SEEN AND HEARD CONCERT DOUBLE REVIEW
Elliott Carter Centenary Concert: Pierre-Laurent Aimard (piano), Alain
Damiens (clarinet), Ensemble Intercontemporain, Pierre Boulez (conductor)
Queen Elizabeth Hall, South Bank, London. 11.12.08 (AO) (MB)
Carter – Dialogues
Carter – Matribute, for solo piano
Carter – Intermittences, for solo piano
Carter – Caténaires, for solo piano
Carter – Clarinet concerto
Boulez – Dérive II
Note: Both Anne Ozorio and Mark Berry attended this important concert,
so here we have an unusual seasonal bargain - a Seen and Heard 'Buy One,
Get One Free' review. Ed.
Anne Ozorio writes:
“I think the importance of music …is a sense that one can
produce something that has a special and rather strong meaning, because
we’re increasingly surrounded now by things whose meaning is cat
food or God knows what…..the problem of consumer life has become
universal. I don’t feel I’m writing for consumers. The wonderful
thing about music is that you don’t consume –it’s something
that is like a spirit : a lively spirit that gets into people and shows
them all the different kinds of feelings they might have in life, even
if they don’t experience them themselves.” (Carter in an interview
with Marshall Marcus, Dec 2008.)
Ponder and reflect on what Carter is saying, because it’s a key
to understanding so much about modern music. The more dependent society
gets on “soundbite thinking”, the more we need music that
makes us think and feel. Carter’s music is not populist and probably
never will be “easy listening”, but, as Pierre Boulez says,
“A progressive and stubborn discovery with various and original
means”. Music is a journey of awareness, which never ends, either
for composer or listener.
This centenary tribute was in many ways a “meeting of friends”
and communication. Dialogues,for example, is based on a fairly simple
cell of patterns but is the basis for a vibrant exchange between piano
and orchestra. Sometimes they are in harmony, sometimes they disagree,
but it is an engagement. It’s a concerto, but one with such a lively
sense of surprise that it feels like a freshly-minted concept. Aimard
plays with lightness of touch, to emphasise the good-natured humour. Boulez
realises that the soloists have “voices” here as if they were
characters. The cor anglais is particularly droll.
More on the theme of fellowship followed. Matribute was written for James
Levine to commemorate his mother, and Intermittences refers to chapter
in Proust where Marcel is overwhelmed by memories of his grandmother.
Both pieces are combined with Caténaires, written very recently
for Pierre-Laurent Aimard who played it on the First Night of the Proms
this year. Caténaires are the cables that link electric pylons,
enabling the flow of electricity. Personal relationships mean a lot to
Carter. By combining the three pieces, he’s showing how people connect
and react off each other.
Hence the incredibly rapid rhythms, like the constant hum of electric
cables. There’s a “buzz in the air” so to speak. Also
striking are the sudden switchbacks and changes of direction. Each instrument
is distinctly individual, yet they entwine like a cable, binding different
but disparate threads into something new and strong. It’s a one-line
piece with no chords. As Carter describes it, it’s a “continuous
chain of notes….a stream of semi quavers constantly fast but also
constantly fluctuating in register and in smoothness or irregularity”.
Then, suddenly it ends, not broken, but as if it’s leaped into another
atmosphere.
Since the Proms premiere, Aimard has grown even deeper into the piece,
playing unbelievably fast flurries of notes so they seem to fly off the
keyboard with a life of their own. Ensemble Intercontemporain, too, is
in a totally different league from the BBC Symphony Orchestra at the Proms
The Ensemble was founded by Boulez as a specialist new music ensemble,
each player chosen for his or her virtuoso status. The clarity Boulez
gets from them is phenomenal, as it needs to be in music as precisely
defined as this : truly the effect was electric. Many in this audience
were musicians of the first rank, who really appreciate what it takes
to play at this level. The tumultuous applause that followed was heartfelt.
Commissioned by Boulez for Ensemble Intercontemporain, Carter wrote the
Clarinet Concerto for the skills of Alain Damiens, the ensemble’s
eminent soloist. Carter builds the piece around what he calls “family
groupings” of instruments of different types, rather than the more
usual blocks. Each of the seven movements has a distinct character, with
sweeping swings of mood. Damiens moves between different instrumental
groups, creating a level of unity, a “catenaire”, so to speak.
The final part, the Agitato is vigorous, all the players in action but
in discrete cells.
Choosing Boulez’s own Dérive II to complete the tribute to
Carter was an inspired idea, Carter and Boulez have been so closely associated
for so long that the piece extends the idea of confraternity central to
this programme. But it’s significant on a deeper level, too. Even
at the age of 100, Carter is still writing, still finding new sources
of inspiration. As he says, there’s “late Carter” and
“late, late Carter” ! Dérive II exemplifies that open-ended,
ever-renewing approach to creativity. The spirit that drives Dérive
II is the spirit that drives Carter. This music isn’t pre-packaged
consumer product “like cat food”, as Carter said, but “gets
into people”, constantly growing in their psyches. It was a perceptive
affirmation of Carter’s enduring vitality.
Dérive II grows out of Dérive I. Both explore the idea of
continuous development from simple cells, but with five extra instruments
the possibilities expand exponientially. Sounds interweave and morph,
sometimes pivoting on a single note, presaging, perhaps the switchbacks
in Caténaires. It moves, unfolds, spirals, like a plant shooting
out of the soil, its tendrils unfurling, turning towards the light. There
are even lyrical passages where snatches of near-melody flit past, tantalizingly
elusive. It feels like being in an enchanted forest of sound, each tree,
branch, leaf vivid and different. Sometimes the forest is dense, sometimes
the music opens onto clearings that reveal new ways of listening. Like
Carter's own music, Boulez's is vital and vigorous, still evolving. Perhaps
there will be "late, late Boulez" too, if he makes 100. Cat
food fans beware !
