Dr.Godfried-Willem RAES
Kursus Experimentele Muziek: Boekdeel 9: Literatuur en aktualiteit
Hogeschool Gent : Departement Muziek & Drama
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9205:
NEW MUSIC AND IMPROVISATION
by Carl Bergstrøm-Nielsen, composer, musician and teacher of improvisation as well as
graphic notation at Music Therapy, Aalborg University, Denmark.
This is a revised version of an article which was published for the first time in 1995 in
the programme book of Musica Nova, Copenhagen (Danish ISCM-Section), on the occasion of
the 1st Scandinavian Improvisation Festival.
Improvisation provides new musical insights and new playing experiences.
Please allow me to tell you a true story which also deals with the audience's point of
view. Some years ago Agathe Kaehr from the English experimental music group Edges told me
that after having graduated from the Conservatory of Berlin as a flute player in the
beginning of the seventies, she heard the English group AMM play an improvised concert. It
filled her with such enthusiasm that she decided to move to London in order to live where
this kind of music could be found at that time. I asked her what was so fascinating about
the music, and after a thoughtful pause she answered - that the silence before they played
was different. It had to do with the way in which they prepared themselves on the scene,
she thougt.
This story suggests that improvised music may have an especially concentrated atmosphere,
that the musician may acquire a new and more direct form of contact with the audience and
that the listener may experience a special excitement. An improvised performance is more
risky than a 'normal' one - this fact is stated "with letters in small print" on
the concert ticket, as the German Professor Behne put it newly in a lecture on the
psychology of improvisation. The audience often knows that and goes for it - there is a
greater element of sharing.
An improvised addition of voices to a melody must have been a common practise from the
Middle Ages and forth. And still in the seventeenth century organists who applied for an
employment as organist of the San Marco church in Venice solely did one thing at the
examination: they improvised. General bass numbers leave room for improvisation, cadenzas
in solo concertos do the same thing. Or, rather, they used to - for when have you last
heard a soloist improvise a cadenza? One easily gets the impression that improvisation, a
phenomenon which is a part of every other music culture, has wasted away in our Western
classical music. Organists may form an exception. The existence of exactly notated pieces
titled "Improvisation" might stand as a thought-provoking sign of the word
having actually lost its original meaning and here only stands for a free compositional
way of writing.
However, in the development of new music after 1945 improvisation has manifested itself as
an important element one cannot look away from without reducing what was produced by
composers, their thoughts as well as historical reality alarmingly. There are works that
leave some of its realization to the musician, and a practise for playing without rules
exists also. Early in the periode, a new aesthetic of art left room for indeterminacy in
performance, and notation was modified accordingly. The New York School does not employ
the concept of improvisation - but what happens here must be seen as a special variant of
it, and in all cases it had consequences. Feldman, Brown and Wolff went on with innovating
the notation. And soon this spread also to Eyurope. Stockhausen, Logothetis,
Haubenstock-Ramati are relevant names - in Denmark: Gudmundsen- Holmgreen, Lorentzen,
Plaetner and others.
We must try to differentiate between new notations ensuing improvisation and new notations
which are precise. This may be judged from practise. In some pieces by Wolff and with the
plus-minus-notation by Stockhausen, as a musician you may have enough to do with playing
what there is, and to accomplish it may take much time and practise. So other notations
can certainly also place the musician under an obligation.
But, the possibility of having greater freedom for the musician certainly also exists. And
such practises as well as free improvisation with no material from an outside composer at
all, was cultivated in various groups that arose in the last part of the sixties - AMM in
England from 66 (it still exists), Stockhausens group from 68, lasting a few years, and
many more. Danish Group for Alternative Music in the beginning of the seventies (where my
own engagement in all this started), and English Scratch Orchestra were organisations run
democratically by member composer/musicians theirselves - in both, improvisations as well
as pieces could appear on the programme of their concerts. Later, Danish Group for
Intuitive Music made concert series stressing pieces that contained improvisation.
In this, performance practise becomes sociologically significant, and probably some taboos
become offended from time to time. Improvisation groups can have a mixed line up of
members - for instance, in AMM conservatory trained Cornelius Cardew med with others
having a jazz background. Since AMM never play from notations it would be hard to place it
under a musical genre. Many other groups who never play from notations have jazz as their
background. But exceptions certainly exist - Vinko Globokar (living in France) never plays
from notations in his groups because he is ideologically against them, and Swiss group
Adesso plays a neat kind of chamber music suggesting that jazz is not the most common
background of its members. In the sphere of freely improvised music, it becomes
increasingly difficult to take old genre headings seriously.
