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Piano solo

[Composition sans titre] pour piano, composée dans les années 40 (1940)

First Piano Sonata (in One Movement) (1943)

Andante moderato pour piano (1944)

Self-Portrait pour piano (1945)

Illusions pour piano (1948)

Three Dances pour piano (avec tambour et verre dans le troisième mouvement) (1950)

Two Intermissions pour piano (1950)

Nature Pieces pour piano (1951)

Intersection 2 pour piano (1951)

Intermission 3 pour piano (1951)

Variations pour piano (1951)

Extensions 2 pour piano (1952)

Extensions 3 pour piano (1952)

Piano Piece 1952 (1952)

Intermission 4 pour piano (1952)

Intermission 5 pour piano (1952)

Intersection 3 pour piano (1953)

Intersection + pour piano (1953)

Intermission 6 pour un ou deux pianos (1953)

Three Pieces for Piano (1954)

Piano Piece 1955 (1955)

Piano Piece 1956 A (1956)

Piano Piece 1956 B (1956)

Piano (Three Hands) (1957)

Piano Four Hands (1958)

Last Pieces pour piano (1959)

Piano Piece (to Philip Guston) (1963)

Vertical Thoughts IV pour piano (1963)

Piano Piece 1964 (1964)

Piano (1977)

Triadic Memories pour piano (1981)

For Bunita Marcus pour piano (1985)

Palais de Mari pour piano (1986)

Musique de chambre pour piano solo

Four Instruments pour piano et trio à cordes (1975)

Piano and String Quartet (1985)

Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello (1987)

Musique de chambre pour piano(s)

[Composition sans titre] pour deux pianos et violoncelle (1950)

Projection 3 pour deux pianos (1951)

Extensions 4 pour trois pianos (1953)

Two Pieces for Two Pianos (1954)

Piece for Four Pianos (1957)

Two Pianos (1957)

[Composition sans titre] pour deux pianos (1958)

Vertical Thoughts 1 pour deux pianos (1963)

Two Pieces for Three Pianos (1966)

Five Pianos (1972)

Musique de chambre avec piano(s)

Sonata for Violin and Piano (1945)

Sonatina for Cello and Piano (1946)

Two Pieces pour violoncelle et piano (1948)

Piece for Violin and Piano (1950)

[Composition sans titre] pour violoncelle et piano (1951)

Extensions 1 pour violon et piano (1951)

Durations 2 pour violoncelle et piano (1960)

Durations 3 pour tuba, violon et piano (1961)

Vertical Thoughts 2 pour violon et piano (1963)

Four instruments pour cloches, piano, violon et violoncelle (1965)

Merce pour percussion et clavier (1969)

The Viola in My Life 3 pour alto et piano (1970)

Three Clarinets, Cello and Piano pour trois clarinettes, violoncelle et piano (1971)

Spring of Chosroes pour violon et piano (1977)

Why Patterns? pour flûte, piano et glockenspiel (1978)

Trio pour violon, violoncelle et piano (1980)

Patterns in a Chromatic Field pour violoncelle et piano (1981)

For John Cage pour violon et piano (1982)

Crippled Symmetry pour flûte, piano et percussions (1983)

For Philip Guston pour flûte, piano et percussions (1984)

For Christian Wolff pour flûte et claviers (piano et célesta : un seul exécutant) (1986)

Piano(s) et orchestre

Piano and Orchestra (1975)

Années 1940

[Composition sans titre] pour piano, composée dans les années 40 (1940)

First Piano Sonata (in One Movement) (1943)

Andante moderato pour piano (1944)

Self-Portrait pour piano (1945)

Sonata for Violin and Piano (1945)

Sonatina for Cello and Piano (1946)

Illusions pour piano (1948)

Two Pieces pour violoncelle et piano (1948)

Années 1950

[Composition sans titre] pour deux pianos et violoncelle (1950)

Piece for Violin and Piano (1950)

Three Dances pour piano (avec tambour et verre dans le troisième mouvement) (1950)

Two Intermissions pour piano (1950)

Projection 3 pour deux pianos (1951)

Variations pour piano (1951)

Intermission 3 pour piano (1951)

Intersection 2 pour piano (1951)

[Composition sans titre] pour violoncelle et piano (1951)

Extensions 1 pour violon et piano (1951)

Nature Pieces pour piano (1951)

