QUaX Ensemble, Petr Kotik - Cornelius Cardew - Treatise (2009)
Artist: QUaX Ensemble, Petr Kotik
Title: Cornelius Cardew - Treatise
Year Of Release: 2009
Label: Mode
Genre: Avantgarde, Modern Classical, Free Improvisation
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
Total Time: 02:06:56
Total Size: 568 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Cornelius Cardew - Treatise
Year Of Release: 2009
Label: Mode
Genre: Avantgarde, Modern Classical, Free Improvisation
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log)
Total Time: 02:06:56
Total Size: 568 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
1.1 - 2.3 Treatise
For any number of musicians with any instruments, may be performed whole or in part.
Recorded live in Prague, October 15, 1967
Performers:
The QUaX Ensemble
Petr Kotik, conductor
This performance of Cardew's monumental 193-page graphic score Treatise was recorded live in Prague in 1967 by the Czech QUaX Ensemble, directed by composer, flautist & conductor Petr Kotik. This historical recording offers a unique perspective to hear Treatise as interpreted by Cardew's contemporaries.
Kotik met Cardew in Warsaw in 1962 and they began exchanging scores by mail, including Treatise, which was a work in progress. Upon meeting again in London (1966), Cardew provided Kotik with additional portions of the score and insights.
Fresh from this encounter, Kotik started the QUaX Ensemble upon his return to Prague in 1966. The first thing QUaX did was to rehearse Treatise, working through the pages Kotik had: "The piece was very important for getting all of us together, musically speaking, besides having a lot of fun working out individual pages by having all the musicians contribute ideas and suggestions. We worked regularly over a long period of time, ending up with a 2-hour version of the piece... only performed once, at the concert on October 15, 1967 in Prague." It is presented here.
Cardew said: "Treatise is a continuous weaving and combining of a host of graphic elements (of which only a few are recognizably related to musical symbols) into a long visual composition, the meaning of which in terms of sound is not specified in any way. ... Any number of musicians using any media are free to participate in a 'reading' of this score ... and each is free to interpret it in his own way.
Liner notes by Petr Kotik and Cardew's friend and colleague John Tilbury.
Tilbury says of this performance: "There is much to admire in this 1967 version of Treatise by the QUaX Ensemble from Prague: the feeling of spontaneity, its uninhibitedness, the rough-hewn sounds, the accidental, the half-intended, the blurred."
Kotik met Cardew in Warsaw in 1962 and they began exchanging scores by mail, including Treatise, which was a work in progress. Upon meeting again in London (1966), Cardew provided Kotik with additional portions of the score and insights.
Fresh from this encounter, Kotik started the QUaX Ensemble upon his return to Prague in 1966. The first thing QUaX did was to rehearse Treatise, working through the pages Kotik had: "The piece was very important for getting all of us together, musically speaking, besides having a lot of fun working out individual pages by having all the musicians contribute ideas and suggestions. We worked regularly over a long period of time, ending up with a 2-hour version of the piece... only performed once, at the concert on October 15, 1967 in Prague." It is presented here.
Cardew said: "Treatise is a continuous weaving and combining of a host of graphic elements (of which only a few are recognizably related to musical symbols) into a long visual composition, the meaning of which in terms of sound is not specified in any way. ... Any number of musicians using any media are free to participate in a 'reading' of this score ... and each is free to interpret it in his own way.
Liner notes by Petr Kotik and Cardew's friend and colleague John Tilbury.
Tilbury says of this performance: "There is much to admire in this 1967 version of Treatise by the QUaX Ensemble from Prague: the feeling of spontaneity, its uninhibitedness, the rough-hewn sounds, the accidental, the half-intended, the blurred."