FrançaisEnglish
Recherche avancée
Accueil  Catalogue  Contemporain  NW80816
MON COMPTE
MES ENVIES
MON PANIER
Catégories
Labels
Informations
John Joseph Becker : Soundpieces 1-7.Harris, Kubera, Lancaster, Dukovski, Tendler.
Format : 2 CD
Durée totale : 01:43:08

Enregistrement : 24/04-18/09/2019
Lieu : New-York
Pays : Etats-Unis
Prise de son : Studio / Stereo

Label : New World
Référence : NW80816
EAN : 0093228081623
Code Prix : DM035A

Année d'édition : 2020
Date de sortie : 01/02/2020

Genre : Classique
John Joseph Becker (1886-1961)
Soundpiece n° 1
Soundpiece n° 2
Soundpiece n° 3
Soundpiece n° 4
Soundpiece n° 5
Soundpiece n° 6
Soundpiece n° 7

Conrad Harris, violon
Joseph Kuber, piano
Margaret Lancaster, flûte
Vasko Dukovski, clarinette
Adam Tendler, piano
Quatuor FLUX

John J. Becker (1886–1961) is the least known of a group of composers who, by reputation, became known as “the American Five,” analogous to the better-known “Russian Five” or “French Six.” Becker’s cohorts consisted of Carl Ruggles, Henry Cowell, Wallingford Riegger, and Charles Ives. Ives, born 1874, was the oldest of the group and Cowell, born 1897, was the youngest, and in the 1920s and ’30s they were known as the most radical and dissonant of American composers. Becker could be briefly summarized as a confluence of dissonance and Catholicism. He became known as one of the leading proponents of a style invented by musicologist/composer Charles Seeger (1886–1979), who had been one of Cowell’s mentors, known as dissonant counterpoint, an idiom in which the traditional rules of counterpoint were reversed to produce maximum dissonance rather than consonance. In his own writings about Becker, Cowell emphasized his ties to Renaissance church polyphony, calling him “a Sixteenth-Century modern.” For a promotional pamphlet Becker produced, Cowell wrote that Becker “bases his style on the art of the great vocal polyphonists, de Lassus, Palestrina, Victoria, etc. Using their breadth and religious feeling, he has poured his own modern materials into the old polyphonic forms.” Elsewhere Becker can fall into a kind of modernist simulacrum of Classical-era style, in conventional four-part textures differentiated by the harshness of dissonant intervals between moving lines. He picked up Cowell’s passion for tone clusters, often pitting black keys on the piano against white (in common with some other early moderns like Stravinsky and Ornstein), and he made a notational fetish of large sharps and flats that were intended to apply to an entire chord. In his music, he said, there was no dissonance, because “dissonance replaced consonance as the norm.” Along with the Symphonia Brevis, the Concerto Arabesque, and a motoric percussion ensemble piece called The Abongo (which the percussion-loving Cage expressed admiration for), Becker’s seven chamber works abstractly called Soundpieces have proved the most public part of his output. This is the first recording to bring them altogether, and indeed the first commercial recording of several of them. That John Becker will remain the least-celebrated member of the American Five is probably inevitable. But at his best he achieves considerable eloquence in the then-new idiom of dissonant counterpoint, and a textural momentum and energy that seem all his own.

.  Ecrire une critique
Commander ce produit

25,44 €
Prix catalogue : 36,35 €
EN STOCK
Expédié sous 24h !
Produit éligible à la livraison gratuite
Livraison gratuite !
En savoir plus

ClicMag du mois
ClicMag n°125 - 04/2024
ClicMag n°125 - 04/2024
Infos label
New World
Tous les disques du label
Le site Internet du label
Faire connaître


Envoyer cet article à un ami.