Friday 14 December 2007

KARLHEINZ STOCKHAUSEN RETURNS TO SIRIUS


Current mood: BACK ON SIRIUS...
Category: BACK ON SIRIUS... Music



REPORT STOLEN FROM (AFP)


Acclaimed German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen has died at the age of 79 in Kuerten in western Germany, the Stockhausen Foundation announced on Friday.

The foundation said Stockhausen, considered one of the most important composers of the past century, died on Wednesday and would be buried in a cemetery in the forest outside the small town.

Stockhausen's earliest works were in the serialist style but he became known from the mid-1950s for his experiments with aleatoric technique, which leaves key elements during a musical performance to chance.

A true enfant terrible of contemporary music, he influenced everyone from the likes of Brian Eno to Bjork -- and even appeared on the cover of the Beatles' Sergeant Pepper album.

His foundation said he composed a total of 362 individually performable works.

Stockhausen was born in Moedrath, a small town near Cologne, on August 22, 1928 but was fond of saying in typically eccentric style: "I was educated on Sirius and want to return there, although I'm currently still living in Kuerten near Cologne."

At an early age, Stockhausen received piano lessons from a local organist and later earned his pocket money as a pianist for the local dance school.

After failing the theoretical part of the entrance examination for Cologne's Hochschule fuer Musik (university of music) at the age of 19, he secured a place to study German, philosophy and musicology at Cologne University in 1948, where he graduated with distinction in 1951.

In that same year, Stockhausen met Herbert Eimert, who was to become his patron and who helped set up Cologne's electronic studio.

It was also Eimert who first took Stockhausen to the now-legendary "Internationale Ferienkurse fuer Neue Musik" in Darmstadt.

In their heyday in the 1950s and 1960s, the Darmstadt summer courses -- still held today -- became one of the most important forums for the musical avant-garde, establishing themselves as a laboratory for so-called serial music.

Serialism has its roots in Arnold Schoenberg's 12-tone system or dodecaphony, but serialism developed that technique still further, applying it not only to pitch, but to other musical elements.

In 1951, Stockhausen composed his first important serially-influenced piece, "Kreuzspiel" (Crossplay), which caused a scandal at its Darmstadt premiere.

After studies with Olivier Messiaen and Darius Milhaud in Paris in 1952, during which he composed the first four of his seminal "Klavierstuecke" (Piano Pieces), Stockhausen completed his first fully serial piece "Kontrapunkte" (Counter-Points) in 1953.

A year later, he was already moving away from the absolute rigour of serialism and, in his "Klavierstuecke" V-VIII, began to experiment with aleatoric technique, which leaves key elements during a performance to chance.

Stockhausen met US experimental composer John Cage, a pioneer of aleatoric music, in 1954 and in the same year he also began to explore the spatial dimensions of music.

The works during this period, which used different aleatoric and spatial elements, include "Gruppen" (Groups) and "Gesang der Juenglinge" (Song of the Youths).

In 1963, Stockhausen took over from Herbert Eimert as head of the electronic studio in Cologne where his experiments led to works such as "Mixtur" (Mixture) and "Mikrophonie I - III" (Microphony).

In 1966, he came into contact with Far Eastern religions, studying their use of music for creating heightened physical states, and that same year created "Hymnen" (Anthems), one of his best-known pieces that uses all of the world's national anthems.

In 1971, he was awarded a professorship for composition at the Hochschule fuer Musik in Cologne, and in 1977 Stockhausen embarked on the piece that would eventually occupy him for nearly 30 years, the seven-opera cycle, "Licht" (Light), in which each part is named after a day of the week.

The logistical demands of the 29-hour long work are staggering. For just one section alone, entitled "Helikopter-Streichquartett" (Helicopter String Quartet), a string quartet hovers in four different helicopters above the concert hall, with audio and video feeds relayed to the audience below.

Ridiculed by many in the musical establishment for his increasingly outlandish ideas and self-agrandissement ("my personality is a universal statement"), alternately dismissed as charlatan and revered as a genius, Stockhausen once compared the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York's World Trade Centre to "a work of art".


Currently listening :
Stockhausen: Helikopter-Quartett
By Karlheinz Stockhausen
Release date: By 26 October, 1999

15:49 - 10 Comments - 2 Kudos - Add Comment - Edit - Remove

Purveyor of Nothing

A big influence on Kraftwerk and Blixa bargeld who I cite as one of my heroes :)

Posted by Purveyor of Nothing on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 19:15
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: THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI :

Who's Blixa Bargeld??

Posted by : THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI : on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 19:21
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Purveyor of Nothing

From The Bad seeds and his own project Einsturzende neubauten....they're brilliant.German Industrial band I suggest you 'youtube' it at least you tell me if u dont know who someone is rather than just humour me ( I hate that!)Yesterday in the local spar I said I hated the woman who said 'your call back request has not been accepted,please hang up' and carried it on 'u fucking hang up' the guy asked if I knew it was a robot....Some people dont credit me with the intelligence I was born with...I may not have gleaned a lot more since then but they really think I'm away with the fairies most of the time :/

Posted by Purveyor of Nothing on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 22:38
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: THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI :

I know the two bands as existing but have never delved into their stuff...

I don't like The Bad Seeds at all. Nick Cave does my head in big time. I figure he's one of those kinda people who's a lot more interesting when on drugs than when not...

EN I don't know too much about. Indsutrial doesn't really float my boat. if I want to hear that sort of noise I just go and spend time in a factory and make those sounds into my own rhythms..

Posted by : THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI : on Sunday, December 09, 2007 at 01:36
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The Van Allen Belt

you can add us to that list of the influenced. but everyone owes a lot to him, whether they know it or not.

Posted by The Van Allen Belt on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 20:22
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.

Well of course you're right. I borrowed a fiver off him in Brighton in the nineties and completely forgot about it until he died. Sorry, dude.

Posted by . on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 22:00
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: THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI :

I suggest you get in touch with his estate...

Posted by : THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI : on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 22:20
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Nonstop Everything

and he mentored irmin schmidt, who i intend to blog about in the near future...

Posted by Nonstop Everything on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 20:33
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: THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI :

I liked his style a great deal.

His comments about 911 were amongts the more honest I heard at the time - nastily uncomfortable and quite outrageous, but honest...

Posted by : THE FUTUREPROOF MUSIC BLOG BY PIOUS GIOVANNI : on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 21:17
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.

And don't forget his influence on Paul McCartney who stuck him on the sleeve of Sgt Pepper. Without Stockhausen, We'd never have had records like 'With A Little Luck' and 'Old Siam Sir'

Posted by . on Saturday, December 08, 2007 at 21:59
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