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P.Ablinger: Grisailles for 3 Pianos

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2005年03月03日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルHat Now
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 HATART132
SKU 4589538730444

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:48:20
Personnel: Hildegard Kleeb (piano). Liner Note Authors: Christian Scheib; Peter Ablinger. Recording information: Sender Freies Berlin, DE (12/08/1998-12/10/1998). Austrian composer Peter Ablinger has provided one of the most confounding and remarkable piano works of the late twentieth century in Grisailles (1-100). Essentially a meditation on light and its relationship to time and creation, Grisailles is a series of 24 layers played by three pianos playing as well as repeated octaves, creating tonal and physical fissures in time -- fingers slipping over the keys, pedals being released, ambiguous sounds, and so on. Once the sequence is completed, it is used as a preliminary score whereby other layers are added until the sequence has been layered 100 times. The result is one of complete and total loss -- in the music, that is. Which is Ablinger's goal: to completely lose himself in the labyrinthine construction until he -- and thus the listener -- has no choice but surrender to what comes from the execution of the process. The structures are at times ornamental, and at times harmonic, rhythmical, and polytonal. The density is forbidding, but the way through is intuitive, clearing a path through unintentional spaces and fissures, which produce possibility. It's a provocative -- yet very listenable -- approach to the infinite. Light is the manner by which listeners make their way through this 50-minute work; it creates the relationship not just between the work and the listener, but also between the various elements held within the score itself. As always, Hildegard Kleeb gives a disciplined, determined reading -- she is simply one of the best around -- by cutting no corners, allowing for overtones to resonate fully, and then fills the cracks with whatever material she is offered next. Grisailles (1-100) is a hearty work, and is physically and mentally demanding. Kleeb gives listeners its first recorded performance on three pianos with verve and passion. ~ Thom Jurek

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Grisailles (1-100), for 3 pianos: [Part 1]

      アーティスト: ヒルデガルト・クレープ

    2. 2.
      Grisailles (1-100), for 3 pianos: [Part 2]

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: ヒルデガルト・クレープKLEEB

ゲスト

商品の紹介

Austrian composer Peter Ablinger has provided one of the most confounding and remarkable piano works of the late twentieth century in Grisailles (1-100). Essentially a meditation on light and its relationship to time and creation, Grisailles is a series of 24 layers played by three pianos playing as well as repeated octaves, creating tonal and physical fissures in time -- fingers slipping over the keys, pedals being released, ambiguous sounds, and so on. Once the sequence is completed, it is used as a preliminary score whereby other layers are added until the sequence has been layered 100 times. The result is one of complete and total loss -- in the music, that is. Which is Ablinger's goal: to completely lose himself in the labyrinthine construction until he -- and thus the listener -- has no choice but surrender to what comes from the execution of the process. The structures are at times ornamental, and at times harmonic, rhythmical, and polytonal. The density is forbidding, but the way through is intuitive, clearing a path through unintentional spaces and fissures, which produce possibility. It's a provocative -- yet very listenable -- approach to the infinite. Light is the manner by which listeners make their way through this 50-minute work; it creates the relationship not just between the work and the listener, but also between the various elements held within the score itself. As always, Hildegard Kleeb gives a disciplined, determined reading -- she is simply one of the best around -- by cutting no corners, allowing for overtones to resonate fully, and then fills the cracks with whatever material she is offered next. Grisailles (1-100) is a hearty work, and is physically and mentally demanding. Kleeb gives listeners its first recorded performance on three pianos with verve and passion. ~ Thom Jurek|
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