Boulez: Notations; Structures; ...explosante-fixe...

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential recording
Pierre Boulez is a genuine rarity, a conductor who holds his own as a respected composer. Here he conducts a trio of his own works, from his earliest-published composition, Notations, to the version of ...explosante-fixe... that he conducted at IRCAM in the early 1990s. The piano works reveal what Boulez treasures: extremity of contrast, bruised sonorities humming as constant color, and skewered virtuosity.

From Notations, things proceed to Structures pour deux pianos, where pianists Pierre-Laurent Aimard and Florent Boffard dash into, across, beyond, above, and below each other in clustering runs and spare, telling jabs. The 36-minute ...explosante-fixe... is a celebration of accelerated and intensified sonic forestry. Sophie Cherrier's solo MIDI flute is electronically tampered with as a chamber orchestra and two additional flutes seek to ensnare, overwhelm, and surround Cherrier with unending swirls of sound. Energetic would be too flat a word to describe this display of volume and shifting soundscapes. Boulez advances electroacoustic composition here and shows himself a spectacular performing visionary in his leadership of the piece. --Andrew Bartlett

Boulez: Notations; Structures; ...explosante-fixe..., Music, Pierre Boulez, Pierre Boulez, Pierre-Andre Valade, Ensemble InterContemporain, Emmanuelle Ophèle, Classical, Classical Artists, Classical Music, Collection of Contrapuntal/Improv. Pieces for Keyboard, Keyboard, Music for Tape/Electronics and Live Performer(s), Music for Two Keyboards
Boulez: ...Explosante-fixe...
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • One experiment, and two wonderfully accessible pieces, including a wild flute concerto
  • explosante-fixe marvelously luminous,shimmering to the end,
  • Boulez's most powerful work
Boulez: ...Explosante-fixe...

Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B0007404HI
Release Date: 2005-02-08

Tracks:

  1. I. Fantasque - Modere
  2. II. Tres Vif
  3. III. Assez Lent
  4. IV. Rythmique
  5. V. Doux Et Improvise
  6. VI. Rapide
  7. VII. Hieratique
  8. VII. Modere Jusqu A Tres Vif
  9. IX. Lointain - Calme
  10. X. Mecanique Et Tres Sec
  11. XI. Scintillant
  12. XII. Lent - Puissant Et Apre
  13. Chapitre I
  14. Chapitre II (Pieces 1-2, Encarts 1-4, Textes 1-6)
  15. Transitoire VII - Interstitiel 1

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars One experiment, and two wonderfully accessible pieces, including a wild flute concerto.......2006-04-03

This Deutsche Grammophon disc--originally released in 1996 but reissued in the "Echo 20/21" series for Pierre Boulez's 80th birthday--contains three pieces by the great French composer, conductor, and theorist. The first two pieces are writen for piano, "Notations" is performed by Pierre-Laurent Aimard, and on "Structures pour deux pianos, Livre II" Aimard is accompanied by Florent Boffard. The third, "...explosante-fixe..." is for solo MIDI flute (Sophier Cherrier), two flutes (Emmanuelle Orphele and Pierre-Andre Valade), electronics, and orchestra, here the Ensemble Intercontemporain conducted by Boulez himself.

"Notations" (1945) is a series of twelve piano miniatures written in the very early days of Boulez's career and is fact the earliest piece he has published. Initially neglected after their composition, two Notations (5 and 9) were quietly used in "Pli selon pli", and then the work was fully uncovered in 1970s, when the composer embarked on orchestrating them. While the orchestral versions--much longer and of course with a greater range of colour--are impressive, the original piano Notations are a delight as well. Each consists only of twelve measures, featuring a twelve-tone row in much the same fashion as the work of Anton Webern. In spite of certain formal commonalities, however, the pieces widely range from free (e.g. 1) to tightly rhythmic (4, 6), contemplative (3) to frenetic (2). If you like Gyorgy Ligeti's "Musica Ricercata", you'll find this quite enjoyable. Aimard's performance here is so confident and poised, the man is a titan of contemporary piano repertoire.