In return, however, improvisation has come into its own in terms of creating its own
institutions. Examples include English Musician's Collectives, American Free Music
Societes, musician's cooperatives in Germany and Switzerland, Swedish FRIM, magazines,
regular radio programmes, record labels like English Matchless, Incus, Bead, Acta, !Quarz,
German FMP and Random Acoustics - and the music life of the cities of Stockholm and
London. Musicians will often not perceive their activity under a genre heading - other
then 'improvised music' which has become known in the concert life of London and
Stockholm. A terminological concept which has become accepted by many musicians is Derek
Bailey's "non-idiomatical" music. When genre headings are abandoned, so are also
their cultural identities. American experimental jazz in the sixties was intimately
connected to black culture - but in the subsequent development towards freer improvisation
in the seventies in European countries like England and Holland, it was taken over by
white musicians. If you can still call what you are doing "rock", it will evoke
associations among the public both of something nice they are familiar with and maybe of a
certain amount of subversiveness as well. But those who play just "improvised
music" seek and find their own music - it is an avantgarde attitude. - The name Logos
in Belgium stands for a concert group as well as for a concert hall and for a
comprehensive archive of performing material and recordings, all of it comprising various
experimental music, including improvised. In addition, in the eighties they lead the
improvising amateur group "Ghent Filharmonic". - In elementary music education
improvised elements has established itself. German periodical Ringgesprch fr
Gruppenimprovisation publishes a yearly, comprehensive calendar on courses in
improvisation. When the wall in Berlin, Germany was taken down in 1989 it became known in
the West that it had long been possible to study improvisation as a main subject at the
conservatory of Leipzig. One additional thing to mention here is the subject of Music
Therapy which in its modern form could not have come into existence without the
re-discovery of improvised music in experimental music culture after 1945. - So well,
something has indeed happened!
Groups and individuals can connect their improvisational practise to quite marked ideas.
Stockhausen's vision is spiritualistic, attaches itself to the old idea about a sounding
universe, the music of the spheres, and as he perceives it, there should be freedom from
clichees, to follow inspiration in every given moment. - Logos and Scratch Orchestra
rather had a vision of improvisation as having the possibility of becoming a new kind of
folk music, accessible to all, without style uniforms. In Scratch Orchestra, several
special improvisational genres existed, meeting various demands in the life of the group.
One had "scratch music" - a quiet music performed by each member according to
her/his own recipe at the beginning of meetings. "Improvisation rites" were
pieces having a composer, gathering the group around one activity, but they should not fix
it too much. Finally, one had "compositions" which might very well also be open
for improvisation, for instance pieces by Cage, LaMonte Young, Kosugi and Stockhausen. -
English David Toop undertook in the seventies very comprehensive studies in animal sounds
and communication and practised his flute playing outdoors. Viewing music as intimately
connected to its environment, a territory behaviour as it were, is something he shares
with other Englich composers and musicians.
One statement being at the same time beautyfully formulated, philosophically deep and very
subversive with respect to music theory comes from the American Earle Brown. He says:
"It is not possible, given any degree of optimism and generosity in regard to people
in general, to set a time limit on creative reflection or a limitation on the number of
people involved in the creation" (1966). If there can be no time limit to creative
reflection, then music can be created on the spot under the right circumstances -
improvisation is then a way of producing music having the same importance as composition
has. And if there can be no limitation on the number of people involved, then instant
creation of music can also take place collectively.
It is good to improvise without rules, but putting up frameworks is also a practise
capable of broadening the perspective. And written frameworks can be exchanged between
groups ... I find it deplorable that so few musicians till now coming from jazz and rock
backgrounds make such frameworks. I believe that in many cases, spoken agreements exist,
so the step to be taken should not be too big. We look much forward to seeing your
products!
Shortly described - frameworks may consist of words, like in the collections by
Stockhausen from 68 and 70 which both provokes associatons as well as they give precise
directions. See for instance this "Unanimity":
Play and/or sing
extremely long quiet sounds
and
extremely short loud sounds
Try to sing/play
more and more attacks
SYNCHRONOUSLY with the others
without visual signs.
And they may be sign systems of a different nature - or maybe picture-like,
with various degrees of freedom in the interpretation.
Our musical culture needs improvisation. Let us try to be part of the solution rather than
part of the problem!
Literature:
generally on improvisation: Derek Bailey: Improvisation. Its nature and practise in music.
(New ed. British Library National Sound Archive, London 1992). Editions exist in several
languages, including Japanese!
A music history book which also accounts for new notations since 1945 is Reginald Smith
Brindle: The New Music (Oxford University Press, sec. ed. 1986).
Filedate: 980420 - last update: 98-09-07
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