Tumgik
#horațiu rădulescu
nonstandardrepertoire · 4 months
Text
watching a score video for Horațiu Rădulescu's Before the Universe Was Born, and the score contains the text "if you want to be reborn, you must let yourself die", and i can already tell i'm going to be thinking about that for the rest of my life
3 notes · View notes
windsymphony · 1 year
Text
6 notes · View notes
taumada · 4 months
Text
0 notes
dustedmagazine · 4 years
Text
Listed: Horse Lords
Tumblr media
Baltimore-based Horse Lords have been forging their own take on experimental rock music since 2012. The quartet, Andrew Bernstein (saxophone/percussion), Max Eilbacher (bass/electronics), Owen Gardner (guitar) and Sam Haberman (drums) weave together pieces drawing on divergent sources that include everything from 20th and 21st century classical music to just intonation tuning to African and Appalachian musical traditions to intricate polyrhythms and studio experiments. In a recent interview, Gardner talked about their approach to putting pieces together. “We generally write right up to the edge of our abilities. And sometimes slightly beyond. We’d had to scrap quite a few songs because they proved to be basically impossible to play... It keeps it interesting.” Ian Forsythe covered their newest release, The Common Task, noting that “Their nearly ten-year core pivots rhythmic and tonal ideas athletically, and their ability to pull elements from anywhere and everywhere is seemingly more fluid with each record.”
For this Listed, the four members runs down a list of live shows, recordings, blogs, movies, and books that have been on their minds.
Gleb Kanasevich plays Horațiu Rădulescu’s “Inner Time II for seven clarinets (Op.42b),” Baltimore. 2018 (Owen Gardner)
youtube
A near-hourlong ear workout, combining impressive sonic and structural brutality. The interaction of what these close dissonances do inside your ears with what the clarinets do in space (Gleb played live with 6 recordings of himself, meticulously arranged around the audience) is a haunting experience, celestial but with no concession to human music.
Maryanne Amacher — Perceptual Geographies, Philadelphia 2019 (Owen Gardner)
Tumblr media
https://issuu.com/bowerbirdphilly/docs/amacherprogramonline
So much revelatory material has come out of the Maryanne Amacher archive so far, and particularly these loving reconstructions of her instrumental music. A lot more attention seems to have been given to “Petra,” which is certainly gorgeous and shows fascinating symmetries with the spatial/timbral concerns of her electronic music, but “Adjacencies” struck me as the Major Work of 20th Century Music. She wrote the damn thing in 1965 and it sounds fresh half a century later, which we can say of no previous piece of percussion music and not much written subsequently. I am slowly losing my mind waiting for Amy Cimini’s book on Amacher to come out, craving a deeper dive into her theory and methods.
Sarah Hennies, Bonnie Jones, Lê Quan Ninh, and Biliana Voutchkova at the High Zerofestival, Baltimore 2019 (Owen Gardner)
youtube
One of at least three great things Sarah Hennies did last year (Reservoir 1 on Black Truffle and the 90 minute cello/percussion duo “The Reinvention of Romance” being the others) was to take part in Baltimore’s High Zero festival, four mind-frying days devoted to free improvisation. This set was one of the highlights of 2019’s festival; each of the four performers having at least one foot in composed music (Ninh is a long-time Cage interpreter and Biliana has collaborated with Peter Ablinger) seemed to lend it a certain sureness and serenity, but ultimately their combined strength as improvisors (fastidiously captured by High Zero’s crack recording team) is what makes it such an engaging listen.
El Chombo — Cuentos de la Cripta (Owen Gardner)
youtube
A relentless tetralogy that nicely balances the rawness of ‘90s proto-reggaetón productions (the first volume self-identifies as “Spanish Reggae”) and the slicker, synth-oriented sound and settled genre conventions we’ve come to enjoy (or not) in the 21st century. This was helpful when working on “People’s Park,” not least for its insistent connection to Jamaican music. I can understand very little Spanish but I'm guessing the lyrics are not unproblematic; signifying language always disappoints.