"Structures, Livre II" (1956-61) shows that a decade later Boulez had come out from Webern's shadow and was expanding serialism with original contributions. Boulez had caught John Cage's fascination with musical chance operations, and so much of the material is left to the discretion of the performer (a feature shared by his Piano Sonata No. 3 of the same era). What is obligatory, however, is rigidly notated; the piece features serialisation of all elements, rhythm and dynamics too, not just pitch. Boulez even specifies the exact height of the pedal. Thus, the work is a strange combination of freedom and severity. This is not Boulez at his most accessible: the music of the two pianos is interrelated, but in not so charming a fashion as Stockhausen acheived in his "Gruppen" for three orchestras. For a more entertaining example of Boulez's thought during the mid-1950s, I'd recommend the piano sonata.

"...explosante-fixe..." (1991-93), taking its title from a line in Andre Breton's NADJA, was first conceived in the early 1970s when Boulez oversaw the founding of IRCAM and was interested in how cooperation between electronic technicians and composers might serve music. However, the state of the technology didn't satisfy Boulez at the time, and the work was finally presented anew twenty years later. In this piece, one of Boulez's most eerie and colourful, the concerto concept is vastly expanded through electronics: one MIDI flute performs great feats of sound high above the capabilities of the other instruments, while two normal flutes double its acrobatics in imperfect imitation and an orchestra fills out the sound. The work has an elegant formal scheme: it begins with two "transitory" sections derived from elementary material, and the elementary material is finally presented at the end, so that the piece seems to go from a wide cloud to a point. In between, there are two electronic interstitial passages. Yet, this piece requires no real formal understanding of musicology, it just sounds great. The early wall of sound gives way to, as it is often describes, a house-of-mirrors, which in turn leads to a liberation of all elements with thundering percussion and roaring violin, and the final "Originel" is shy and innocent, As usual, the Ensemble Intercontemporain give a flawless performance and show themselves as the premier interpreters of Boulez's work.

All in all, "...explosante-fixe..." is certainly the most accessible piece Boulez has written and so this is disc a fine introduction to his soundworld. Established fans will love this reading of the piano pieces.

5 out of 5 stars explosante-fixe marvelously luminous,shimmering to the end,.......2005-04-19

There are numerous recordings now of these "Notations",Aimard plays them with the right gesture you come to hear the "spectres" of the "First Sonata" is some the exposed brutal lines; the pointillism, and fast as possible lines,althgough this from a young composer within occupied Paris.The listening experience is indeed transitory,good for students of the new and are like finding 'seeds' in an Egyptian tomb and planting them to get now Boulez's orchestral "Notations".

If you know the "First Book" of "structures" the "Livre II" is more sophisticated,overdetermined, Stockhausen once quipped that Boulez places too many details in his music unneccessarily, well he may; it is the results that count. I find this "Livre" II" not as open as the first, the exposed lines the reiteration of the 12 tone in the "Livre I" was exciting,the crossing, and antiphonal diagonals, the dialogue of one piano to the other was explited by Boulez, there is that as well here in "Livre II" but not as extreme; although there is not that much time that separates the two books. But the "First Book" utilized electronic music thinking,of distributions of density, register, texture. I recall the old Kontarsky Brothers recording was/is definitive in many respects; Ligeti even did an exhaustive analysis of the "First Book" "structures" charting the way the 12 unfolded in seemingly endlees arrays, configurations,visiting all the registers of the piano,yet keeping a focus where you can distinguish the various layers, the :Livre II: has more convolutions at work and more direct,the continuously moving,(32nd-64th notes) upper register lines is like a clique now in the modern piano as Ferneyhough and Finnissy's music exhibit lots of these ideas.
Yes cannot agree more with the other review "explosante-fixe" is a primary work with shimmering,luminous moments well this is an important dimension to Boulez' s aesthetic strategy,luike his earlier "Eclat" the almost floating "magical" like timbres, fast furious yet incredibly controlled you never sense any moment has an independence from its origin, and Boulez we find here as well has developed a new language with at times simple iterative patterns, but allowing the solo moments to come forward, wonderful lyricism as well in the flutes, compelling actually, for it is non-pointillistic lines in the flutes,many times inhabiting the rich lower regions of the flutes, perhaps the paradigm of late capital (as Jameson said someplace) renders one's creativity to contract, to pull in and find accessible points, Boulez really did that later with then "Sur Incises" and "Anthemes" both works when placed alongside "explosante-fixe" seem like incidental passing "etudes".
Here however I think "explosante-fixe" is overly long, the ending moments(last 10 minutes) all seem gratuitous,like Boulez is searching for something that is not really there,making the flute repeat material(s) already heard;it makes the piece heavier then which is not the premise of the work,in all the full "tutti" punctuations, the swells of volumes with the flute above,like a lost soul.And the flute timbral with incessant iterative presence grows boring quickly, you want to savor the flute timbre, and you do that by contrast variation and simply not hearing it continuously. Boulez however keeps a luminous timbral quality throughout,clean and threadbare that is the electronics at work.The electronic moment are not clique-ish at all,but function well that was the IRCAM philosophy to make electronics,computer systems to function in conjunction with music,the creator but separate as well, to find a :meeting place:,which they did in Paris,I like the compact sound he gets here as well,making the various flutes come out from it,yet still being blended into the whole,the body of timbre, nothing really that is independent as the flutes seems to not dominate the proceedings, yet this is a quasi-post-modern concerto,well! redefined,. Wonderful cover art,finding the sense of movement,sparked forward into an unknown.

