Elliott Carter: Eight Compositions

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential recording
With a full orchestra, Elliott Carter can spread his wings with clangorous grandness. When he goes with a smaller unit, as he does here, he can also do wonderful things--expanding on his tonal and timbral studies with telescoped intensity. This generous 78-minute collection begins in 1993 with Charles Neidich unfurling Gra for the solo clarinet, a piece that rivals anything on the extraordinary Giacinto Scelsi's Complete Works for the Clarinet for breadth and investigative power. Carter, an octogenarian when he wrote Gra, has, this collection shows, been on similar paths since at least 1948, when the CD's closer, Sonata for Violoncello and Piano, came to be. It shows off Carter's proclivity for middle-register grounding and fast outward motion, always tracking toward the unfamiliar and creating electric excitement. As a compendium of one of the greatest American composer's solo and chamber works, Eight Compositions can't be beat. --Andrew Bartlett

Elliott Carter: Eight Compositions, Music, Fred Sherry, Charles Neidich, Elliott Carter, Group for Contemporary Music at Columbia University, Harvey Sollberger, David Starobin, Charles Wuorinen, Martin Goldray, Rolf Schulte, Cello with Keyboard, Chamber, Chamber Music & Recitals, Clarinet Solo/Sonata, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Flute Solo/Sonata, Guitar Solo, Trio for Mixed Instruments without Keyboard, Violin Solo, Violin with Keyboard
Elliott Carter: Eight Compositions
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • uncompromisingly incomprehensibly obtuse
  • Fabulous music by one of America's greatest composers
  • Fabulous music by one of America's greatest
  • Great collection by a genuinely colossal figure.
  • How refreshing such vehement dislike ...
Elliott Carter: Eight Compositions

Manufacturer: Bridge
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. The Music of Elliott Carter, Volume Five - Nine Compositions (1994-2002)
  2. Elliott Carter: The Complete music for Piano
  3. The Music of Elliott Carter, Vol. 1: Vocal Works (1975-1981)
  4. The Music of Elliott Carter Vol. 7; Boston Concerto, Cello Concerto, ASKO Concerto, Dialogues
  5. The Music of Elliott Carter, Volume Four

ASIN: B000003GJ2
Release Date: 1994-06-28

Tracks:

  1. Gra - Charles Neidich
  2. Enchanted Prlds - Harvey Sollberger/Fred Sherry
  3. Duo - Rolf Schulte/Martin Goldray
  4. Scrivo In Vento - Harvey Sollberger
  5. Changes - David Starobin
  6. Con Leggerezza Pensosa (Omaggio A Italo Calvino) - Charles Neidich/Rolf Schulte/Fred Sherry
  7. Riconoscenza Per Goffredo Petrassi - Rolf Schulte
  8. Son: Moderato - Fred Sherry/Charles Wuorinen
  9. Son: Vivace, Molto Leggiero - Fred Sherry/Charles Wuorinen
  10. Son: Adagio - Fred Sherry/Charles Wuorinen
  11. Son: Allegro - Fred Sherry/Charles Wuorinen

Amazon.com essential recording

With a full orchestra, Elliott Carter can spread his wings with clangorous grandness. When he goes with a smaller unit, as he does here, he can also do wonderful things--expanding on his tonal and timbral studies with telescoped intensity. This generous 78-minute collection begins in 1993 with Charles Neidich unfurling Gra for the solo clarinet, a piece that rivals anything on the extraordinary Giacinto Scelsi's Complete Works for the Clarinet for breadth and investigative power. Carter, an octogenarian when he wrote Gra, has, this collection shows, been on similar paths since at least 1948, when the CD's closer, Sonata for Violoncello and Piano, came to be. It shows off Carter's proclivity for middle-register grounding and fast outward motion, always tracking toward the unfamiliar and creating electric excitement. As a compendium of one of the greatest American composer's solo and chamber works, Eight Compositions can't be beat. --Andrew Bartlett

Customer Reviews:

