“Among Fields of Crystal” Harold Bud & Brian Eno

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

“Among Fields of Crystal” Harold Bud & Brian Eno “Among Fields of Crystal” Harold Bud & Brian Eno Critical Analysis by Mitchell Benham Critical Analysis Among Fields of Crystal Mitchell Benham Introduction In 1980, 'Ambient 2: The Plateaux of Mirror' was released as the second instalment in what would grow to become the four-part Ambient series. Though it is credited to Harold Budd and Brian Eno, the title and categorisation of this album as one of Eno's can be seen as misleading. Budd's piano is the star here, the leading instrument and the musical focal point. Eno and Budd together create an artificial environment, and endeavour to display their creation to us. Context Ambient 1: Music for Airports, released two years earlier in 1978 began Eno's experiments in open-ended and self-generating music, something that he continues here, and on Ambient 3: Day of Radiance (1980) and Ambient 4: On Land (1982). Eno had produced Budd's first album The Pavilion of Dreams in 1978 and had also released the work on his Obscure Record label. This album continues Eno's collaboration habit, with Eno as producer directing a musician. Other collaborations that operated in this manor include Robert Fripp (No Pussyfooting) and Jon Hassell (Fourth World, Vol. 1: Possible Musics). The desired outcome of these experiments was to create “environmental music suited to a wide variety of moods and atmospheres” (Weiner, 2004). Unlike Music for Airports, where the environment and mood are of a place that is familiar to many people, The Plateaux of Mirror instead invents new places. Leaving the listener to imagine the environment based only on its title and the recorded sound leaves the intended image to be somewhat ambiguous, but allows the Brian Eno has stated “...that things don't come with intrinsic and timeless value. Where you place them in time, the context they fall in, is what charges them” (Diliberto, 1993), implying that he thinks his albums are important for their time, he understands that their relevance and impact is reduced over time. Structure and Arrangement The song begins abruptly with a note of a piano, and the opening chord of the piece is played broken and out of time. Soon, the rhythmic anchor of the piece is introduced, Budd's incomplete 'left hand' chords falling rigidly on the beat until the end of the piece. Between the beats, (only very occasionally do the melodic notes fall directly onto the beat) the melody begins to appear. The melody is dis jointed, never Illustration 1: The rhythm can be seen on the waveform, as the beats really moving in any one direction before returning to are evenly spaced from each other. where it began. The piano in this piece is more about playing notes not to form a beautiful melody, but more for the aesthetics of the notes as played. The notes appear to arrive randomly, almost spontaneously - sometimes close together, sometimes further apart. Critical Analysis Among Fields of Crystal Mitchell Benham The attack of the piano notes are followed by long reverb tails, and it is in this space between the notes, played beautifully by Harold Budd, that Brian Eno appears. As the melodic lines are not made up of chords, but only of single notes, the reverb created from one note is the only way that it can interact with the notes that follow it. The longer the reverbs are, the longer that note can stay with the listener and influence the other notes of the melody. The song peaks, melodically and dynamically, less than half way through, before plateauing for quite some time before a final but less significant climax towards the ending. The piece ends as abruptly as it began, a piano chord (the same one that opened the piece) that leaves the whole thing unresolved. Like the melodies, we are taken away but brought back to were we began. It is thinking about where the melody has 'taken' the listener that the title of Among fields of Crystal becomes interesting. Beginning the song title with a preposition instead of a verb hints at inaction, and of remaining stationary. It might be imagined that this piece of music is designed to take the listener to a field of crystal (crystal is usually defined as a solid material, that is rigid and defined, but transparent) and leave them there. It is up to us to observe. Sound Sources and Recording The primary sound source on this recording is, of course, Harold Budd playing a piano. However, we must not assume that a man playing the piano as all that is happening. The rhythmic chords do sound as though there are different from the melodic notes. This sort of effect can be achieved by performing just one