John Cage's Atlas Eclipticalis; Carnegie Hall, Oct. 22, 2012 S.E.M. Orchestra
2012 is a stellar year for John Cage performances, his centennial sparkling with a veritable myriad of concerts in his honour. The largest scale of these, at least in terms of performers, is the production of Atlas Eclipticalis in its most expansive version, which took place in historically star-studded Carnegie Hall, on Monday Oct.22, 2012. The “Orchestra of the S.E.M. Ensemble”, which premiered this version twenty years ago, played it as part of their "Beyond Cage" festival, to its maximum duration of 100 minutes, with its maximum instrumentation of 86 musicians, simultaneously with Winter Music in a two-piano version, as per the signature optional directions of Cage.
This concert witnessed a veritable conglomeration of New York City new music
freelancers, including players from Argento, Absolute Ensemble, Alarm
Will Sound, Talea, FLUX Quartet, Composer's Concordance, Either/Or,
20-21, Yarn|Wire, Signal Ensemble, Talujon, Loadbang, American Composer's
Orchetsra, ACJW, Ensemble Moto Perpetuo, Guidonian Hand, North/South
Music, The Knights, Ljova, and - the list goes on. As one of the
performers, I enjoyed the opportunity to interact with so many of my colleague-friends
all at the same time.
I also enjoyed the reaction of many of my non-musician invitee-friends, who before the concert said, "Wow, that sounds intriguing", and after expressed, "What an amazing experience!" Old new music is still fresh, even if its rays of light take longer to reach us now.
I also enjoyed the reaction of many of my non-musician invitee-friends, who before the concert said, "Wow, that sounds intriguing", and after expressed, "What an amazing experience!" Old new music is still fresh, even if its rays of light take longer to reach us now.
www.johncage.info
tells us that Atlas
Eclipticalis was
composed as follows: “Cage used the Atlas
Eclipticalis 1950.0 (an
atlas of the stars published in 1958 by Antonín Becvár (1901-1965),
a Czech astronomer), superimposing musical staves over the
star-charts in this atlas. Brightness of the stars is being
translated into the size of the notes in the composition.”
The score consists of 344 pages of music, which are divided up among the 86 musicians, hence we each play 4 pages, at 25 minutes a page. The dots on the page, are organized into clusters connected by lines, according to chance processes. There is a nice link to pictures of all of this here: http://greg.org/archive/2012/06/25/john_cage_antonin_becvar_and_leonard_bernstein_walk_into_a_bar.html
The score consists of 344 pages of music, which are divided up among the 86 musicians, hence we each play 4 pages, at 25 minutes a page. The dots on the page, are organized into clusters connected by lines, according to chance processes. There is a nice link to pictures of all of this here: http://greg.org/archive/2012/06/25/john_cage_antonin_becvar_and_leonard_bernstein_walk_into_a_bar.html
We
play the notes in each cluster in whichever order we wish, following
instructions for each cluster as to how many notes shall be as short
as possible, and how many shall have “some duration”. The only
parameter around “some duration” is that each cluster should be
completed more or less according to its positioning on the staff, as
the piece is spatially notated, meaning that each line of staff is to
last for the length of one cycle of the conductor's, or clock's, arms
– which in our version is five minutes (there are 5 lines of staff per page). Petr Kotik, founder and
conductor of S.E.M., and the driving force behind this performance,
did his yogic work well, conducting the twenty cycles like a Tai Chi exercise. Slow movement, especially for
such a long time is not easy. The audience was privy only to the movement of his arms, which started above his head, and continued slowly in a circle, liked the hands on a clock. Occasionally, time stood still, as the
score allows for; perhaps once or twice it backtracked slightly. We
players could of course see his serious yet humourful (might one say,
universal?) expression.
Star-gazing
is a meditative enterprise. Re-creating the dots of light is no
less so. While the instructions provided by Cage stop short of specifying “attempt to sound as you might imagine the stars do”, the
analogous parallel between light and sound is woven inherently into
the score, and appears as such in the sound. The task of performing
the dots on the page, with specific instructions, yet with freedom
with respect to their timing and length and balance, over the course of 100
minutes, also sets the stage for a zen-like focussedly unfocussed
state of being.We started sounding really good by the third page. Our egos had disappeared – each dot was no longer a solo in Carnegie
Hall, but a twinkling with the others in the orchestra; we'd gone
from being stars to connecting the – galaxies.
When I had a few minutes of rest, about an hour into the piece, I found myself staring
at the floor of the stage. For some reason, I have always liked the
particular colour of Carnegie's stage – a light, almost tan
bare-hardwood. It makes me feel at home, and with the stage lights,
it seems cheerful. But something appeared to me tonight: Carnegie's
stage is a star-map in itself, marked by galaxies - hundreds, thousands, perhaps hundreds
of thousands of cello endpin holes, stabbed into history by the
world's most famous, most revered, most renowned cellists. Jacqueline
du Pré, Rostropovich, Yo-Yo Ma, generations of Berliner
Philharmoniker and Cleveland Orchestras – well, the current stage is not so old (1995), but
old enough to have seen every major orchestra in the world multiple
times, and all the soloists too. Sometimes the cello sections sits at
stage left, where I was, and sometimes they sit further inland; for
contemporary works they could sit anywhere, and for large-scale youth
orchestras and other non-Carnegie-Hall-presents groups, they also might be
squeezed in anywhere. The stage is layered in endpinpoints, in
months, as stars are layered in light-years. How often can we busy
New Yorkers take a moment out of our hectic schedules, to contemplate
such things, to star-gaze? A worthwhile reflection.
Needless
to say, we were warmed up for the post-intermission piece, John
Marclay's Shuffle
– of which we gave a spunky and humourous rendition, and which, at
10 minutes, felt much too short.
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