| Hi all,
In July I travelled to Kuerten, a town about 40 mins outside of Cologne for the annual Stockhausen Courses. These have run every year since Stockhausen's 70th birthday in 1998, and run for 10 days during which around 300 interpreters, composers, musicologists and music enthusiasts gather to celebrate the music of Stockhausen. There is a concert held every night, and during the day there are various seminars: Stockhausen holds a daily composition seminar, there are daily classes analyzing Stockhausen's music (this year Richard Toop provided a 7 day overview of LICHT; highly appropriate for anyone who knows the piece) and the interpreters are given masterclasses on Stockhausen's works for their instrument.
In the trumpet class, taken by Marco Blaauw, there was one other trumpeter, Kerry Lannan from Kansas (one hell of a player), and we worked alternating hours with Marco. Kerry was playing OBERLIPPENTANZ and I played ARIES, both huge intense pieces (what of KhS's is not?) which required a great deal of work with Marco. I thought I had prepared ARIES pretty well; I'd played it at Chosen Vale a few times, I had the memory pretty well down (All of Stockhausen's trumpet music requires that the player play from memory), but I soon realized I had only scratched the surface. Marco demanded an attention to detail that I hadn't encountered before, and helped reveal layers of musical meaning that I can honestly say I had never experienced in music written for the trumpet. Needless to say, these were very intense classes!
Both Kerry and I were selected to play in one of three participant concerts held throughout the courses. This allowed us to rehearse with Stockhausen on the morning of the concert, and in my case, with Stockhausen as the Projectionist. So, I arrived for my rehearsal at 1030 AM, and we worked on a 15 minute piece till nearly 1pm. Stockhausen was unrelenting. His knowledge of a piece he wrote in 1977 was extraordinairy. Every aspect of the performance he wanted to control, down to how quickly I walked on to the stage, where my eyes were directed, and how I was holding the instrument. In addition to this, the musical level of detail he demanded was amazing. For example, there is a 3 minute section of graphic notation at the beginning of the piece, indicating speech like sounds from the harmon mute, 'electronic' and 'disconnected'. This I was playing basically as an improvisation- Stockhausen told me that there were indeed 7 dashes here, and 9 here, and this was to be longer than that...
So, I played the concert- absolutely sh*itting my pants- but it went OK. I walked off stage and Stockhausen was there to tell me I hadn't played staccato enough in bar X and in bar Y the dynamic was piano not piannisimo!
I should add all these directions seemed to come not from not from a control freak composer, but from a great mind for which music is everything. Stockhausen's ambitions as a composer run higher than any other I have known, no less than to cause transformation in people and by extension, the world, and as such he takes his mission very, very seriously. As a result, he has a history of alienating people who he feels are not as committed as he is. (who could be) thus the prickly personality Ed alluded to.
Working with Stockhausen has been one of the highlights of my musical life. I have no doubt he is one of the greatest minds in music, and to come into contact with him has been an enormous privilege. His ideas about the ritual of performance I believe are revolutionary. In many ways he is way ahead of his (our) time, but he believes history will find his position vindicated. I found him an extremely intimidating personality, but someone I am very much looking forward to working with again. Working with him changed me for the better as a musician.
If anyone wants to discuss this further, I'd be happy to. As trumpet players, we are incredibly lucky that this truly great composer has written so much for our instrument. I'd urge any of you interested to check it out...its very demanding stuff, both to play and initially understand, but the rewards far exceed the level of exertion required.
Tristram Williams |