1 out of 5 stars uncompromisingly incomprehensibly obtuse.......2004-03-31

If only Carter would write electronic(ELEKTROACOUSMATIK, ELECTROINSTRUKTIVIST) music, instead of torturing those poor violins and violoncellos!(WHICH WERE DESIGNED TO PLAY TONAL MUSIC)....so much of this post-schoenbergian stuff just sounds "NAUGHTY" and "WRONGNOTE-EEE(K !)"...WHEREAS...my ear, at any rate, has a far greater tolerance for the conjunct/disjunct a-melodic spasms of so much current music(s) if elektronik sound generation is used..... unexpected AND UNLIMITED timbres carry no previous associations....so we can accept (AND WELCOME!)48-notes-to-the-octave-scales....as well as toilets flushing in counterpoint with wind chimes, buzzsaws, shakuhachis.......THE PERFORMANCES HERE ARE FULL-OF-FRIGHTENING-FABULOSITY!......AND, MAYBE IF I TAKE THE TIME TO LISTEN TO THIS CD 10 GAZILLION MORE TIMES, I'LL BEGIN TO ACTUALLY GET PLEASURE FROM IT(ALTHOUGH MUSIK/AS/PLEASURE IZ PROBABLY ANATHEMA TO CARTER AND HIS DISCIPLES....WHO PREFER "SERIOUS AND UNCOMPROMISING" STUFF!)...RANT RANT RANT..... yes I'm a composer too and write my share of self-referential elitist effusions.....but STRIVE TO juxtapose complexity with simplicity......without such contrasts, music becomes dry and lifeless.....look what happened to UNCLE IGOR......FIREBIRD/SACRE/PETTROUCHKA/LES NOCES/PULCINELLA/FAIRYS KISS/CAPRICCIO.....all masterpieces....AND THEN HE HAD TO GO INTERNATIONAL AND DILUTE HIS POWER BY WRITING FAKE-BACH AND PANDERING TO THE LIKES OF ROBERT CRAFT....WHO CONVINCED HIM TO BECOME AN ARNOLDWORSHIPPER.....BABBITT HAD THE RIGHT IDEA IN HIS SETTING OF JAMES JOYCES"WING AND A
PRAYER" FOR SOPRANO AND TAPE....A TRUE MEISTERPIECE.....THE ELEKTRONIK BLIP/BLEEPS PERFECTLY COMPLEMENT THE TEXT.....

5 out of 5 stars Fabulous music by one of America's greatest composers.......2004-02-04

This disc is full of some of the most interesting and beautiful compositions by one of American's greatest composers. Every piece is both delightful and challenging, and each rewards repeat listening. Some of these pieces needed some time for me to grow into them, but I very fond of all them now. Others I found to be terrific right away. You mileage may vary!

By the way, the performances are spectacular. It is difficult to imagine the possibility of performances with greater charm and commitment. The players believe in every note, and play it all with superb confidence and musicianship.

5 out of 5 stars Fabulous music by one of America's greatest.......2004-02-04

This disc is full of some of the most interesting and beautiful compositions by one of American's greatest composers. Every piece is both delightful and challenging, and each rewards repeat listening. Some of these pieces needed some time for me to grow into them, but I very fond of all them now. Others I found to be terrific right away. You mileage may vary!

By the way, the performances are spectacular. It is difficult to imagine the possibility of performances with greater charm and commitment. The players believe in every note, and play it all with superb confidence and musicianship.

5 out of 5 stars Great collection by a genuinely colossal figure........2003-07-01

Elliott Carter (b. 1908) is a composer whose music seems to inspire either love or hatred, with little in between. Carter started out studying with Nadia Boulanger in the 1930s, then wrote several years' worth of neo-Copland music before finally finding his own voice in the mid-1940s. Beginning with his Piano Sonata, Carter began writing in an exclusively atonal idiom, constructing works that are breathtaking in their complexity and integrity.