element of the piano part and recording it to a track on a multi-track recorder. As the other elements are also performed individually and recorded to their own tracks, the complete part will eventually appear. One downside is possible timing issues, but benefits include the ability to treat the elements with different effects later on, during the mix stage of It must also be recognised that artificial reverberation and delay effects are actual sound sources themselves. Much in the the same way that a sampler would be considered a sound source, even though they create no new sounds of their own. A reverb or delay effect is triggering a repeat of the original sound, as determined by the different settings of the effects processors themselves. In Among Fields of Crystal the reverb and delay effects are used as instruments, contributing to the recording as much as the piano does. (The natural reverberation of the room in which an instrument is recorded, if captured by the recording microphones, would be considered to be a part of the original instrument's sound, as affected by its natural environment at the time of the recording.) Critical Analysis Among Fields of Crystal Mitchell Benham Mix The mix of Among Fields of Crystal is quite simple. The piano is front and centre in the mix, and the reverbs to the work of filling out the space between the notes and creating the atmosphere of the imagined environment. The piano is recorded in stereo, as the lower notes appear slightly to the left of the sound field and the higher notes appear slightly to the right. This being a correct representation of how a piano sound when you sit at it and play, it implies to the listener that the notes are being played for them by the environment, but it also by them. The listener takes the place of Budd in the centre of the environment. As the melody evolves, the reverbs play a larger part in the piece, bringing back earlier notes, creating interesting chords when new notes are played. The reverberations are triggered increasingly as the piano keys are struck harder. This means that not only are some notes louder than others, but they stay in the created soundscape for longer than quieter notes. The lower, chordal notes dont stay around as long as the melodic notes, which are played more intensely and higher in pitch, do. The chords are able to change without affecting the following chords, whereas the melody does the opposite, taking quite some time for each note to disappear into the distance. The stereo image is quite wide, but it is mostly the background reverbs that fill this space. As a note is struck the initial attack appears first in its correct position in the stereo image, but then as the reverbs take hold of it, they spread it around the listener. As the piano part does not use the extremes of the instrument's range, most of the note attacks appear in a reasonably centred position. The mix, therefore, does engulf the listener, but not by using hard left or right panning, but by using the slow moving reverb effects to move the sounds in a natural, if undefined, manner around the imagined space. Eno states “the listener requires about half of what you think you require when you are the creator” (Tingen 2005, p36), it is understandable, then, that this mix is so sparse, but everything we need. Illustration 2: Waveform displaying the entire piece. Notice climaxes before half way and before the ending. Critical Analysis Among Fields of Crystal Mitchell Benham Technology and Processing One wonders how this song would have sounded played off an LP record. The current high standard of audio distribution in comparison to 1980 could have an effect on the experience created by the work. The hiss and crackle of the vinyl record surely must have affected the beauty of the soundscape created, as there are no percussive or even overly rhythmic elements with which the noise would blend (and be hidden). The higher noise level on vinyl could also explain why at no point during the piece is there ever silence. As soon as a sound appears at though it is going to disappear, a new note is played to re-excite the performance. Listening to high-quality FLAC transfers of this recording is almost perfection. There are no extraneous sounds save some small mechanical noises (sustain pedal movements, perhaps) and the music and the environment created have nothing to compete with. Arguments that vinyl is better sounding than compact disc are definitely not applicable here. Conclusion Among Fields of Crystal is one of Eno's imaginary spaces. Though the space is imaginary, created by somebody for the purpose of being shown to the listener musically, the experience of being in the space is easily understood.
