzewski or John Corigliano?)

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад

      Duly noted: lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html

  • @adebowaleadeogun4144
    @adebowaleadeogun4144 2 года назад +1

    Very useful and for us in Nigerian art music

  • @oscargill423
    @oscargill423 2 года назад +3

    I love how all of the new complexity composers are wearing glasses in their pictures.

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +2

      Ha, nice spot! I hadn't noticed.

    • @davidunger3199
      @davidunger3199 2 года назад +2

      There is so much to read in the scores that reading glasses should perhaps be noted in the very score itself as mandatory equipment while approaching this music. 😀

    • @blacknwhitesalright
      @blacknwhitesalright Месяц назад

      It’s because their bodies are struggling against the constraints placed on their sight by capitalism’s debilitation of human bodily capacities.

  • @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328
    @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328 2 года назад

    Some heavy lifting on this video - kudos!

  • @user-uz7gb7gb4v
    @user-uz7gb7gb4v 2 года назад +10

    49:42 In case anyone was wondering, the "obsession" with the note F apparently refers to a colloquial expression in English that means "nothing" and begins with that letter. This is described in Barrett's thesis.

    • @davisatdavis1
      @davisatdavis1 10 месяцев назад

      explain more? I'm so lost

    • @user-uz7gb7gb4v
      @user-uz7gb7gb4v 10 месяцев назад

      @@davisatdavis1 the expression is "f$*# all", which means "nothing", and he became obsessed with using the note F as a way of representing that

    • @davisatdavis1
      @davisatdavis1 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@user-uz7gb7gb4vokay gotchu. But how does that make sense in this context?

  • @monnicamii
    @monnicamii 2 года назад

    great video

  • @johnpcomposer
    @johnpcomposer 2 года назад +6

    Finissy: ...a series of forms that discard received traditions...Dench: a staggered or simultaneous present consisting of a meta-stacked time. a broad level of self-similarity...Yeah, that's so moving.

  • @machida5114
    @machida5114 2 года назад +2

    so good work... so good performance...

    • @machida5114
      @machida5114 2 года назад +1

      so good comments...

    • @machida5114
      @machida5114 2 года назад +2

      the complexity works contains a kind of so spicy-delicious dishes.

  • @ionescuflorin7307
    @ionescuflorin7307 2 года назад +5

    Would be great if you also make a guide about reductionist composers and the Wandelweiser movement, a self-organized offshoot of the New York school (John Cage, Morton Feldman) with occasional dashes of everything from Satie to phonography (field recordings) - a low-key alternative to both post-serial/spectral academia and pop minimalism.
    They are featured proeminently in Jennie Gottschalk's book "Experimental Music Since 1970", but other than that they don't have much institutional power and most of their sparse music is an acquired taste, so despite being active for almost three decades and are regularly being performed and recorded to some critical acclaim (and, in the case of Michael Pisaro-Liu, even a modest popularity), they are still rarely talked about on most discussion forums dedicated to contemporary classical music.
    I can see why: while retaining an avant-garde edge (sometimes enough to be suspected of hoaxing), at least some compositions have sensuous appeal to listeners (at least it does to me, though I guess I can thank ASD for that), yet they generally tend to be more conceptual (in any case, they like phenomenology) than focused on technicality, and collaborate more often with improvisers or electronic musicians.
    New Complexity is being fetishized to this date by many in the small crowd of contemporary classical composers and listeners because it appears as the ultimate embodiment of modernist complexity that deserves funding, whereas Wandelweiser ambitions are a little more scalable for the era of downshifting...

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад

      Duly noted: lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html

    • @PaulCaruso53
      @PaulCaruso53 2 года назад +1

      Thank you for this. Will seek out this music.

    • @rumijosephs6882
      @rumijosephs6882 Год назад

      Just read that book!

  • @imlxh7126
    @imlxh7126 2 года назад +6

    2:05 Hey, to Babbit's credit, he just said he didn't *understand* hip-hop, not that it wasn't a valid form of musical expression. I'd call that a fair take on his part. Most people don't understand HIS music. :P

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +4

      An excellent point! A Babbitt video is in the works, where I hope to take a much deeper dive into this (and much else besides).