Wallahi Le Zein! (Owen Gardner)
Tumblr media
http://thewealthofthewise.blogspot.com/
An invaluable resource for anyone interested in African music, much more consistent and informative than the often yucky reissue market, which seems to prioritize awkward (and marginal) attempts at Western musical fads—as if what was available was not an impossibly rich and heterogeneous network of self-sufficient musical cultures but merely a broken mirror facing America. The archive of Mauritanian music alone makes this the most worthwhile stop on the information superhighway. There’s plenty of goofy drum programming and appalling sound quality if that’s your bag, but the rich variety of traditional musics is what keeps me coming back.
Miles Davis — On the Corner (Max Eilbacher)
youtube
Some might say Stockhausen serves imperialism but he did his little part to help cook up some of the most twisted American Jazz/funk jams ever. Davis only kept one cassette in his convertible sports car during the On the Corner sessions, a tape of “Hymnen.” He would take each member of the band on highspeed joy rides with the car’s stereo system on full blast. That same energy was channeled in the arrangement and editing. The convergence of a lot of different elements keeps this record on my top 10 list ‘til the end of time. The little detail of Americans taking concepts from European Neu Musik and making something incredibly funky and pleasurable is the cherry on top.
Olivia Block & Marcus Schmickler at Diffusion Festival, Baltimore 2018 (Andrew Bernstein)
Tumblr media
This was an amazing pairing, with both artists playing in 8-channel “surround sound.” Marcus’ set was incredibly intense. Pure synthesis with a lot of psychoacoustic inner ear tones and unending overlapping melodies. It felt like the sonic equivalent of watching a strobe light at close distance. Olivia’s set was a slow creep, laying samples to create lush textures that were truly immersive. This was the kind of concert that reminds you of the awesome power of music.
Blacks’ Myths at the Red Room, Baltimore 2019 (Andrew Bernstein)
Blacks' Myths II by Blacks' Myths
I’m there for anything bassist Luke Stewart touches (see Irreversible Entanglements, his solo upright + feedback work, frequent collaborations with too many people to name). Blacks' Myths, his bass and drumset duo with Warren Crudup, is loud, noisy, and intense, and this set at the Red Room last year was particularly transcendent.
“Blue” Gene Tyranny — Out of the Blue (Andrew Bernstein)
Out of the Blue by "Blue" Gene Tyranny
I have probably listened to this record more than any other the last few years. Perfectly crafted pop songs segue into proggy funk jams and then into stream of consciousness drone pieces based around the doppler effect. I’ll put it on over and over again, an experience with an album I haven’t really had since I was in high school.
Bill Orcutt — An Account of the Crimes of Peter Thiel and His Subsequent Arrest, Trial, and Execution 2017 (Max Eilbacher)
AN ACCOUNT OF THE CRIMES OF PETER THIEL AND HIS SUBSEQUENT ARREST, TRIAL AND EXECUTION. by BILL ORCUTT
Legendary underground American guitarists from the most important American rock band also makes top notch conceptual digital audio art. Years ago I thought computer music lacked a certain sub cultural attitude. While this was/is not true, this 2017 release feels like it exists in its own world. High and low brow are in perfect harmony for this patterned enjoyable hellride of a listen. What if Hanne Darboven had to make art while working a full time job and dealing with mild substance abuse?
Lina Wertmüller — Seven Beauties 1975 (Max Eilbacher)
Tumblr media
By Source, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=42000553
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Beauties
During this pandemic I have been talking film shop over emails nonstop. I went through a big Wertmüller phase in 2018-2019 and as people are trading recommendations I usually try to recommend something by her. This film is the one that I keep reaching for. The email recommending this film usually starts as a draft with “this is really intense” and then I try to hearken back to my film school days and write about the male gaze, patriarchy, communism or something of that nature. I end up writing a bit, feeling like it’s way over the top for a casual email and then I end up deleting everything except “this is a really intense and beautiful film.”
Chaos: Charles Manson, the CIA and the Secret History of the Sixties by Tom O’Neill (Sam Haberman)
Tumblr media
https://www.littlebrown.com/titles/tom-oneill/chaos/9780316477574/
The last book I managed to check out of the library before it closed. Though it in some ways resembles works of conspiracy theory, Tom O’Neill is always straightforward in telling the reader that, though the official story of the Manson case is almost certainly not true, the actual details don’t cohere into any kind of Meaning. Every new discovery is its own digression that points to a new unknowable truth or unverifiable claim. This really inverts the normal thrill of conspiracy theory, which invites you to either buy into the story being presented or reject it all together, either path offering its own sort of comfort. Chaos offers no such comfort.