5 out of 5 stars Boulez's most powerful work.......2005-03-20

This is a reissue in the DG 20/21 Echo series of the disc which was originally released in 1996, with excellent improved artwork. "...explosante-fixe..." is the highlight, without question the most powerful of all of Boulez's compositions. For me, this is the reward for persevering through several of his less compelling pieces until finally hearing it! (This is a good year to hear Boulez -- DG is releasing a slew of new recordings in honor of his 80th birthday.)

I was confused as to its place in the Boulez chronology. Here's why -- "explosante," an open-ended work, was apparently the first composition Boulez worked on at IRCAM in the early 1970s. In the form presented here, though, "explosante" was finalized a decade after "Repons," which was finalized in 1984, but "explosante" was recorded first, in 1994, while "Repons" wasn't recorded and released on disc until 1998. Clear now?

I have to say I am underwhelmed by "Repons" (see my 7/13/01 review), but "...explasante-fixe..." marks a tremendous advance over the earlier work. While "Repons" is shimmery and Debussian, "explosante" is quite forceful, coming closer to sounding like Xenakis than anything else Boulez has done. An electro-acoustic work featuring the midi flute of Sophie Cherrier along with two more flutes and the Ensemble Intercontemporain, the form is three instrumental movements separated by two electronic interludes (interstitiel). It's ironic, perhaps, that when Boulez decides to let fly with his most powerful work he does it with a flute piece, but this is no ordinary flute -- the electronic amplification makes it possible for Cherrier to cut through even the densest of passages. The IRCAM technology is utilized to its fullest.

The two piano pieces are quite fine as well. "Notations," Boulez's earliest composition, sounds very much like Schoenberg and Webern, and Pierre-Laurent Aimard performs them fantastically. "Structures II" is tougher (though not as tough as the Piano Sonata No. 2 -- check out Pollini's ferocious recording for instance), a duo played by Aimard and Florent Boffard, but on this disc it is a perfect segue from the introverted "Notations" to the wild energy of "explosante."
Boulez: Notations; Structures; ...explosante-fixe...
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • One experiment, and two wonderfully accessible pieces, including a wild flute concerto
  • Magnifique
  • Who needs a sell-out like Gorecki with music this moving?
  • classic Boulez penetrable, sensual and mind probing
  • Música de laboratorio
Boulez: Notations; Structures; ...explosante-fixe...

Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

All Works by BoulezAll Works by Boulez | Boulez, Pierre | ( B ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
PianoPiano | Keyboard | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
Deutsche Grammophon: MusicDeutsche Grammophon: Music | Specialty Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Pierre Boulez: Rituel / Eclat / Multiples - Ensemble InterContemporain / BBC Symphony Orchestra

ASIN: B000001GOY
Release Date: 1996-01-23

Tracks:

  1. Notations: Xll. Lent - Puissant et apre
  2. Structures pour deux pianos - Livre II: Chapitre I
  3. Structures pour deux pianos - Livre II: Chapitre II (Pieces 1 - 2, Encarts 1 - 4, Textes 1 - 6)
  4. ...explosante-fixe...: Trasitoire VII - Interstitiel 1, Transitoire V - Interstitiel 2, Originel

Amazon.com essential recording

Pierre Boulez is a genuine rarity, a conductor who holds his own as a respected composer. Here he conducts a trio of his own works, from his earliest-published composition, Notations, to the version of ...explosante-fixe... that he conducted at IRCAM in the early 1990s. The piano works reveal what Boulez treasures: extremity of contrast, bruised sonorities humming as constant color, and skewered virtuosity.

From Notations, things proceed to Structures pour deux pianos, where pianists Pierre-Laurent Aimard and Florent Boffard dash into, across, beyond, above, and below each other in clustering runs and spare, telling jabs. The 36-minute ...explosante-fixe... is a celebration of accelerated and intensified sonic forestry. Sophie Cherrier's solo MIDI flute is electronically tampered with as a chamber orchestra and two additional flutes seek to ensnare, overwhelm, and surround Cherrier with unending swirls of sound. Energetic would be too flat a word to describe this display of volume and shifting soundscapes. Boulez advances electroacoustic composition here and shows himself a spectacular performing visionary in his leadership of the piece. --Andrew Bartlett

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars One experiment, and two wonderfully accessible pieces, including a wild flute concerto.......2006-04-03

This Deutsche Grammophon disc contains three pieces by the great French composer, conductor, and theorist. The first two pieces are writen for piano, "Notations" is performed by Pierre-Laurent Aimard, and on "Structures pour deux pianos, Livre II" Aimard is accompanied by Florent Boffard. The third, "...explosante-fixe..." is for solo MIDI flute (Sophier Cherrier), two flutes (Emmanuelle Orphele and Pierre-Andre Valade), electronics, and orchestra, here the Ensemble Intercontemporain conducted by Boulez himself. It should be notated that the recording was re-released in 2005 in the "Echo 20/21" series for the composer's 80th birthday, and if artwork and packaging matter to you, the new edition may be preferable to the original 1996 disc.

"Notations" (1945) is a series of twelve piano miniatures written in the very early days of Boulez's career and is fact the earliest piece he has published. Initially neglected after their composition, two Notations (5 and 9) were quietly used in "Pli selon pli", and then the work was fully uncovered in 1970s, when the composer embarked on orchestrating them. While the orchestral versions--much longer and of course with a greater range of colour--are impressive, the original piano Notations are a delight as well. Each consists only of twelve measures, featuring a twelve-tone row in much the same fashion as the work of Anton Webern. In spite of certain formal commonalities, however, the pieces widely range from free (e.g. 1) to tightly rhythmic (4, 6), contemplative (3) to frenetic (2). If you like Gyorgy Ligeti's "Musica Ricercata", you'll find this quite enjoyable. Aimard's performance here is so confident and poised, the man is a titan of contemporary piano repertoire.

"Structures, Livre II" (1956-61) shows that a decade later Boulez had come out from Webern's shadow and was expanding serialism with original contributions. Boulez had caught John Cage's fascination with musical chance operations, and so much of the material is left to the discretion of the performer (a feature shared by his Piano Sonata No. 3 of the same era). What is obligatory, however, is rigidly notated; the piece features serialisation of all elements, rhythm and dynamics too, not just pitch. Boulez even specifies the exact height of the pedal. Thus, the work is a strange combination of freedom and severity. This is not Boulez at his most accessible: the music of the two pianos is interrelated, but in not so charming a fashion as Stockhausen acheived in his "Gruppen" for three orchestras. For a more entertaining example of Boulez's thought during the mid-1950s, I'd recommend the piano sonata.