Recommended publications
  • Russell-Mills-Credits1
    Russell Mills 1) Bob Marley: Dreams of Freedom (Ambient Dub translations of Bob Marley in Dub) by Bill Laswell 1997 Island Records Art and design: Russell Mills (shed) Design assistance, image melts: Michael Webster (storm) Paintings: Russell Mills 2) The Cocteau Twins: BBC Sessions 1999 Bella Union Records Art and design: Russell Mills (shed) Design assistance and image melts: Michael Webster (storm) 3) Gavin Bryars: The Sinking Of The Titanic / Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet 1998 Virgin Records Art and design: Russell Mills Design assistance and image melts: Michael Webster (storm) Paintings and assemblages: Russell Mills 4) Gigi: Illuminated Audio 2003 Palm Pictures Art and design: Russell Mills (shed) Design assistance: Michael Webster (storm) Photography: Jean Baptiste Mondino 5) Pharoah Sanders and Graham Haynes: With a Heartbeat - full digipak 2003 Gravity Art and design: Russell Mills (shed) Design assistance: Michael Webster (storm) Paintings and assemblages: Russell Mills 6) Hector Zazou: Songs From The Cold Seas 1995 Sony/Columbia Art and design: Russell Mills and Dave Coppenhall (mc2) Design assistance: Maggi Smith and Michael Webster 7) Hugo Largo: Mettle 1989 Land Records Art and design: Russell Mills Design assistance: Dave Coppenhall Photography: Adam Peacock 8) Lori Carson: The Finest Thing - digipak front and back 2004 Meta Records Art and design: Russell Mills (shed) Design assistance: Michael Webster (storm) Photography: Lori Carson 9) Toru Takemitsu: Riverrun 1991 Virgin Classics Art & design: Russell Mills Cover
    [Show full text]
  • EV16 Inner DP
    16 extreme voice JohnJJohnohn FoxxFoxx Exploring an Ocean of possibilities Extreme Voice 16 : Introduction All text and pictures © Extreme Voice 1997 except where stated. 1 Reproduction by permission only. have please. , g.uk . ears in My Eyes Cerise A. Reed [email protected] , oice Dancing with T obinhar r and eme V Extr hope you’ll like it! The Gift http://www.ultravox.org.uk , e ris, URL: has just been finished, and should be in the shops in June. EMAIL (ROBIN): Monument g.uk Rage In Eden enewal form will be enclosed. Cheques etc payable to (0117) 939 7078 We’ll be aiming for a Christmas issue, though of course this depends on news and events. We’ll Cerise Reed and Robin Har [email protected] UK £7.00 • EUROPE £8.00 • OUTSIDE EUROPE £11.00 as follows: It’s been an exceptionally busy year for us, what with CD re-releases and Internet websites, as you’ll been an exceptionally busy year for us, what with CD re-releases It’s TEL / FAX: THIS YEAR! 19 SALISBURY STREET, ST GEORGE, BRISTOL BS5 8EE ENGLAND STREET, 19 SALISBURY best! ”, and a yellow subscription r y eatment. At the time of writing EV16 EMAIL (CERISE): ry them, or at least be able to order them. So far ry them, or at least be able to order essages to the band, chat with fellow fans, download previously unseen photographs, listen to messages from Midge unseen photographs, listen to messages from essages to the band, chat with fellow fans, download previously ee in the following pages.
    [Show full text]
  • Worldnewmusic Magazine
    WORLDNEWMUSIC MAGAZINE ISCM During a Year of Pandemic Contents Editor’s Note………………………………………………………………………………5 An ISCM Timeline for 2020 (with a note from ISCM President Glenda Keam)……………………………..……….…6 Anna Veismane: Music life in Latvia 2020 March – December………………………………………….…10 Álvaro Gallegos: Pandemic-Pandemonium – New music in Chile during a perfect storm……………….....14 Anni Heino: Tucked away, locked away – Australia under Covid-19……………..……………….….18 Frank J. Oteri: Music During Quarantine in the United States….………………….………………….…22 Javier Hagen: The corona crisis from the perspective of a freelance musician in Switzerland………....29 In Memoriam (2019-2020)……………………………………….……………………....34 Paco Yáñez: Rethinking Composing in the Time of Coronavirus……………………………………..42 Hong Kong Contemporary Music Festival 2020: Asian Delights………………………..45 Glenda Keam: John Davis Leaves the Australian Music Centre after 32 years………………………….52 Irina Hasnaş: Introducing the ISCM Virtual Collaborative Series …………..