Tristan Perceptions
Tristan Perceptions
Tristan Perceptions
By
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Doctor of Philosophy
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Department of Music
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UMI 3602679
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Felipe De Souza Lara
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DEDICATION
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENS
of this document would have not been possible. Professor Karchin was not
only instrumental in helping me discover local and global reference points and
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inconsistencies, but showed unmatched support, enthusiasm, and availability
from the get go. His insights and additions have always been fascinating,
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knowledgeable, and fruitful. I will always regard Professor Karchin as an ideal
example of an adviser, teacher, and mentor, and will try to match his all
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encompassing support when the time comes for me to advise my own students.
an academic.
and discussion of their ideas have helped to broaden my horizons within the
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extend to my esteemed dissertation readers, Professors Michael Beckerman
and Brigid Cohen, for the time, continual support, and enthusiasm.
Lawren Young and Pauline Lum, whose help has been unlimited since day
one.
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numerous teachings and insights over the years.
Many thanks to my close friends Ricardo Vogt, Leala Cyr, and Robert
and friendship.
every way, and for whom I would like to express my deep love and
appreciation.
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PREFACE
Messiaens Turangalla Symphony, under Seiji Ozawa was, in fact, the first
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live performance of 20th century concert music that I heard. What initially
attracted me to the piece and later to Messiaens work generally, was the
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composers unusual orchestration technique, which achieved an extremely
I first met Murail upon moving to New York, in 2005. From 2006 to
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was available during this period for private lessons, and I attended rehearsals
and concerts of his works. It was during this time that I decided to pursue
further research into the composers unique style and technique, as well as the
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dissertations discuss the timbral and technological characteristics of Murails
music, few access it from the point of view of interpretation and translation of
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models.
Comparative Literature at New York University. While the seminars did not
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address music per se, they explored seminal texts on translation studies,
(re)produce a copy, but rather to appropriate the wide array of useful concepts
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ABSTRACT
composer Tristan Murail, one of the founders of the spectral movement, and in
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compositions. Composers have employed such models through the ages as
catalysts for the realization of their creative potential, but Murails treatment of
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these models differs substantially from the pictorial musical representation of
make use of more general imagery, he also utilizes actual data from his models
to create harmonies, melodic contours and rhythms, as well as local and global
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forms. I present a study that analyzes the application of these models to three
complex issues involving the translation from model to notated musical idea,
works composition. The thesis thus traces the evolution of Murails music
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against the backdrop of technological change. Relevant concepts from
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relationship with IRCAM. Chapter 4 discusses relevant topics and texts from
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
DEDICATION iii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS iv
PREFACE vi
ABSTRACT viii
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LIST OF APPENDICES xvii
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CHAPTER 1: Introduction to the Music of Tristan Murail 1
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1.1 Early influences 3
1.2 Messiaen 4
1.3 Ligeti 6
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1.4 Xenakis 7
1.5 Scelsi 8
1.6 Varse 13
1.7 Conclusion 15
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2.1 LItineraire and the French Spectral School 16
2.7 Microtones 37
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2.9 Electronic spectra 41
2.11 Formants 43
2.15 Process 48
2.16 Distortion 49
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3.4 Partial tracking, SPEAR 75
3.9 Conclusion 85
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4.1 Translation theory 87
4.4 Hypertranslation 94
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5.6 Serendib 133
APPENDICES 172
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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LIST OF FIGURES
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Figure 04 Compressed and stretched spectra. 51
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Figure 05 Distortion proportional to highest and lowest frequencies. 51
Figure 08 FM spectrum. 68
Figure 09 Sonogram. 75
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Figure 12 Carriers and modulator for the first section of Gondwana. 121
Figure 14 Double harmonic spectrum from the end of the first section of
Gondwana. 122
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Figure 15 Orchestration of first aggregate of Gondwana. 124
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Figure 22 Fractal subdivision of section 1 of Serendib. 134
Figure 24 Two states of the Lorenz attractor: simple and strange. 138
Figure 28 Interaction of different objects in pages five and six of Le Lac. 147
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Figure 35 Sweeping filtering analogy. 163
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LIST OF APPENDICES
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APPENDIX C: Tran(slate) 211
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CHAPTER 1
realizing their creative ideas. The celebrated French composer Tristan Murail
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has consistently employed such models throughout his career and has made
them a central part of his musical thinking. Murails music has incorporated
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models derived from a variety of sources including acoustic phenomena
geometry (self-similar proportions), and even works from the classical music
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traditional sense, the composer also uses specific data gleaned from his models
and global forms. In his orchestral work Le Partage des eaux, for example,
Murail utilizes the sounds of a wave breaking on the beach. The natural
phenomenon inspires the works profile, not unlike the approach favored by
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manipulated, and transformed as the composer appropriates this natural gesture
Michelangelos: the artist unveils the work of art already hidden inside the
of a stone block which conceals a hidden form; a spectrum will thus be able to
criteria and with the help of certain instruments: active filtering, selection of
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tempered pitches, spectral exploration this composition technique, from the
Murail was born in the city of Le Havre, France, on March 11, 1947.