    • @imlxh7126
      @imlxh7126 2 года назад

      @@ClassicalNerd Personally I'm more interested in the works he made for the RCA synthesizer than his orchestral work, mostly because I'm hearing some like...almost proto-spectral stuff in there? Like you're bombarded with a bunch of notes and tone clusters, and then ANOTHER bunch of notes and tone clusters with a different synth patch, and at the speed at which it's going, it becomes difficult (for me at least) to tell the tone clusters of the composition from the harmonics making up the waveforms that the synthesizer is producing. I actually tried writing a piece in Sonic Pi (a "live coding" environment) that attempted to use the harmonic series in a similar way, but Sonic Pi tends to burn out between 300-400 BPM.

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +1

      His electronic work forms some of the best examples of his theories and style. Orchestras just don't have the precision of the RCA. I'll keep my eyes peeled for references to spectral stuff in the literature, but as far as I know he and the spectralists had very little interaction.

    • @imlxh7126
      @imlxh7126 2 года назад

      @@ClassicalNerd Right, I'm not saying he was part of the movement, I'm just saying that he was blurring the line between tone cluster and timbre (perhaps unintentionally, but it definitely shows up in the resulting audio).
      Sorry, I'm a Synth Guy, so in my world "spectral" just means "composing with additive synthesis"

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +2

      I'm not sure how much he intended for timbre and pitch to be conflated, or if that was just the end result of working with pretty rudimentary synthesis technology. It'll be interesting to compare and contrast him with Stockhausen, who was definitely more interested in that kind of thing.

  • @myronmcpherson1685
    @myronmcpherson1685 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @jonathanmosebach2921
    @jonathanmosebach2921 2 года назад

    I feel flooded with this video! I feel like I want to check out everything here. I would love if you would be so kind of you could do a vid on each one of these guys, and maybe 2-5 pieces of each to really get your brain around what these blokes are trying to accomplish! I am a vocalist/Percussionist/and Fretted String player. One thing I am doing this year is listen to Ligeti's Requiem once every day, I want to ''understand'' that work deeply and feel that since it is so dense, it requires many listens to to comprehend it! Thanks for a great video!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +4

      There's no way. The research on this video alone took four months.

    • @jonathanmosebach2921
      @jonathanmosebach2921 2 года назад

      Wow! Is it easy to get any or all of these music scores? I would love to get ferneyhough's la tierra est la home score. I have seen a copy of it and it is massive. You probably have a world class score library! Thanks for all the great vids!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад

      It depends on the score. I have access to a the extensive music library of the University at Buffalo, but even they don't have _La terre est un homme_ ... Stony Brook does, though.

  • @afischer8327
    @afischer8327 2 года назад +1

    You are a scholar, sir. I appreciated the mention of ars subtilior. I have a recording of the pianist Ian Pace, playing Ferneyhough, Chris Dench, and Richard Barrett. Also Kevin Bowyer on the organ, playing Ferneyhough's Sieben Sterne. Ferneyhough once mentioned in an interview exactly what you relate (more briefly - Ferneyhough will never choose a few words when a couple of thousand will do) - about the impossibility of interpreting the score exactly, and how that challenges both performer and listener. On the radio, I once heard Irvine Arditti playing Intermedio alla ciacona. I bought the score, and it hangs on a wall now, with the title 'Modesty'.

  • @wilh3lmmusic
    @wilh3lmmusic 2 года назад +7

    Time to see if you mention Sorabji…
    Edit: 31:18 there it is!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +1

      😏

    • @JustMiluna
      @JustMiluna 2 года назад

      I would love to see more Sorabji ,what a pity that there are a lot of pieces that still need to be played.

    • @wilh3lmmusic
      @wilh3lmmusic 2 года назад

      @@ClassicalNerd important elements in Finnissy’s style:
      (List)
      Seems familiar…
      (26:50)

    • @chrisamies2141
      @chrisamies2141 2 года назад +2

      tbh I was thinking "Sorabji in there somewhere?" just before he was mentioned.

  • @BrianJosephMorgan
    @BrianJosephMorgan 2 года назад

    Fascinating.

