Welcome to my website!     New cd @ KAIROS ot now:
    https://www.kairos-music.com/cds/0015104kai 
 
    
   Peter Ablinger
  Against Nature 
  Erik  Drescher,voice (spoken, sung) glissando flute, ultrasonic flute (organ  pipes, c4 - f6), bottles (C#-d#1) bird pipes, bass flute, piccolo, small  wooden flute            KAIROS CD      READ:  Peter Ablinger  WIDER DIE NATUR / Against Nature from: "Augmented Studies"    
       "Against Nature", extended flute project, 52', 2020  
            score for "Baum" ("tree") for 32 glissando flutes (draft)          final score for "Baum" ("tree"), red: voice 6 from 32            AGAINST NATURE  "extended flute project"   The Story    It all started with a rejection. Flutist Erik Drescher applied for a  cooperation with me at the end of 2019. Initially it was supposed to be  a kind of continuation of our joint 2014 CD "Augmented Studies",  especially an extension of the multi-track pieces for (then) 16 or 22  flutes. The rejection came in February 2020. Then came Corona. We both  had nothing to do and so we decided to start our project - unfinanced,  of course.   
    "Unkenteich" ("bombina pond"),   listen to "Unken" ("toads/bombina") filmstill and recording by Siegrid Ablinger    At the beginning of May on a trip to Brandenburg my wife Siegrid  Ablinger made a recording at a toad pond. The toads [a certain species  of them: 'bombina'] became the starting point for the entire piece and  were initially also its working title (german: "Unken"). Both the  sonic-rhythmic articulation and the "heterophony" ('similarities,  simultaneously') became the structure generator for everything that  followed.   
    organ pipes, the 1-foot register    In addition to the idea of polyphonic layering, there were two  further basic assumptions: On the one hand, the flute spectrum should be  expanded upwards and downwards (also beyond piccolo or bass flute). For  the height I bought used organ pipes, the 1-foot register of a no  longer existing organ, which - depending on age - reaches the ultrasonic  limit (highest tone f6, approx. 11KHz). For the depth I got bottles  (lowest tone CIS, approx. 69Hz). So a total of 7 1/2 octaves - that's  more than a symphony orchestra. And then the other basic assumption: I  wanted to use a method that was also unfamiliar to me: this time not to  compose first and then record the whole thing, but to compose through  recording, to create something "al fresco", so to speak, and to missuse  Erik as my brush for the image to be painted. "Al fresco" is the  metaphor for the non-notating creation, which no longer splits the  creation into notation on the one hand and execution on the other. It is  the term for the act of defining in the moment of realisation.   
    recording chamber    Then a recording environment had to be created. It was clear that a  conventional recording studio would not be available for a period of  several weeks - it wasn't supposed to be a 3-minute song. I also wanted  to be independent and be able to decide freely whether we would work  overtime today and cancel tomorrow after an hour. What we needed was a  "home office studio", so to speak. This is where the Academy of the Arts  came into play: Gregorio Karman, head of the academy's electronic  studio, lent us 2 Neumann microphones and a professional interface. Then  I built an improvised recording chamber in my studio and wired  everything up.   
    ultrasonic flute    I then tinkered with the "ultrasonic flute", so I tied the high  organ pipes together to form a kind of chromatic panpipe with a range of  2 1/2 octaves (c4 - f6). Then we could start.   
