Manoury - The Köln Trilogy - programme note

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THE KÖLN TRILOGY The architectures of the new symphony halls now being built in most of the great capitals of the world are among the most daring buildings of our time. Ignoring the principles based on which symphony halls used to be built, they provide entirely new viewpoints (as well as listening points). Built mostly during the 19th and early 20th centuries, the older halls were designed to accommodate the larger orchestras required by Postromantic works as well as the growing audience of symphonic concerts. In most cases the shapes of those halls were simple rectangular parallelepipeds on one of whose sides stood the stage, while the great majority of the audience sat in the space facing the stage, with in addition in some cases balconies at the far end and on the sides. The reason for this standardized shape is not random: it privileges a frontal perception of music that is the very basis of the sound constructions created by Classical and Romantic symphonies.[1] The arrangement of the orchestras also satisfies criteria related to this frontal principle: the louder instruments (percussions and brass) are placed at the back, while woodwinds are placed forward and higher up, and the strings are in the foreground. Another criterion is numerical: there are fewer low-pitched instruments than high-pitched instruments, whose spectrum is more limited. 32 violins to 8 double basses is a typical ratio. Such orchestras produce highly hierarchical sound constructions. Instruments are gathered together to form “families,” and even within each family, the woodwinds for example, identical instruments (flutes, oboes, clarinets, etc.) are also gathered together. During that entire age homogeneity was the golden rule that determined the ideal sound image. Classical and Romantic music imposed the hegemony of string instruments over the rest of the orchestras, and that hierarchical organization was also observed in the very makeup of instrument groupings. It is well-known that in the Classical age viola players were failed violinists, while double bass players were failed cellists. While absolutely necessary to the construction of symphonic sound, violas and double basses never played the most important parts. Without attempting a simplistic analogy between orchestra and society,[2] it can be said that orchestras were often viewed as mirror images of the bourgeois European societies of the 18th and 19th centuries. The gradual emancipation from the hierarchical constraints that ruled with an iron fist the sound canons of that age goes back to the very end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. Wagner’s orchestra – as fusional as ever was an orchestra – attempted to do away with the excessive unbalance among families of instruments. The famous orchestra pit of the Festspielhaus at Bayreuth, which places the orchestra underground, below the stage, produces a global sound with such a degree of fusion that it is almost impossible for the audience to determine whether, for instance, the flute is located on the right or left side.[3] From this perspective Parsifal’s orchestration, just like that of most of Wagner’s later works, ensures a brilliant match between sound and architecture. The works of Mahler and Strauss also give increasing importance to the expression of individual instruments, while still allowing, as in Wagner, for highly massive sound events. But the clearest “redistribution of the roles,” no longer assigned mainly to string instruments but also found in all the other families, is heard in Debussy’s works. From this specific perspective Jeux is the most premonitory work. This example was not ignored by the generations of composers that followed Debussy, and their attempts to pursue this direction were met with some success. Those approaches appeared to take a decisive turn in the 50s and 60s. Stockhausen’s Gruppen, and later Carré, Xenakis’ Terretektorh and Nomos Gama, Boulez’s Figures-Double-Prisme, tried each in its own way to redefine the orchestra in its internal arrangement as well as placement relative to the audience. At the time it was believed that the musical world was finally about to shake off


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