 J’ai un faible pour Morton Feldman (1926-1987), compositeur et pianiste d’origine ukrainienne, au centre, avec John Cage, de la New York School (Christian Wolff, Earle Brown, David Tudor) et maître d’un temps musical décalé, alangui, aplati. Cette intégrale publiée chez Mode (14ème parution à lui consacrée) propose ses pièces pour deux instruments-phares dans son parcours, le violoncelle et le piano – lui-même compose sur un Steinway au son singulier et assourdi, qui le suit sa vie durant et concourt à créer son univers sonore. Le double disque fait la part belle au monument (par sa longueur – en rapport avec la mémoire, dit Feldman, se référant à Marcel Proust –, et l’utilisation de celle-ci, façon de permettre l’oubli – et le rappel – de motifs musicaux), hypnotique, captivant, qu’est "Patterns in a Chromatic Field", mais offre aussi un premier enregistrement (la Sonatina) d’une œuvre de jeunesse qui, puisant dans l’héritage de Béla Bartók, dévoile quelques indices de l’esthétique naissante de Feldman, ainsi qu’une partition inédite ("Two Pieces"), influencée par les leçons qu’il suit alors auprès de Stefan Wolpe. En début et en fin d’album, Durations 2, une partition graphique de 1960, déploie deux interprétations, exemple de la flexibilité (les hauteurs sont écrites, mais sans indication de durée) offerte aux interprètes par la notation sur papier millimétré et nouveau territoire de liberté pour le compositeur : une musique qui n’émanerait de rien, de nulle part. (Bernard Vincken)  This release brings together ALL of Morton Feldman’s compositions for cello and piano, including unpublished works and a first recording. Together, these works tell the story of Feldman’s music. They span 35 years — over half his lifetime — from when he was searching for his voice as a student to when he was opening new doors in the last years of his life. The album is bookended by two realizations the graphic score “Durations 2” (1960), giving an opportunity to hear what the flexibility of graphic notation can bring. The “Sonatina” (1946) is earliest work here, and a first recording. Displaying the influence of Béla Bartók, Feldman wrote for the cello sound he loved without fully understanding the realities of playing the instrument. The resulting solo part is naively virtuosic and often even impossible to play. For this recording, Stephen Marotto keeps as close as possible to the written score, aiming to fulfill what Feldman heard in his mind’s ear. By 1948, Feldman had been studying privately with the composer Stefan Wolpe for several years. The unpublished “Two Pieces,” of that year is a fluctuating music held together not by logic, but through its carefully poised gestures — what Wolpe called “shape.” While the emotional drama of this and other early works would soon disappear from Feldman’s music, it was above all the idea of “shape” that remained with him for the rest of his life. In 1950, Feldman met John Cage, who shepherded him into the world of the New York avant-garde. The unpublished, compact, “Composition for cello and piano” (1951) is a sudden breakthrough, yet it already contains the DNA of his very last works in its minimal material and blurred memories of sounds. “For Stockhausen, Cage, Stravinsky, and Mary Sprinson” (1972) is an ephemeral, unpublished piece, a shard of music broken off from the main body of work Feldman was producing at the time. It consists of just two musical moments separated by silence — the same chord expressed in two different ways. At almost 1 hour 29 minutes, “Patterns in a Chromatic Field” (1981) is of Feldman’s late, long duration period of works and it perhaps the best known of the works recorded here. (Samuel Clay Birmaher)

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