This is not music for the dilettantes who like to play Schubert like muzak when they are cleaning their house or chatting with friends. This is uncompromising, "serious" (often playfully so) music intended for listeners who approach it with the respect it deserves and with the willingness to spend the time required (however long that may be) to appreciate it. If you're looking for instant comprehension, look into [stuff] like "The World's Most Soothing Classical Album" and other corporate delights.

This is a truly invaluable collection, with important works culled from 45 years of Carter's creative development. The earliest work here was written when the composer was 40 and the latest when he was 85, but evident throughout is his daring, originality, extraordinary technique and adherence to his own creative vision. This is beautiful music by virtually any measure. The performances, mostly by the Group for Contemporary Music, are superb. This collection speaks for itself.

Milton Babbitt once asked, "Who cares if you listen?" The point of that notorious essay was that there is now more to music than Tchaikovsky, and that composers have an obligation to themselves and their art and not to close-minded, musically unlettered philistines. Though he wrote that essay in 1958, Babbitt's thesis is unfortunately still valid, as evidenced by the negative, dismissive reviews of Carter's music featured here. If you don't like it, don't listen to it; but don't attack the composer for being a fraud if you won't take the time to familiarize yourself with his music beyond a cursory listen.

4 out of 5 stars How refreshing such vehement dislike ..........2002-02-08

Lloyd Schwartz, in his liner notes to Speculum Musicae's essential recordings of Carter's vocal works (Bridge 9014) writes of his early Frost settings that they are "like the early realistic drawings of a great abstract painter". It would be difficult to come up with a better analogy, not only for Carter's post-1950 compositions but for all works that have willfully surrendered any notion of conventional tonal centers. Tonality in this equation is the equivalent of the figurative in painting. Non tonal works are correspondingly abstract, like the paintings of Pollock or Motherwell: all figurative elements in such works are either accidental or part of a designated encounter of tonal and non tonal aspects (as in Maxwell Davies or the de Koonig of the 'women' series). Now, it is quite clear that, in music as in painting or even dance, there will a number of quite intelligent persons who will never accept the value of abstraction, who think abstract expressionism for instance so much tosh, a Greenbergian legerdemain concocted to brutally anchor american art in the history books as new, valid in its own right, not sub- par europeanism. And it is in fact unfortunate that such progressive art has too often been brandished as an ideological jackhammer, out to bring down the venerable Penn stations of the prevalent taste: this is what happens when true creativity gets ossified in academia. But for those who do not find abstraction anathema, who are as they say adventurous, it should be made clear that all the hyperbolic smoke surrounding Carter is not without fire. He may not be the greatest american composer just like Pollock is hardly the greatest american painter but there are brilliant things to discover here.
This however is not the disc to start with: it's well performed no doubt and the pieces are always interesting if not the best of Carter (except for the cello sonata). Just as it is not really possible to grasp Pollock's 'advance' without a knowledge of what preceded him (as in Kandinsky or the German expressionists: ie, how the figure gets progressively disintegrated and for what reasons) so with Carter (or Schoenberg for that matter) it is best to start with an earlier transitional work like his piano sonato of 1946. It's an astounding piece: Rosen does it well, Jacobs was great, but I favour Watson on Virgin because he choses to program it together with Copland's own monumental sonata and Barber's fighting romanticism. (all these were written in the 40s, an amazing decade for keyboard works: in addition to the above it is also when Dutilleux publishes his luminous and equally transitional sonata). After this, I would move to the cello sonata of '48 on Nonesuch (the better rendering) before taking a deep breath for the plunge into the mind boggling first quartet. (The Composers are the best on Nonesuch; they convey the excitement of discovery. The great Arditti is next and best all round. I find the later Juilliard plodding and too closely recorded for comfort: listen to the crisp page turning throughout). Then, you could turn to the superb Night Fantasies (by Rosen or Oppens) which echo Copland Night thoughts. From there, you're on your own but down forget the vocal pieces: Carter is the premiere reader of American poetry: in addition to Frost and Dickinson, he sets Bishop, Lowell, Ashbery, etc.

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