Piece for Four Pianos explained

Piece for Four Pianos
Composer:Morton Feldman
Composed:April 30, 1957
Performed:1957, New York City
Scoring:Four pianos

Piece for Four Pianos is a musical composition for four pianos by American composer Morton Feldman. It was finished in 1957.

Background

Feldman's Piece for Four Pianos was first conceived as a result of the composer's fascination with the timbral and spatial possibilities of the piano, which he explored in many other compositions for two to five pianos in his lifetime, such as Extensions IV, Two Pieces, and Five Pianos. It was Feldman's first free durational composition with fixed pitches, as he grew more and more frustrated with the use of regular pulses and rhythmic placement.[1] [2] A somewhat early chamber composition, Piece for Four Pianos was written on April 30, 1957. It was premiered shortly after by John Cage, William Masselos, Grete Sultan and David Tudor, in the Carl Fischer Concert Hall, 165 West 57th Street, New York City. It was then published by C. F. Peters in 1962.[3]

Structure

Piece for Four Pianos is a single-movement composition scored for four pianos reading the same sheet of music.[3] Its duration may vary widely, since Feldman specifies in the score that all beats are meant to be played slowly but not necessarily simultaneously—that is, each performer has its own internal speed, which may be different from the rest.[3] [4] However, most performances tend to be about 7 to 8 minutes long. As other early works by Feldman, this piece is meant to have an echo-like or reverberant quality.[5] Feldman attempted to remove what he believe to be a supposed virtue of traditional ensemble playing, stating that "It works better if [the players] don't listen [to each other]."[6] He then stated that the result should be "like a series of reverberations from an identical sound source" and that "the beginning of the piece is like a recognition, not a motif, and by virtue of the repetitions it conditions one to listen."[7]

The original score is one page, five systems long written in notation.[3] Feldman only uses seventy-five musical events, including chords, single notes, and rests, arrayed in an arbitrary fashion.[8] [9] The piece requires all pianists to start simultaneously, all playing the same chord while slowly drifting apart in tempo.[10] [11] Notes are generally stemless, although stems can be found in some passages and grace notes, and some eighth notes with empty heads are present. There is no measure division, time signature, key signature, and tempo markings.[3] [12] Feldman provides no indications as to how the notes written in the score can be read, which gives performers some space for artistic freedom. Even though there are no explicit dynamic markings present in the score, Feldman specifies that the piece has to be played with low dynamics with a minimum of attack. Despite the fact that the piece has no measures, players are expected to count beats, as fermatas, grace notes and silent beats are present and common in the piece.[3] [13]

Reception

In January 1960, music critic Alfred Frankenstein wrote on High Fidelity magazine that "although [Feldman denied] that his Piece for Four Pianos has anything to do with Webern's pointillism, the effect of [Feldman's] works is eminently Webernian" and "the final result is to compact hours into seconds with an almost overwhelming intensity and depth of feeling".[14] English composer Cornelius Cardew, who would later work with Feldman and premiere some of his works, also wrote that "possibly because it has been played so much, this piece has acquired a venerable quality; the notes themselves have an air of immutability, as though they were pre-determined in some non-human sphere, possibly by the instruments for which they were written." Maurice Hinson wrote that "it is possible that Feldman's work was designed to reattract audiences largely put off by an extreme mathematical approach to music", and the piece contains "delicate textures and sonorities".[15]

Recordings

The piece remains a popular experiment for chamber pianists to this day. Here is a list of recordings of Piece for Four Pianos:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cline . David . The Graph Music of Morton Feldman . 26 May 2016 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-316-56521-6 . 15 July 2021.
  2. Book: Potter . Keith . Four Musical Minimalists: La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Steve Reich, Philip Glass . 25 April 2002 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-01501-1 . 15 July 2021.
  3. Web site: Feldman . Morton . Piece for 4 Pianos . C. F. Peters. 15 July 2021. 1962.
  4. Book: Pace. Ian. Ian Pace. McBride . Nigel . Critical Perspectives on Michael Finnissy: Bright Futures, Dark Pasts . 24 May 2019 . Routledge . 978-1-351-03152-3 . 15 July 2021.
  5. Book: DeLio, Thomas. Thomas DeLio. The Music of Morton Feldman . Psychology Press . 15 July 2021. 1996. 9780935016161.
  6. Book: Gagne . Cole . Caras . Tracy . Soundpieces 2: Interviews with American Composers . 1993 . Scarecrow Press . 978-0-8108-2710-3 . 15 July 2021.
  7. Book: Nyman, Michael. Michael Nyman. Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond . 29 July 1999 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-65383-1 . 15 July 2021.
  8. Book: Lucier . Alvin . Alvin Lucier . Music 109: Notes on Experimental Music . 16 November 2012 . Wesleyan University Press . 978-0-8195-7298-1 . 15 July 2021.
  9. Book: Taruskin, Richard. Richard Taruskin. The Oxford History of Western Music: The late twentieth century . 2005 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-522274-6 . 15 July 2021.
  10. Book: O'Hara . Frank . Liner notes of Columbia Masterworks ML 5403 — Morton Feldman – New Directions in Music 2 . 1959 . Columbia Masterworks.
  11. Book: Reich, Steve. Steve Reich. Writings on Music, 1965–2000 . 11 April 2002 . Oxford University Press . 978-0-19-535478-2 . 15 July 2021.
  12. Book: Peters . Rainer . Liner notes of WERGO WER 6708 2 . 2009 . WERGO. Mainz.
  13. Book: San Francisco Symphony. Susan Key. Larry Rothe. Michael Tilson Thomas. American Mavericks . 2001 . University of California Press . 978-0-520-23305-8 . 76 . 15 July 2021.
  14. Book: Liner notes of Odyssey 32 16 0302 – Morton Feldman – The Early Years . 1968 . Odyssey . New York.
  15. Book: Hinson . Maurice . Music for More than One Piano: An Annotated Guide . 9 July 2001 . Indiana University Press . 978-0-253-11306-1 . 15 July 2021.
  16. Book: Liner notes of Auditorium Edizioni AUD 01 1303 . 2003 . Auditorium Edizioni.
  17. Book: Minimal Piano Collection, Vol. X–XX. 2010 . Brilliant Classics. Utrecht .
  18. Web site: Edgard Varèse: Amériques / Morton Feldman: Piece for Four Pianos / Five Pianos . Schott Music. 16 July 2021.