Intermission 5 pour piano (1952)

Intermission 4 pour piano (1952)

Piano Piece 1952 (1952)

Extensions 3 pour piano (1952)

Extensions 2 pour piano (1952)

Intersection 3 pour piano (1953)

Intersection + pour piano (1953)

Intermission 6 pour un ou deux pianos (1953)

Extensions 4 pour trois pianos (1953)

Two Pieces for Two Pianos (1954)

Three Pieces for Piano (1954)

Piano Piece 1955 (1955)

Piano Piece 1956 A (1956)

Piano Piece 1956 B (1956)

Piano (Three Hands) (1957)

Piece for Four Pianos (1957)

Two Pianos (1957)

[Composition sans titre] pour deux pianos (1958)

Piano Four Hands (1958)

Last Pieces pour piano (1959)

Années 1960

Durations 2 pour violoncelle et piano (1960)

Durations 3 pour tuba, violon et piano (1961)

Piano Piece (to Philip Guston) (1963)

Vertical Thoughts 1 pour deux pianos (1963)

Vertical Thoughts IV pour piano (1963)

Vertical Thoughts 2 pour violon et piano (1963)

Piano Piece 1964 (1964)

Four instruments pour cloches, piano, violon et violoncelle (1965)

Two Pieces for Three Pianos (1966)

Merce pour percussion et clavier (1969)

Années 1970

The Viola in My Life 3 pour alto et piano (1970)

Three Clarinets, Cello and Piano pour trois clarinettes, violoncelle et piano (1971)

Five Pianos (1972)

Piano and Orchestra (1975)

Four Instruments pour piano et trio à cordes (1975)

Piano (1977)

Spring of Chosroes pour violon et piano (1977)

Why Patterns? pour flûte, piano et glockenspiel (1978)

Années 1980

Trio pour violon, violoncelle et piano (1980)

Patterns in a Chromatic Field pour violoncelle et piano (1981)

Triadic Memories pour piano (1981)

For John Cage pour violon et piano (1982)

Crippled Symmetry pour flûte, piano et percussions (1983)

For Philip Guston pour flûte, piano et percussions (1984)

Piano and String Quartet (1985)

For Bunita Marcus pour piano (1985)

Palais de Mari pour piano (1986)

For Christian Wolff pour flûte et claviers (piano et célesta : un seul exécutant) (1986)

Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello (1987)

Moins de 5 minutes

Piece for Violin and Piano (1950)

Two Pieces for Two Pianos (1954)

Two Pianos (1957)

5 à 10 minutes

Vertical Thoughts 2 pour violon et piano (1963)

The Viola in My Life 3 pour alto et piano (1970)

Four Instruments pour piano et trio à cordes (1975)

Three Dances pour piano (avec tambour et verre dans le troisième mouvement) (1950)

Three Clarinets, Cello and Piano pour trois clarinettes, violoncelle et piano (1971)

10 à 20 minutes

Spring of Chosroes pour violon et piano (1977)

20 à 30 minutes

Palais de Mari pour piano (1986)

Piano and Orchestra (1975)

Piano (1977)

30 minutes à 1h

Why Patterns? pour flûte, piano et glockenspiel (1978)

1h ou plus

Piano and String Quartet (1985)

For John Cage pour violon et piano (1982)

For Bunita Marcus pour piano (1985)

Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello (1987)

Trio pour violon, violoncelle et piano (1980)

Triadic Memories pour piano (1981)

Patterns in a Chromatic Field pour violoncelle et piano (1981)

Crippled Symmetry pour flûte, piano et percussions (1983)

For Christian Wolff pour flûte et claviers (piano et célesta : un seul exécutant) (1986)

For Philip Guston pour flûte, piano et percussions (1984)

Catalogue
Effectif
Année
Durée
Catalogue

Morton Feldman (1926-1987)

Spring of Chosroes

pour violon et piano

Date de composition : 1977
Durée : 12'
Éditeur : Universal Edition

Dédicace : à Paul Zukosky

Création : États-Unis, Washington DC, Library of Congress, 10 mai 1979, Paul Zukosky, violon et Ursula Oppens, piano

Fiche Brahms/IRCAM
Partition (Universal Edition)
CD (Amazon)
CD (Amazon)
CD (Discogs)
Portail de la musique contemporaine
Ecouter (YouTube)