………………………….54 World New Music Magazine, edition 2020 Vol. No. 30 “ISCM During a Year of Pandemic” Publisher: International Society for Contemporary Music Internationale Gesellschaft für Neue Musik / Société internationale pour la musique contemporaine / 国际现代音乐协会 / Sociedad Internacional de Música Contemporánea / الجمعية الدولية للموسيقى المعاصرة / Международное общество современной музыки Mailing address: Stiftgasse 29 1070 Wien Austria Email: [email protected] www.iscm.org ISCM Executive Committee: Glenda Keam, President Frank J Oteri, Vice-President Ol’ga Smetanová,
    [Show full text]
  • Swr2-Musikpassagen-20160619
    SWR2 MANUSKRIPT ESSAYS FEATURES KOMMENTARE VORTRÄGE _______________________________________________________________________________ SWR2 Musikpassagen Drohkulisse Die Stadt, die Nacht und ihre Klänge Von Harry Lachner Sendung: Sonntag, 19. Juni 2016, 23.03 Uhr Redaktion: Anette Sidhu-Ingenhoff Produktion: SWR 2016 __________________________________________________________________________ Bitte beachten Sie: Das Manuskript ist ausschließlich zum persönlichen, privaten Gebrauch bestimmt. Jede weitere Vervielfältigung und Verbreitung bedarf der ausdrücklichen Genehmigung des Urhebers bzw. des SWR. __________________________________________________________________________ Service: Mitschnitte aller Sendungen der Redaktion SWR2 Musikpassagen sind auf CD erhältlich beim SWR Mitschnittdienst in Baden-Baden zum Preis von 12,50 Euro. Bestellungen über Telefon: 07221/929-26030 Bestellungen per E-Mail: [email protected] __________________________________________________________________________ Kennen Sie schon das Serviceangebot des Kulturradios SWR2? Mit der kostenlosen SWR2 Kulturkarte können Sie zu ermäßigten Eintrittspreisen Veranstaltungen des SWR2 und seiner vielen Kulturpartner im Sendegebiet besuchen. Mit dem Infoheft SWR2 Kulturservice sind Sie stets über SWR2 und die zahlreichen Veranstaltungen im SWR2-Kulturpartner-Netz informiert. Jetzt anmelden unter 07221/300 200 oder swr2.de 2 -------- Musik Kancheli, Yula Yayoi -------- SP: Sieh, des Verbrechers Freund, der holde Abend, naht Mit leisem Raubtierschritt, der Helfer bei der Tat;
    [Show full text]
  • Dreaming of Virtuosity”: Michael Byron, Dreamers of Pearl
    Dreaming of Virtuosity Breathless. Difficult. Obsessive. Audacious. Abstract. Shimmering. Extreme. Such adjectives come to mind when I consider the impact of Michael Byron’s latest composition for solo piano. Byron has been writing piano music for more than thirty years (having produced twelve solo or multiple-keyboard pieces to date), but if we compare his earliest modest effort for solo piano, Song of the Lifting Up of the Head (1972) with his most recent achievement recorded here, Dreamers of Pearl (2004– 05), we might be perplexed by the differences in scope, scale, material, complexity, and technical demands. The pieces have in common a sensitivity for the sound of the piano, a sensibility of extended playing/listening, and a sustained attention toward repetition through seemingly unsystematic processes that gradually transform what we hear. Both pieces create situations demanding a great deal of relaxed yet relentless concentration on the part of the performer and the listener. Indeed, Dreamers of Pearl belongs to a rare class of recent piano music—monumental compositions of great length, beauty, and depth—all self- consciously bound to traditional piano genres and their deeply ingrained structures, yet inventive and thrilling in ways that inspire only a few brave pianists to dedicate themselves wholeheartedly to these often mercilessly difficult pieces. Joseph Kubera, the tremendously gifted pianist for whom Dreamers of Pearl was written, is one of those brave few. Los Angeles, Toronto, New York Michael Byron was born in 1953 in Chicago, and spent his childhood in Los Angeles where he played trumpet from second grade on. Briefly, around age six, he had piano lessons with his aunt; he also studied trumpet with Mario Guarneri of the Los Angeles Philharmonic.
