Steffen Schleiermacher - Fluxus Piano (2015)

  • 18 Jul, 17:02
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Artist:
Title: Fluxus Piano
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: MDG Scene
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:12:58
Total Size: 178 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Sylvano Bussotti / Four Piano Pieces For David Tudor (1959)
1 – I 1:42
2 – II 1:39
3 – III 2:01
4 – IV 1:16
5 – Toru Takemitsu / Piano Distance 4:35
6 – Frederic Rzewski / Study II (Dreams) 15:17
7 – Toshi Ichiyanagi / Music For Piano No. 4 5:33
8 – Philip Corner / Piano Activities (Piece For Many Pianists) 6:29
9 – Terry Jennings / Piano Piece 5:21
10 – Dick Higgins / Litany Piano Piece For Emmett Williams 7:12
11 – John Cage / Variations I - Version For Piano Solo 6:08
12 – Yoko Ono / Overtone Piece - Version For Piano Solo 5:12
13 – Ben Patterson / Ants 6:04
György Ligeti / Trois Bagatelles For Piano
14 – I 2:19
15 – II 0:33
16 – III 0:34
17 – IV (Bonus) 0:42

Performers:
Steffen Schleiermacher, piano

This is what the mild-mannered music lover first recalls with great concern when the term ”Fluxus“ is heard. However, as Steffen Schleiermacher shows with a couple of friends on his latest CD, there is much more to Fluxus. With great seriousness the Fluxists seek and find highly individual forms of expression, even on the piano.

Along with reminiscences of Dada, miniatures are produced surprising us even fifty years later with their unconventional view of music and sound.

Fluxus concerts could be repeated, but what was included in the repertoire remained in flux. Steffen Schleiermacher’s selection contains some works by composers such as John Cage, Yoko Ono, and György Ligeti that were performed at the International Festival of the Newest Music held in Wiesbaden in 1962.

The Fluxus composers offered the performing musicians a great deal of freedom for making their own decisions. Whether the composition was limited to more or less specific playing instructions, as in Yoko Ono’s “Overtone Piece” and Philip Corner’s “Piano Activities,” or had a difficult-to-interpret graphic score, as with Toshi Ichiyanagi or the master calligrapher Sylvano Bussotti, Steffen Schleiermacher has no equals when it comes to transforming cryptic sources into fascinating sounds.