"The Spring of Chosroes was a sumptuous carpet reputed to have been made for the Sassanian King Chosroes I (in the sixth century AO). Woven with silk, gold, silver and rare stones, the carpet depicted a garden akin to Paradise. The image of this legendary rug remained with Feldman throughout the composition, inspiring the isolated "gems" of sound, the translucent, interwoven harmonic timbres, and suggesting the form of the work.
From the onset, the Spring of Chosroes confronts us, not with the traditional violin/piano exchange, but with two separate yet integral monologues. The continuous repetition of the piano's opening two chords forms a ground around which the disparate violin weaves an image of pizzicato sounds and bowed harmonics. Both the instruments' dissimilar pacing and their harmonic and registral differences combine to produce the image of two separate lines moving parallel through time, but at moments these “uncompromising" instruments exchange like material. In these moments of self­ conscious détente, Feldman exposes the various degrees of their compatibility.
Feldman has taken these most complementary instruments and held each apart, examining one, then the other. It is Feldman's ear which reveals the form – scanning as an eye would scan a carpet – first a close focus on one pattern, then on another; then a wide-angle view of two patterns at once. The nature of these instruments' interaction becomes elusive. Even when one instrument plays alone, we do not get the customary impression that the other is waiting to reply. Rather, Feldman is choosing to turn an ear to one instrument, then to the other; and at times we hear both together. It is through this selective listening that Feldman paces the unfolding dialogue.
The violin and piano are held together by a tightly-knit pitch-world. Both their harmonic and melodic sound-palettes are constructed from three pitches a half-step apart (such as the violin's opening D#, E, F) with the occasional harmonic colouring of the tritone and/or perfect intervals. Using the resultant dichotomy between the dissonant half-steps and the consonant perfect intervals, Feldman creates the parallel impression of distance and intimacy between the violin and piano.
Even though both instruments explore a full range of their technical possibilities, the listener is nevertheless left with the suggestion of two instruments quite immobilized, self-contained, and distant. The violin is constricted, breathless; always too short, too sad, too remote. Never is heard the full, exalted sound that the violin has immortalized; here a double-stop is the warmest sound. The piano has abandoned its traditional function of articulating or interpreting the action. This scenario succeeds because it is enacted on the same surface. Feldman has flattened the three-dimensional questions/answer exchange into two dimensions whose frozen imagery is suspended in an eerie equilibrium not unlike the figures of a Piero della Francesco fresco. The instruments have that same sober inner life; one not exposed through the same musical expressions, but explored through an allusive series of glances and innate gestures.
The Spring of Chosroes, a commission by the McKim Fund in the Library of Congress, was composed in 1977. It is dedicated to Paul Zukofsky, and was first performed by Paul Zukofsky and Ursula Oppens." Bunita Marcus (Universal Editions)

"Morton Feldman's composing style started to change in the middle of the 1970s. While the delicacy, quiet dynamics, dissonance, and constantly evolving textures that were his music's hallmarks remained intact, in the last decade or so of his life he moved toward larger-scale works in which repetition -- sometimes literal, sometimes slightly varied rhythmically, melodically, or harmonically -- played an increasing role. In the essay Crippled Symmetry, which shares its title with one of those later compositions, Feldman refers to Spring of Chosroes in describing musical patterns or ideas that are "complete" in themselves and don't call for normal musical development, only for "extension." Even in a comparatively short work like the 15-minute Spring of Chosroes, this increased repetition and sense of scale is evident.

Spring of Chosroes was written in 1978 and given its premiere on April 26, 1980, in New York City. The program note for that first performance alludes to a carpet -- made out of wool, silk, and silver and adorned with jewels -- supposedly owned by the renowned Persian king Chosroes (or Khosrau I) of the Sassanid dynasty (reigned 531 - 579). Feldman had a long-standing fascination with textiles, and their features informed many of his compositions. Spring of Chosroes is, as is so often the case with Feldman's compositions, predominantly quiet. Short phrases are tentatively stated, then repeated several times before the next figure emerges. The piano's long, ringing chords support the violin's delicate harmonics and multiple stops, and a sense of stasis is established. Toward the end of the work a descending pattern of notes from the violin takes over, and in the fragile coda the violin ascends in a series of very high harmonics." [allmusic.com]

YouTube : Paul Zukofsky, violon; Ursula Oppens, piano

Page actualisée le 18/12/2013

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