    [Show full text]
  • Brian Eno • • • His Music and the Vertical Color of Sound
    BRIAN ENO • • • HIS MUSIC AND THE VERTICAL COLOR OF SOUND by Eric Tamm Copyright © 1988 by Eric Tamm DEDICATION This book is dedicated to my parents, Igor Tamm and Olive Pitkin Tamm. In my childhood, my father sang bass and strummed guitar, my mother played piano and violin and sang in choirs. Together they gave me a love and respect for music that will be with me always. i TABLE OF CONTENTS DEDICATION ............................................................................................ i TABLE OF CONTENTS........................................................................... ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ....................................................................... iv CHAPTER ONE: ENO’S WORK IN PERSPECTIVE ............................... 1 CHAPTER TWO: BACKGROUND AND INFLUENCES ........................ 12 CHAPTER THREE: ON OTHER MUSIC: ENO AS CRITIC................... 24 CHAPTER FOUR: THE EAR OF THE NON-MUSICIAN........................ 39 Art School and Experimental Works, Process and Product ................ 39 On Listening........................................................................................ 41 Craft and the Non-Musician ................................................................ 44 CHAPTER FIVE: LISTENERS AND AIMS ............................................ 51 Eno’s Audience................................................................................... 51 Eno’s Artistic Intent ............................................................................. 55 “Generating and Organizing Variety in
    [Show full text]
  • MUSIC BEYOND AIRPORTS Appraising Ambient Music
    MUSIC BEYOND AIRPORTS APPRAISING AMBIENT MUSIC Edited by Monty Adkins & Simon Cummings 10.5920/beyondairports.fulltext Published by University of Huddersfield Press University of Huddersfield Press The University of Huddersfield Queensgate Huddersfield HD1 3DH Email enquiries [email protected] First published 2019 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License Images © as attributed Every effort has been made to locate copyright holders of materials included and to obtain permission for their publication. The publisher is not responsible for the continued existence and accuracy of websites referenced in the text. A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: 978-1-86218-161-8 Designed by Dawn Cockcroft 10.5920/beyondairports.fulltext CONTENTS INTRODUCTION i CHAPTER 1 1 David Toop How Much World Do You Want? Ambient Listening And Its Questions CHAPTER 2 21 Ambrose Field Space In The Ambience: Is Ambient Music Socially Relevant? CHAPTER 3 51 Ulf Holbrook A Question Of Background: Sites Of Listening CHAPTER 4 67 Richard Talbot Three Manifestations Of Spatiality In Ambient Music CHAPTER 5 83 Simon Cummings The Steady State Theory: Recalibrating The Quiddity Of Ambient Music 10.5920/beyondairports.fulltext CHAPTER 6 119 Monty Adkins Fragility, Noise, And Atmosphere In Ambient Music CHAPTER 7 147 Lisa Colton Channelling The Ecstasy Of Hildegard Von Bingen: “O Euchari” Remixed CHAPTER 8 177 Justin Morey Ambient House: “Little Fluffy Clouds” And The Sampler As Time Machine CHAPTER 9 197 Axel Berndt Adaptive Game Scoring With Ambient Music 10.5920/beyondairports.fulltext CONTRIBUTORS Monty Adkins is a composer, performer, and lecturer of experimental electronic music.
    [Show full text]
  • MOMIX • Box 1035 Washington, Connecticut 06793 Tel: 860•868•7454 Fax: 860•868•2317 Email: [email protected] Website
    Thursday, November 16 at 7:30pm, 2006 Fine Arts Center Concert Hall Post-performance talk immediately following performance LLUUNNAARR SSEEAA PRESENTED BY MMOOMMIIXX Artistic Director MOSES PENDLETON with DANIELLE ARICO, TOM BARBER, JENNIFER BATBOUTA, SAMUEL BECKMAN, JONATHAN EDEN, ROB LAQUI, EMILY MCARDLE, DANIELLE MCFALL, TIMOTHY MELADY, SARAH NACHBAUER, REBECCA RASMUSSEN, JARED WOOTAN Associate Director CYNTHIA QUINN Production Manager WOODROW F. DICK III Lighting Supervisor JIM BERMAN Technical Director ERIK FULK Company Manager CATE RUSNAK MOMIX • Box 1035 Washington, Connecticut 06793 Tel: 860•868•7454 Fax: 860•868•2317 Email: [email protected] Website: www.momix.com Representation: Margaret Selby Columbia Artists Management, Inc. 1790 Broadway, NYC, NY 10019-1412 Ph: (212) 841-9554 Fax: (212) 841-9770 E-mail: [email protected] Sponsored By PeoplesBank, WGBY TV57 and the Ri8ver 93.9FM Funding provided in part by the New England Foundation for the Arts (NEFA), as part of the NEA Regional Touring Program. NEFA receives major support from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) with additional support coming from the state arts agencies of New England. LUNAR SEA PART 1 Sea of Tranquility Co-commissioned by the Aspen/Santa Fe Ballet and the Nutmeg Conservatory for the Arts in Torrington, CT PART 2 Bay of Seething Performance time is approximately 85 minutes. Post-performance talk immediately following performance Conceived & Directed by: MOSES PENDLETON Assisted by: Danielle Arico, Samuel Beckman, Ty Cheng, Otis Cook, Simona Di Tucci,
    [Show full text]
  • Classical by Composer
    Classical by Composer Adolphe Adam, Giselle (The Complete Ballet), Bolshoi Theater Orchestra, Algis Zuraitis,ˆ MHS 824750F Isaac Albeniz, Iberia (complete), Maurice Ravel, Rapsodie Espagnole, Jean Morel, Paris Conservatoire Orchestra, RCA Living Stereo LSC-6094 (audiophile reissue) 2 records Tomaso Albinoni, Adagio for Strings and Organ, Concerto a Cinque in C Major, Concerto a Cinque in C Major Op. 5, No. 12, Concerto a Cinque in E Minor Op. 5, No. 9, The Sinfonia Instrumental Ensemble, Jean Witold, Nonesuch H-71005 Alfonso X, El Sabio, Las Cantigas de Santa Maria, History of Spanish Music, Volume I MHS OR 302 Charles Valentin Alkan, Piano Pieces Bernard Ringeissen Piano Harmonia Mundi B 927 Gregorio Allegri, Miserere, and other Great Choral Works CD ASV CD OS 6036 DDD, ADD 1989 Gregorio Allegri, Miserere, and other Choral Masterpieces CD Naxos 8.550827 DDD 1993 Gregorio Allegri, Miserere, Giovanni Pierluigi, Stabat Mater, Hodie Beata Virgo, Senex puerum portabat, Magnificat, Litaniae de Beata Virgine Maria, Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, Sir David Willcocks, CD London 421 147-2 ADD 1964 William Alwyn, Symphony 1, London Philharmonic Orchestra, William Alwyn, HNH 4040 Music of Leroy Anderson, Vol. 2 Frederick Fennell, Eastman-Rochester “POPS” Orchestra, 19 cm/sec quarter-track tape Mercury Living Presence ST-90043 The Music of Leroy Anderson, Frederick Fennell, Eastman-Rochester Pops Orchestra, Mercury Living Presence SR-90009 (audiophile) The Music of Leroy Anderson, Sandpaper Ballet, Forgotten Dreams, Serendata, The Penny Whistle Song, Sleigh Ride, Bugler’s Holiday, Frederick Fennell, Eastman-Rochester POPS Orchestra, 19 cm/sec half-track tape Mercury Living Presence (Seeing Ear) MVS5-30 1956 George Antheil, Symphony No.
    [Show full text]
  • Musik Mit Gefühl: Off the Record
    #04 Das APRIL 2021 Magazin Voice Versa – Zwei Sprachen, eine Story Ein mehrsprachiges Podcastprojekt Von Schabowski bis Trump Eine Revue besonderer Pressekonferenzen Off the Record – Musik mit Gefühl Der neue Podcast mit Vero Schreiegg „Meine Mitstreiter für Pressefreiheit.“ Hasnain Kazim, Journalist und Autor Unabhängig. Unverzichtbar. Unverwechselbar. Editorial Veranstaltungen #04 Liebe Hörerinnen und Hörer, hören Sie weiter- ROSTOCK hin klassisch Radio, so wie es rund 53 Millionen Menschen in Deutschland täglich tun? Oder könnte man von Ihnen aus das gute alte Radio einfach entsorgen und nur noch Audios auf eine Plattform stellen? Di., 20.4., 20.00 UHR HOCHSCHULE FÜR MUSIK UND THEATER ROSTOCK Hörprobe Konzertreihe mit deut- schen Musikhochschulen Live-Übertragung ab 20.03 Uhr in Audios und Deutschlandfunk Kultur Podcasts versus das „gute alte Ra- dio“? Hörerinnen VIRTUELLE und Hörer nutzen VERANSTALTUNG beides gern 22./23.4. c/o pop xoxo Festival und Convention im digitalen Raum c-o-pop.de KÖLN RAUTENSTRAUCH- JOEST-MUSEUM Im Fachjargon heißt das Dilemma „lineares Hören“ versus „non-lineares Hören“. 1.4. bis 5.9. Stimmt die schlichte Gleichung, wonach nur noch ältere Menschen linear hören und Ausstellung: RESIST! Die Kunst des Widerstands die jüngere Hörerschaft ausschließlich Audios abruft? Weit gefehlt: So einfach ist es museenkoeln.de/rauten- bei Deutschlandradio nicht. Die Rekordzahlen von Deutschlandfunk und Deutschland- strauch-joest-museum funk Kultur bei der letzten Erhebung der Hörerzahlen entstehen eben auch aus den Zuwächsen bei den 20- bis 29-Jährigen. Gleichzeitig laden sich immer mehr ältere Ausgewählte Veranstal- Menschen Podcasts herunter. Die Botschaft erscheint uns klar: Wann und wo Sie uns tungen und Konzerte hören – Sie erwarten, dass wir da sind.