"...explosante-fixe..." (1991-93), taking its title from a line in Andre Breton's NADJA, was first conceived in the early 1970s when Boulez oversaw the founding of IRCAM and was interested in how cooperation between electronic technicians and composers might serve music. However, the state of the technology didn't satisfy Boulez at the time, and the work was finally presented anew twenty years later. In this piece, one of Boulez's most eerie and colourful, the concerto concept is vastly expanded through electronics: one MIDI flute performs great feats of sound high above the capabilities of the other instruments, while two normal flutes double its acrobatics in imperfect imitation and an orchestra fills out the sound. The work has an elegant formal scheme: it begins with two "transitory" sections derived from elementary material, and the elementary material is finally presented at the end, so that the piece seems to go from a wide cloud to a point. In between, there are two electronic interstitial passages. Yet, this piece requires no real formal understanding of musicology, it just sounds great. The early wall of sound gives way to, as it is often describes, a house-of-mirrors, which in turn leads to a liberation of all elements with thundering percussion and roaring violin, and the final "Originel" is shy and innocent, As usual, the Ensemble Intercontemporain give a flawless performance and show themselves as the premier interpreters of Boulez's work.

All in all, "...explosante-fixe..." is certainly the most accessible piece Boulez has written and so this disc a fine introduction to his soundworld. Established fans will love this reading of the piano pieces.

5 out of 5 stars Magnifique.......2004-06-03

Ce disque est absolument magnifique. De la Grande musique, du Grand Boulez!

5 out of 5 stars Who needs a sell-out like Gorecki with music this moving?.......2001-01-25

...explosante-fixe... is Boulez's masterpiece. Like many of his works since the late 1950s (beginning with works like Structures Book II [also on this disk] and Pli selon pli), Boulez focuses on a central collection of pitches and explores these in various colorations and permutations. This is a technique, then, not unlike what one finds in Berio or Messiaen. The result is that ...explosante-fixe... is also one of Boulez's most accessible works.

It's also one of his most moving. It's well known that _Originel_ with which the piece closes doubles as Boulez's _Memoriale_, a piece written in memory of the flautist Laurence Beauregard. Yet even setting this association aside, one finds that, after immersing oneself in the 30 minutes that lead up to _Originel_, the last seven or eight minutes are among perhaps the most moving moments in the music of the last half of the twentieth century.

And the best thing is Boulez does it all without selling out!

5 out of 5 stars classic Boulez penetrable, sensual and mind probing.......2000-04-10

Explosante-Fixe was one of the first work Boulez engaged with the computer assisted musical structures and regular instruments at IRCAM ,the new music mecca somewhere in the bowels of Paris. Of his generation Boulez regardless of the engagement of an intellectual agenda for music always imparts his deep sensual feel to his works. He certainly learned much from Debussy. This work concerns the brokeness of chords the arpeggiated sound. There is more than one version and Boulez is the incessant re-negotiator of his work, always rethinking,revising, it points to the values of the postmodernist epoch, which I guess has run its course. The Notations for piano here is a waste of time,perhaps a vanity, Maitre Boulez should record the subsequent realizations for orchestra. That work has a dramatic power a deep labyrinth of sound and timbre exploiting the full colours of the modernist orchestra. I know Barenboim did them with Chicago, now a committed instrument to the Boulezian cause,coming from the deeply Germanic of the Solti years. But these piano pieces are like young budding sketches,pointillistic, engaged with the full register of the piano's roaring and stridently bright sonorities. It is like the seeds archeologist have found in Egyptian tombs, when planted some centuries later,still bore fruit. Needless to say the ghost of Meesiaen appears here in the piano solo hovering above. The Structures is the laboritorio of the piano,coldly conceived,brutal,uncompromising and rugged, and from a fascinating perspective is like an electric music thinker's realization for the two pianos. You actually cannot distinguish where one begins and the other trails into it. This work is pure expressionism, yet gently poetic and evocative. The fact that this work still elicits negative responses points to its avant-gardism, its ability to shock and subvert, change and challenge the confines of the classical canon

3 out of 5 stars Música de laboratorio.......2000-03-23

El Sr. Boulez en este disco de tres de sus propias obras nos deja con sabor a poco. Esta es música de laboratorio, inexpresiva.

En ...explosante-fixe... le recomiendo que baje el volumen, puesto que es media hora de agudicimos que pueden llegar a resentir el oído, y la verdad no vale la pena. Las obras para piano Notations y Structures, son mucho mejores, por ellas lo de tres estrellas. Aclaro que soy un apasionado por la música del Siglo XX, pero lastimosamente el Sr. Boulez como compositor no me dice mucho.

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