  • @tomn9094
    @tomn9094 2 года назад +2

    I've never seen Ferneyhough and Captain Beefheart in the same room.

  • @inept_
    @inept_ 2 года назад +1

    Oh my god, I live in Adelaide as a musician, and lemme tell ya, everyone with means moves to Victoria, so Denoh had a truly Adelaide experience

    • @Mythologos
      @Mythologos Год назад

      Is Victoria where all the commies are?

  • @johnsrabe
    @johnsrabe 2 года назад

    I don’t intend to watch this video - 3-minutes in and I just want some Bach! - but I dig what you’re up. Keep the faith!

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад

      Well, I also have 40 minutes' worth of discussion on him, too: ruclips.net/video/T7UMnvTLads/видео.html

  • @litoboy5
    @litoboy5 2 года назад +1

    GREAT

  • @anthonycook6213
    @anthonycook6213 2 года назад +1

    'Tis a gift to be hyperpanaugmentedpostserialstthroughnotayednewcomplex
    'Tis a gift to be free..."

  • @SWMack
    @SWMack 2 года назад +1

    Great video! Can you recommend some of your favorite works by these guys?

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +9

      • Ferneyhough's _Cassandra's Dream Song_ is easily his most approachable, especially in a live setting. The flute constrains him from doing _too_ much at one time.
      • Finnissy has some nice moments of relative stasis in parts of the _English Country-Tunes_ and the _Gershwin Arrangements._ I prefer his orchestral music, like _Red Earth._
      • Dench's _ik(s)land[s]_ is really gorgeous, and his Piano Sonata is probably the best example of his work in large scale. I'm also fond of his guitar work _severance_ I excerpted here.
      • Barrett's work with FURT and various iterations of his _codex_ series are worth knowing. Since he's so aligned with improvisation, listening to as many versions as you can find is rewarding.
      • Dillon is my favorite of the bunch, and he's at his best when he's ethereal and impressionistic. I find his piano music hit-or-miss, but when it's a hit, it's by far my favorite of these composers. I especially love _echo the angelus_ (excerpted here) as well as many moments in _The Book of Elements,_ such as the beginning of Volume IV. Some truly amazing sonorities populate _Pharmakeia_ and his _Stabat Mater Dolorosa._

  • @danielmillardmusic
    @danielmillardmusic 2 года назад +4

    I must admit, I am very curious about your book collection there. Is there a possibility for a video covering some of your theory/composition/history books?

    • @isiahbuda9479
      @isiahbuda9479 Год назад +1

      I second this notion! Please do showcase your book collection!!

    • @ragamela8834
      @ragamela8834 Год назад

      I enjoy finding the books where my library intersects with his.

  • @looseunit9180
    @looseunit9180 2 года назад

    Nice mate

  • @Labratas123
    @Labratas123 6 месяцев назад

    bravo

  • @rileymerino6340
    @rileymerino6340 2 года назад

    Would love to see my favorite composer Kent Kennan in one of these someday ☺️

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад

      Duly noted: lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html

  • @Dovith
    @Dovith 2 года назад

    I just discovered this channel by accident; very nice work! I also just checked his music, and its actually a pretty good composer!

  • @RanBlakePiano
    @RanBlakePiano 2 года назад

    You have done a fanrastuc
    I wonder if some day someone will do a follow up to my book Primacy of the ear for most of you ,it’ll be too elementary
    How can educators inspire students to seek out to new directions in all music from Aretha to post Messiaen.and use class time to focus ,enjoy non diatonic sound
    Gunther Schuller ,george Russell have discussed this for years
    You put an amazing amount of time and skill to this fine video. We all thank you

  • @topologyrob
    @topologyrob 2 года назад +1

    I'm just impressed you got this number of views for this rather forbidding music - well done

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +2

      There's a lot of people who want to understand this music, even if it's not to their taste-I was in that camp, prior to researching this video.

  • @cthellis
    @cthellis 2 года назад +1

    Oh man, here we go.