    [Show full text]
  • Recalibrating the Quiddity of Ambient Music
    5 THE STEADY STATE THEORY: RECALIBRATING THE QUIDDITY OF AMBIENT MUSIC Simon Cummings “Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.” – Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr1 Introduction As the superstitions of religious interpretation have given way to the rational rigour of scientific investigation, so our understanding of the nature of the universe has fundamentally shifted. Symbolism, significance, order and limitation have been replaced by meaninglessness, insignificance, randomness and infinity. As we look up at the stars, gazing out and beyond what we think of as home, our perception passes ever further away from the specific to the generalised, an existence characterised by a uniform distribution of elements (homogeneity) appearing the same from all vantage points and in all directions (isotropy).2 From this universal perspective everything may be precious, but nothing is privileged. In tandem with our understanding of how things are, how they came to be has been similarly scrutinised. The twentieth century brought numerous theories regarding such origins (or lack of them), proposing either that the universe had no fixed beginning – Fred Hoyle’s ‘steady state’ model – or that it all began instantaneously in an enormous conflagration, the well-known ‘big 1 Les Guêpes January 1849 (6th series, 1859), in Oxford Essential Quotations, Sixth Edition, ed. Susan Ratcliffe (Oxford University Press, 2018). 2 These twin elements are what constitutes the cosmological principle, originally asserted by Isaac Newton. 10.5920/beyondairports.01 83 MUSIC BEYOND AIRPORTS bang’ theory.3 The latter has become firmly established as the most compatible with contemporary cosmological understanding, though arguments remain and further theories (including attempts to combine the steady state and big bang models)4 continue to be proposed.5 It is perhaps not too fanciful a parallel to say that musical compositions can be regarded as sonic universes.
    [Show full text]
  • Pipilotti Rist
    Pipilotti Rist Paola Morsiani with texts by Stephanie Hanor Mark Harris Rene Morales interview by Linda Yablonsky CONTEMPORARY ARTS MUSEUM HOUSTON Pipilotti Rist was made possible by a grant from the Thi s catalogue is et ·s-s::: ·- conjunction w ith the exhibition National Endowment for the Arts, a Federal agency; Wishing for Synchranicity: arks by Pipilotti Rist by support from Pro Helvetia, Arts Council of Switzerland: organized by Pa ola Morsia i, SEnior Curator (1 999-2007), Contemporary Arts MusEum ouston swiss arts council October 14, 2006-january 14, 2007 pr~helvetia NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE A RTS and by the patrons, benefactors, and donors to the Museum's Major Exhibition Fund: (as of September 25, 2006) Ma jor Patrons Eddie and Chinhui Alien Fayez Sarofim ,Patrons Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Ballard Mr. and Mrs. I. H. l<empner Ill Ms. Louisa Stude Sarofim Vitol SA, Inc. Michael Zilkha Benefactors George and Mary josephine Hamman Foundation jackson Hicks/ jackson and Company Elizabeth Howard Rob and Louise jamail King & Spalding L.L.P. l<aroll<reymer and Robert j. Card , M.D. Leigh and Reggie Smith Susan Vaughan Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Wallace S. Wilson Donors Baker Botts, LLP lsabel Stude Lummis judy and Scott Nyquist l<aren and Eric Pulaski Library of Congress Control Number: 2008941969 ISBN 978-1-933619-17-0 Da vid I. Saperstein l<aren and Harry Susman Stephen and Ellen Susman Copyright© 2009 Contemporary Arts Museum Houston All rights reserved . No part of this publication may be rep roduced without the written pe rmission of the publisher.
    [Show full text]