    recording session with Erik Drescher (right) and Peter Ablinger (left)    At the beginning of June we made the first recordings and then  produced almost the entire piece in the following 6 weeks. Only a few  follow-up recordings followed in September. The beginning consisted of a  few recourse to existing things. To get in the mood and for the  soundcheck, we began to record an old flute piece from the 80s that was  never performed ("Überlegungen 19")  - also because it might play a kind of forerunner role in this project,  or simply because the 'toads/bombina'-textures reminded me of that old  study. Then we recorded Erik as the speaker of a small concept from  1996. It's called "Jetzt" ("Now"):  one piece for 1 speaker  Text: "NOW"  nothing else  always just the word "NOW"  with different pauses  dontknowhowlong  1.2.96  We made the "different pauses" more concrete: Erik should say the next  "now" when it is 'there', so to speak, nothing more - and rather avoid  forcing deliberate differences of pauses. We rehearsed that until it was  'there' and then transferred it to instrumental playing. It was about  the paradox of a 'non-quantifiable regularity' in rhythmic terms, which  developed into a reading of the toads's (bombinas's) rhythm and finally  the rhythmic principle of the entire project. Of these two 'oldies', the  latter finally slipped into the prominent role of the beginning and the  end of the piece, and the other into the appendix.   
    "Drawing IV" with indications of register and time grid (in 10-seconds intervalls)           Another 'recourse' concerned the present, as it were: A piece called "8 Zeichnungen" ("8 Drawings"),  which is exactly what it consists of, was only realized a few weeks  earlier as electronic music. We gradually realized 6 of these 8 drawings  plus a few variants with the possibilities of the 'extended flute' in  mostly polyphonic versions up to around 70 voices. A 70-part one-man  orchestra: that was perhaps the appropriate answer to the Corona  restrictions, with the additional effect of not being alone with  yourself.    It soon became clear that the overall picture would consist of a  sequence of many short (e.g. one-minute) individual forms. Such single  forms, individuals or 'Eingestalten' can stand on their own or combine  to form higher-level architectures or organisms. Many of these  polyphonic structures are exactly the work of one day. Finally, of the  structure generators, the principle of iteration or 'copying' should be  mentioned, whereby first a template was created which then, for example  "one tone higher" was copied. In the third run, the copy was then  copied, etc., as with "silent post". What exactly "one note higher"  meant could vary. In most cases we did not work with notated pitches,  but rather with definitions or drawings that retained a certain scope  for interpretation, to which we could react from one recording step to  the next. As with 'non-quantifiable regularity', blurring plays a  decisive role in - so to speak - copying a microcosm of unmanageable  nuances into the underlying, mostly redundant textures.    Then - in the middle of the main phase of the recordings - I came  across the book "Against Nature" by Lorraine Daston, where she discusses  the concept of nature and describes what it is capable of doing in our  heads - and unfortunately also outside of it. The title we borrowed from  this book is not directed against nature - because nature does not  exist; it is directed against our concept of nature soaked in morality;  Or: it means that nature that we all are - a honk concert as much as the  medially conveyed recording of a toad pond - in contrast to a concept  of nature that tries to maintain a categorical separation from  everything technical, fabricated, human, and clings to banish nature to  something external, to an outside.      
