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Music of the Spheres (Langgaard) from wiki any other "distant" orchestras??

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« on: March 28, 2017, 03:18:30 pm »

Music of the Spheres (Langgaard)

( I had never heard of a "distant" orchestra....has this been used by other composers?)


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia  (I removed the footnote citings)

Music of the Spheres (Danish: Sfærernes Musik) is a composition by Rued Langgaard, written in 1916–18 and scored for orchestra, choir, organ, a "distant" orchestra, and a soprano soloist.

The work incorporates radical innovations, considered ahead of their time,[2] including some of the earliest examples of string piano (playing directly on the strings of the piano), and Langgaard's extensive use of slow moving string clusters prompted the composer György Ligeti to proclaim himself a "Langgaard-epigone" when presented with the score in the late 1960s.

Analysis

According to the music researcher Eric Christensen – in an analysis of works utilizing the "spatial dimension" as a fundamental concept – the space of Music of the Spheres is limited at the upper level by repeated lines of high notes on the violins and flutes, and at the lower level by timpani and deep horns. In between it is filled out with clusters and polyphonic tonal surfaces that remove the sense of time moving forward. Instead, it makes time "acutely present" by accelerating repetitive patterns. The form of the work is accumulative and concludes with a vision of "the end of all things" expressed with stark musical contrast, such as violent music followed by noisy "anti-music" (produced by cymbals and kettle-drums) juxtaposed with "heavenly" music with angel choirs and the sound of harps.[4][5]


Music of the Spheres received its premiere performance on 26 November 1921 in the Konzerthaus, Karlsruhe, Germany, with Ellen Overgaard (soprano), Badisches Landestheater-Orchester and Choir, conducted by Hans Seeber-van der Floe. The premiere was a success, but the following year it received a more lukewarm reception when performed in Berlin, and it was not performed again until 1968, where a performance in Stockholm with the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Sergiu Comissiona, ignited a renaissance for Langgaard's music.

The first performance in Denmark took place in 1969 in "Rundhøjhallen" in Holme with Aarhus Symphony Orchestra and Choir, conducted by Per Dreier. Unfortunately the soprano soloist, Margrethe Danielsen, did not make it in time for the concert. In 1971, a reduced version was performed in Copenhagen, but the first complete performance in Denmark, all forces present, took place in 1980 in the concert hall of Radiohuset with Edith Guillaume (soprano), and the Danish National Symphony Orchestra and Choir, conducted by John Frandsen.

In 2010, Music of the Spheres received its British premiere at the BBC Proms, with the Danish National Symphony Orchestra and Choir, conducted by Thomas Dausgaard.

A performance lasts around 25 minutes.

Recordings

The first recording of Music of the Spheres was made in 1968 at the Nordic Music Days in Stockholm with Berit Lindholm (soprano), Akademiska Kören (The Stockholm Academic Choir), and the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Sergiu Comissiona. A 22-minute excerpt of the work was released on LP the following year by HMV/EMI (CSDS 1087). The first complete recording was released on the Danish label Danacord (DACOCD 206) in 1983 with Edith Guillaume and the Danish National Symphony Orchestra and Choir, conducted by John Frandsen.

Another two recordings, until the present moment, were released with Gitta-Maria Sjöberg, Danish National Symphony Orchestra and Choir, conducted by Gennady Rozhdestvensky, by Chandos CHAN 9517 (1997), and another with Inger Dam Jensen, Danish National Symphony Orchestra, Danish National Choir and Danish National Vocal Ensemble, conducted by Thomas Dausgaard (Dacapo 6.220535, 2010), both setting the complete work.
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Gauk
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« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2017, 08:21:56 pm »

Strauss's Alpine Symphony has a distant brass section, but not a whole orchestra.
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Grandenorm
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« Reply #2 on: March 29, 2017, 05:31:39 am »

It depends what is meant by a "distant orchestra". There are lots of works that use an offstage ensemble, always of a smaller and more specific composition than the main orchestra.
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Christo
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... an opening of those magic casements ...


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« Reply #3 on: March 30, 2017, 07:37:49 am »

Australian orchestras tend to be rather 'distant' (for me).  ;)
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… music is not only an `entertainment’, nor a mere luxury, but a necessity of the spiritual if not of the physical life, an opening of those magic casements through which we can catch a glimpse of that country where ultimate reality will be found.  RVW, 1948
ahinton
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« Reply #4 on: March 30, 2017, 09:44:39 am »

Australian orchestras tend to be rather 'distant' (for me).  ;)
Australia itself is arguably "rather distant" for some of us...
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Jeff
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« Reply #5 on: March 30, 2017, 10:09:51 am »

Not for me!
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relm1
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« Reply #6 on: March 30, 2017, 03:41:54 pm »

What about Charles Ives' Unanswered Question? 
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