receiving degrees in classical Arabic and Maghrib Arabic from the National
Economics and a degree from the Paris Institute of Political Studies. In 1971
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later that year the coveted Rome Prize, an award that allowed him to spend two
techniques but soon decided that the style was not appropriate for him. Murail
1
Tristan Murail, Questions de cible [Questions of object], Entretemps 8 (September 1989),
154.
2
Pierre Michel, Introduction, trans. Joshua Fineberg. Contemporary Music Review 2,
(2005), 119.
3
Ircam-Centre Pompidou, http://brahms.ircam.fr/tristan-murail#bio, 2011.
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in its harmonic dimension. He disengaged himself from serial procedures in
Messiaen
Murail claims that Messiaen (his only teacher) insisted that his students
decisive during Murails formative years. Messiaen exposed Murail to his own
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and Gyrgy Ligeti. As a student, Murail had first-hand knowledge of and
access to Messiaens thinking, even though he will not confirm the French
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master as a direct influence on his music. Messiaens construction of the
piano and its resonance, his radically slow moving organ sonorities, as well as
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his ability to create large and dense chords without losing harmonic depth or
addition, master and student shared the admiration for the ondes Martenot, an
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Tristan Murail, Scelsi and LItineraire: The Exploration of Sound, trans. Robert Hosegawa.
Contemporary Music Review 2, (2005): 182.
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Ibid.
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the Turangalla-Symphonie, Trois petites liturgies de la presence divine, and in
his opera Saint-Franois dAssise (where the score calls for three of them). The
leading orchestras. This unusual fascination perhaps led Murail to his first
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Farewell, and a Smile), a short work for piano. The work was commissioned
(the adieu) of one of Olivier Messiaen's earliest works, his piano prelude
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Cloches d'angoisse et larmes d'adieu (1929). Murail writes, I tried to mix in,
amongst other allusions, a few [examples of the] ethos of bells which are
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and clusters of chords in cheerful keys, as the smile of Messiaen's last works
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The ondes Martenot allows the exploration of non-tempered frequency spaces in the form of
glissandi by sliding the metal ring with the right hand.
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managed to triumph for good over the anguishes and tears of the past for
Ligeti
oscillator bank. The illusion of seemingly infinite sustaining power and the
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possibility of seamless transitions between stable but highly differentiated
movement of often cluster-like, pitch aggregates. The term refers to the global
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and timbres that are not always perceivable by themselves, but in combination,
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create densely woven and fluid polyphonic cobwebs. Ligeti writes, The
polyphonic structure does not come through, you cannot hear it; it remains
7
Tristan Murail, Cloches dadieu, et un sourirein memoriam Olivier Messiaen,
http://www.tristanmurail.com/en/oeuvre-fiche.php?cotage=27527
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Tristan Murail, The Revolution of Complex Sounds, trans. Joshua Cody. Contemporary
Music Review 2, (2005), 123.