5 notes · View notes
classical-nerd · 7 years
Video
youtube
A look at the first spectralist.
Classical Nerd is a weekly video series covering music history, theoretical concepts, and techniques, hosted by composer, pianist, and music history aficionado Thomas Little.
2 notes · View notes
flammessombres · 5 years
Video
youtube
Horațiu Rădulescu - Piano Sonata No. 4 ‘like a well ... older than God’, Op. 92 (1993)
3 notes · View notes
specialistmorgenj · 6 years
Video
youtube
0 notes
jurnaldeoltenia · 2 years
Text
Un politician a murit în timpul unei emisiuni live pe Facebook. Participanții nu l-au băgat în seamă, nu au sunat la 112
Un politician a murit în timpul unei emisiuni live pe Facebook. Participanții nu l-au băgat în seamă, nu au sunat la 112
Gheorghe Iancu, Secretar General la „Uniunea Socială Popular Creștină”, a murit sâmbătă în timpul unei transmisiuni live pe Facebook, mai exact în timpul unei reuniuni pe Zoom cu 12 participanți. „Un om moare „în direct” și participanții la flecăreala „teve” sunt prea preocupați; nu-l bagă în seamă, nu sună la 112…”, povestește jurnalistul Horațiu Rădulescu, care a remarcat și incidentul.…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
redshift-13 · 4 years
Video
youtube
As much as I like it, this piece is too busy and energetic for me to be ‘Before The Universe Was Born’.  Maybe that’s too literal of a view, an artless rule that expects direct translation of music from image or text.  In any case...
This piece feels more like the chemical soups of abiogenesis, jittery, swerving, bumping and linking molecules, the first moments of self-assembly and replication, the first membranes to keep the chemical furniture in some kind of order.  Me and you, where we came from.  Our chemical birth.
...
“Horațiu Rădulescu (7 January 1942 – 25 September 2008) was a Romanian-French composer, best known for the spectral technique of composition.”
Tumblr media
“The spectral approach to musical composition was first given a name in 1979 by Hugues Dufourt, in an article he entitled "Musique spectrale" (Spectral music).  In spectral music, the spectrum – or group of spectra – replace harmony, melody, rhythm, orchestration and form. The spectrum is always in motion, and the composition is based on spectra developing through time and exerting an influence on rhythm and formal processes. Spectral music seeks to exteriorize the inner reality of sound, to project its inner dynamics into an acoustic space and time, and to transmit to the public the reality of sound in all its complexity.” [wikipedia]
1 note · View note
tpthvn · 4 years
Link
0 notes
freeradiotune · 6 years
Link
Magic FM Romania Magic FM Romania live broadcasting from Romania. Magic FM Romania broadcast various kind of latest hip hop, classic, dance, electronic etc. music . Magic FM Romania is a one of the most famous online radio station on Romania. Notable Romanian composers of the 19th and 20th centuries include Ciprian Porumbescu, Anton Pann, Eduard Caudella, Mihail Jora, Dinu Lipatti and especially George Enescu. Also famous is the composer and conductor Sergiu Celibidache. The Australian composer Julian Cochran wrote works extensively titled Romanian Dances with a collection of piano works and two orchestral works, exemplifying affinity amongst classical composers with the Romanian folk music tradition outside of Romania.Béla Bartók was born in Nagyszentmiklós in the Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary, now Romania. He collected Hungarian folk songs with his colleague Zoltán Kodály and used them in several of his compositions, notably in his string quartets.György Ligeti and Iannis Xenakis were two avant-garde composers born in Romania who were followed in the second half of the 20th century by the Romanian spectralism school: Ştefan Niculescu, Horațiu Rădulescu, Iancu Dumitrescu, O
0 notes
hrdyasamudra · 12 years
Video
youtube
Horațiu Rădulescu - Clepsydra
5 notes · View notes