  • @user-pk5oy7cr8u
    @user-pk5oy7cr8u 9 месяцев назад

    Mi profesor de composición estudió con Ferneyhough y él le comentaba que unos alumnos habían creado un software para hacer que sus obras estuvieran escritas de una forma más fácil, él inmediatamente sacó una versión qué el había escrito antes y coincidía con la que el software había escrito, una idea de la nueva complejidad en el Reino Unido era forzar a estudiar a los intérpretes ya que el nivel interpretativo era muy alto y esto hacía que los instrumentistas no estudiaran sus partes y siempre leyeran todo a primera vista, con esta complejidad en la escritura se fuerza a estudiar y descifrar toda obra. Hace poco analizamos Bone Alphabeth y todos sabemos lo compleja que es, un hito para graduarse en el solfeo Ritmic.

  • @nathanielsattler1382
    @nathanielsattler1382 2 года назад +5

    Excellent work! I had been hoping for a NC essay at some point and this really helped scratch that itch. I can absolutely understand why this type of music isn't up even most people's alleys, but it unfortunately seems there's a lot of open hate not just for NC music, but even people who do enjoy this type of stuff. It seems like you're either either a snooty academic or some idiot who knows nothing about music composition in order to enjoy the likes of these composers. Like damn, I just think this stuff sounds cool, lay off for a bit. The second and third Ferneyhough string quartets and La Terre Est un Homme are irreplaceable in my realm of listening material. If I get the opportunity to so much as have a disastrous read-through session of one of his works for string quartet I will die a happy man.

    • @egapnala65
      @egapnala65 2 года назад

      When you have spent three years studying composition having the disciples of these people essentially deride you as a regressive neanderthal for not seeing the point of writing impossible to play music while name dropping concepts you think make you sound more intellectual than you actually are, then perhaps you will understand a little better.

  • @brendanward2991
    @brendanward2991 2 года назад +6

    Excellent survey of a neglected field of music. You certainly know your stuff.

    • @AndreyRubtsovRU
      @AndreyRubtsovRU 2 года назад +3

      I wonder why this field of music is neglected. (/sarcasm)

    • @grantco2
      @grantco2 2 года назад

      @@AndreyRubtsovRU Wish it could simply cease to exist. Even better.

    • @jimit.4220
      @jimit.4220 Год назад +4

      ​@@grantco2 Why? Why show such visceral dislike to a kind of music when it literally does not affect you in any way, if you don't like it, just don't listen to it, simple as that.

  • @johnbarry5036
    @johnbarry5036 2 года назад +4

    ill take schubert, beethoven, mozart, bach, brahms, chopin. ;)

  • @dankmemesdeaddreams2309
    @dankmemesdeaddreams2309 2 года назад +1

    Here's a suggestion. How about a video on Charlemagne Palestine? I've loved his piece Strumming Music ever since I heard it for the first time

  • @ChopinIsMyBestFriend
    @ChopinIsMyBestFriend 2 года назад

    Interesting assessment, I like harsh experimental stuff sometimes for they have some thrilling stuff, but I wouldn't call it beautiful. The best emotional release is when a dissonance resolves to harmoniousness. To throw away one side or the other, order or chaos, both tend to sound like noise and not music. To me.

    • @ChopinIsMyBestFriend
      @ChopinIsMyBestFriend 2 года назад +1

      There is good reason we still love Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, and Chopin so much. The test of time cannot be overlooked. I just have a philosophy that music is true love, and it doesn't work as a scientific or mathematical formula. The formula I used for composing is, now listen closely... "Sound entering my ear sound good?" "Yes" "That is good" "Jam in more counterpoint"

    • @jimit.4220
      @jimit.4220 Год назад +1

      I get what you're talking about, but there's a reason why this sort of stuff is written. You can't express true emotions with simple cadences, real emotions aren't so simple and singular.

  • @clembillingsly1873
    @clembillingsly1873 2 года назад +2

    Please do Mieczyslaw Weinberg. He music deserves way more attention than it currently gets.

    • @jackminto7062
      @jackminto7062 2 года назад +1

      My fave

    • @molybdaenmornell123hopp5
      @molybdaenmornell123hopp5 2 года назад +1

      Attended a live performance of him by Argerich, Maisky and Kremer recently. I'd never heard of him before.

    • @ClassicalNerd
      @ClassicalNerd  2 года назад +1

      Duly noted: lentovivace.com/classicalnerd.html