Exploring the breathtaking landscapes of Feldman's sublime art is about preparing oneself to an entirely new listening experience. The sublime, puzzling, almost hypnotic quality of this genius' musical mind still mantains many angles of mistery to our critical sense - surely his imagery and his aesthetics represent an unique and inextinguishable light amid the greatest modern creators.
To me, Feldman is one the last true innovators in the history of western music.
What we have after him is a generalised coming of a great neo-romantic era (to include Minimalism), which certainly boasts a wealth of musical treasures, but - as an artistic movement - it rather looks back than forward.
Some of Feldman's classic masterpieces are here, including the magic piano pages of Palais de Mari or of Triadic Memories. Not to be missed are his choral works, starting with the brief and sublime Christian Wolff in Cambridge and culminating in the sensational For Stefan Wolpe (dedicated to the German composer, Feldman's compagnon de route, and here presented with his own heavenly Four Pieces for Mixed Chorus). Most of all, you will find Feldman's late, daunting and immortal chamber works, with the mind-blowing String Quartet II as the highest peak of the composer's conceptual output - music like no others, adventuring into new spaces or rather completing the journey into those new realms of sound begun by Schoenberg's String Quartet No. 2 (coincidence?) and mostly continued by Webern. Profoundly touching, characterised by its haunting stillness and extremely limited dynamics, this masterwork (in one single movement 6 hours long, as performed by the Flux Quartet) deserves at least one uninterrupted listening in the lifetime of any true and devoted music lover.
This post also features some key recordings of another American Master's music, Elliott Carter, including Charles Rosen's superb recording from 1983 and of course Ursula Oppens' classic survey. Plus, George Perle's intriguing piano serialism, Marc Neikrug's beautiful "Play with Music", Through Roses, in its first historical recording, and - closer to our days - David Lang's transcendent and somehow feldmanian Passion of The Little Match Girl, superbly performed by Paul Hillier's Theatre of Voices.
Morton Feldman
String Quartet No. 2
Flux Quartet
Mode 112 (2001)
Audio DVD ISO Image
Can be played back with VLC Player (free) (which will also show "tracks"/index),
or burned onto one Dual Layer DVD-R (8.5 Gb capacity) to play on any DVD Player.
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5/11/2013
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