    bird pipe    The instruments used:  Voice (spoken, sung), glissando flute (approx. b - c#4), "ultrasonic  flute" (organ pipes, c4 - f6), bottles (C# - f#1), bird pipes, and only  rarely used: bass flute, piccolo, small wooden flute   "AGAINST NATURE"  The 59 forms (tracks):  ('bot' for bottles, 'op' for organ pipes, 'bp' for bird pipe)    1 'Jetzt (Now) 1', voc  2 'Jetzt (Now) 2', fl  3 'Many A', 9 fl  4 'Toads', field-rec  5 'Drawing 1', 2 fl  6 'Prelude Drawing 2 (narrow)', 5 fl  7 'Drawing 2 (narrow)', 32 fl  8 'Jetzt (Now) 3', fl  9 'Triads 1', 12 fl  10 'Gliss-Canon 1', 23 fl  11 'Gliss-Canon 2', 23 fl  12 'Copying: Wolf', 8 fl  13 'Copying: Unfold', 8 fl  14 'Copying: ICE', 17 fl  15 'Copying: Fold', 8 fl  16 '666 Notes 1', 29 fl  17 '666 Notes 2', 23 fl  18 'Triads 2', 12 fl  19 'Drawing 5', 9 layers f each 5 bot, bfl, fl, picc u op  20 'Triads 3', 3 bot, 3 fl, 3 op  21 'Rain 1', 6 op  22 'Low Toading', 15 bot  23 'Bottle Canon', 51 layers of 15 bot  24 'Rain 2', 7 fl  25 'Octaves 1', 2 bot, 3 fl, 3 op  26 'Diagonal', 51 layers of bot, fl u op each  27 'Drawing 2 (wide)', 37 layers of bot, fl u op each  28 'Drawing 8, Var.1', 8 op  29 'Drawing 8, Var. 2', 8 op  30 'Octaves 2', 2 bot, 3 fl, 3 op  31 'Drawing 8', 61 layers f bot, fl, op  32 'Bird Pipes (pp)', 2 bp (simultaniously played)  33 'Prologue to Telephone+Flute', 3 fl  34 'Telephone+Flute', fl u field-rec  35 'Bird Pipes (ff)', 2 bp (simultanously pl.)  36 '4 High Organ Pipes', 4 op  37 '9 High Organ Pipes', 9 op  38 'Cicadas 1', 8 op  39 'Cicadas 2', field-rec  40 'Prologue to Drawing 4', 20 op  41 'Drawing 4', 69 layers / bot, fl, op  42 'Triads 3', 7 fl  43 'Rain 3-6', 7 fl  44 'Alarm Clock', 5 fl and field-rec  45 '3 Surfaces', 79 fl  46 'Low Toading 2', 15 bot  47 'Drawing "Etno"', 9 fl  48 'Low Toading 3 (Thirds)', 26 bot  49 'Imitate honks 1', bot, fl  50 'Honks', field-rec  51 'Imitate Honks 2', bot, fl  52 'Wobbling Solo', fl  53 'Wobbling tutti', 9 fl  54 'Drawing 6', 9 op, 8 fl, 3 voc  55 'Bird Pipes (mf)', 2 bp (simultanously pl.)  56 'Drawing "Tree"', 33 fl  57 'Gliss Solo 1', fl  58 'Gliss Solo 2', fl  59 'Jetzt (Now) 4', 2 voc  (1-59: 51:55)    APPENDIX:  60 'Nichts (Nothing) for 2 Drums' (1983), fl (4:23)  61-72 'Überlegung 19 (Consideration 19)' (1988), fl (8:10)  73-80 '8 Zeichnungen (8 Drawings)' (2020), electronic music (7:47)    Hybrid (Footnote on aspects of presentation)    Our "extended flute project" was originally started as a project for  sound carriers, not for live concerts. In a sense, it was also about  the impossible, about something that would be realistically, i.e. live,  unthinkable: an orchestra made up of 79 glissando flutes, or 72  "ultrasonic flutes". As the work progressed, however, a certain  dialectic developed between solo and tutti, or between a single model  and mass copy. And thus the first considerations for a hybrid of live  performance and play-back came up. Finally, there could be two versions  that would be slightly different, one for sound carriers alone, the  other for the combination. The hybrid version, of course, which was not  originally planned, has to be tried out and tested in practice before it  can be officially approved as an Anti-Corona agent.    What composing always has to fail (Footnote on 'blurring')    Traditional composition, therefore notating composition, has to be  determined. As a result, deviations from the determined are maybe  accepted, but hardly can become a formative means. Aiming at the nuances  of the deviation from the outset - and not just afterwards - is little  supported by notation-based composing. Notation escapes something. Many  composers feel this restriction and work with - or rather against this  problem, invent notations that are not reproducible 1:1, or even  unplayable, which, of course, generates deviations but does not  'compose' them. It makes a difference whether I only accept deviations  or create them.    William Turner (Footnote on extreme high sounds)   
    William Turner: Venetian Scne, 1940-45, London, The Tate Gallery, CC BY-SA 2.0 de    ... dense bundles of high tones near the ultrasonic limit are in my  imagination associated with the glaring light of William Turner ...
           
 
                                    
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