It goes without saying that this was an astounding performance for this
orchestra is so acutely attuned to Boulez's idiom that it was quite magical.
I hope someone taped it for Carter to listen to. He would beam with delight
!
Anne Ozorio
And Mark Berry adds:
Elliott Carter Centenary Concert – Carter and Boulez: Pierre-Laurent
Aimard (piano), Alain Damiens (clarinet), Ensemble Intercontemporain,
Pierre Boulez (conductor). Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, 11.12.2008 (MB)
Following the previous night’s Messiaen celebrations – in
practice, at least as much a celebration of Boulez – the Ensemble
Intercontemporain, its founder, and Pierre-Laurent Aimard moved on to
Elliott Carter, for his hundred birthday. The astounding difference, or
one of them, is of course that Carter is still with us – and still
composing: unprecedented for one entering his eleventh decade.
Prior to the opening work, we saw a recorded interview with him, in which
he was still very much the Carter of old, buoyed with enthusiasm for his
most recent projects, including a clarinet quintet for Charles Neidich
and the Juillard Quartet, and a flute concerto for Emmanuel Pahud. Carter
poignantly expressed the hope that he might hear the latter, none of its
first performances having taken place in America. Europe, he explained,
has always been more receptive to his music, not least since broadcasting
is not here – perhaps one should add, not solely – based upon
the needs of advertising. If it is true, as Carter claimed, that he has
more ‘friends’ in Europe than in his own land, we should consider
that to be an honour. On the other hand, we should also consider how,
in the words of Daniel Barenboim in one of several programme tributes,
Carter ‘combines America with Europe’. This concert made a
very good start.
Dialogues, a concertante piece for piano and ensemble, provided a glittering
opening. Rather to my surprise, and despite Aimard’s predictably
fine performance, I found much of the orchestral writing more compelling
than the piano part – although perhaps this will change with greater
acquaintance. As ever with Carter, there was an abundant sense of life,
of joy. Poised midway between chamber and orchestral music, a work such
as this is the lifeblood of the Ensemble Intercontemporain, whose performance
could hardly be faulted.
With Matribute – ‘ma tribute’ – a short piece
written for James Levine, to honour Levine’s mother, we reached
the solo piano selection. I was taken with the contrast between melodic
development, rising up through the keyboard’s octaves, and that
characteristic Carter kinetic energy, both influencing each other and
yet never quite merging. Intermittences and Caténaires were given
what was described as the United Kingdom premiere of their joint existence
as Two Thoughts about the Piano. If this were stretching a point somewhat,
there was no need, since such fine piano writing needs no pretext for
performance. It was, in any case, my first hearing of either piece. Aimard
once again proved a spellbinding guide, though the silences (intermittences,
as in Proust) and eruptions of the first piece. His fingers and feet –
for here, pedalling is crucial, not least with regard to the middle pedal
– were wholly at the service of the music and as communicative to
the audience as one could imagine. The different ‘characters’
– always a key feature of Carter’s writing – were vividly
portrayed, as was the more single-character nature of Caténaires.
Its toccata-like single line spun if anything an even more gripping narrative,
almost miraculously transforming the chordal instrument into a giant violin
– solo Bach sprang to my mind – all the more to impress us
with the variety of colours a single line can produce.
The Clarinet Concerto received an equally commanding presentation. Commissioned
by Boulez and the Ensemble Intercontemporain, and written with Alain Damiens
in mind – he and they premiered the work in 1997 – one could
hardly have wished for a more authoritative or, again, vivacious performance.
The five sections of the orchestra each had their opportunities to shine,
to interact, to project their ‘character’ or ‘characters’,
and they took them. Damiens and Boulez not only held the work together
– Damiens literally moving around the stage, to interact with each
group – but appeared to engage in a dialogue of their own, reminding
us that this is a concerto, with considerable ambiguity concerning the
relationship between blend and battle when it comes to the soloist and
other players. Once again, there was energetic game-playing aplenty, but
there were also oases of calm, the harmonies of the string-based Largo
section quite ravishing, and unerringly placed in terms of the dramatic
game-plan.
Where the previous evening, Boulez had presented his sur Incises, here
we had the revision, completed in 2006, of Dérive II. The work
was now double the length of the previous time I had heard it. In many
ways, it seems Janus-faced, connecting back to the SACHER-inspired works
of the 1970s and 1980s, whilst also showcasing much of his more recent
harmonic and structural development. As ever, the overwhelming sensation
is of proliferation, in every aspect of the music. It was also striking
how every instrument in the ensemble – eleven instrumentalists:
woodwind, strings, and tuned percussion, including piano – was given
ample opportunity to shine; it would be invidious to single out any one
in particular, though I must mention the echoes of the Rite of Spring
in the bassoon writing. One aspect that somewhat surprised me was how
frankly thematic much of Boulez’s writing proved to be. In this,
the expert performance of the EIC, under his direction, contributed a
great deal. The oft-elusive ability to find an ending, most definitely
achieved in sur Incises, was again displayed here: rhythmically exciting
in the lead-up to its final, unanswerable unison.
Mark Berry
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