source file: m1397.txt Date: Mon, 27 Apr 1998 07:12:46 -0400 Subject: La Monte Young's "Well-Tuned Piano" From: monz@juno.com (Joseph L Monzo) Yesterday David Beardsley hosted a listening session at La Monte Young and Marian Zazeela's _Dream House_ in New York, of the now out-of-print Grammavision 5-CD set of a performance by Young of his "The Well-Tuned Piano". This work is an always-evolving (I suppose I really mean always-expanding) piece for piano solo, and this performance was just over 5 hours long. It is certainly Young's magnum opus, and in this version, truly a vast conception. It was performed on a specially reconstructed 9-foot Bösendorfer Grand which has an extraordinarily resonant tone and which was meticulously retuned. The tuning is a 12-tone 7-limit just intonation scale, mapped onto the keyboard in one octave and repeated in all the rest. It actually uses ratios with factors of only 3 and 7 -- Young has never been fond of composing with ratios involving 5 as a factor. As best as I can tell, he feels that 5 has been explored fairly extensively in our most familiar music, and he wishes to investigate the ratios with prime factors higher than 5 (he probably uses 3 because it supplies lots of perfect 4ths and 5ths). He conceives his pitches as extracts from the harmonic series, so that all the different melodies and chords ultimately reinforce the same low fundamental, although he displays much skill in "tonicizing" higher partials by using pitches which relate to them in small-number ratios -- in particular, he uses the septimal 3rds and 6ths (7/6, 9/7, 12/7, and 14/9) a great deal, to make major and minor chords. The piece is continuous (certainly an extraordinary feat of endurance for any performer), and uses many different melodic styles -- chorale, middle eastern, gamelan, etc. (all the sections have Young's typically fanciful names) -- each of which is a little self-contained section. Interspersed between these, and sometimes used as bass part under them, are longer sections Young calls "clouds", in which he plays a sort of tremolo on a chord in the lower ranges of the piano (the differently-named clouds use different chords). These "clouds" produce summation tones which reinforce higher overtones of the so-low-it's-inaudible fundamental, and they can be clearly heard. For me, these are the most striking parts of the piece, as high overtones waver in and out, creating a kind of melody, over the rumbling bass. Indeed, these sections to me did not sound like a piano at all, but rather like an ensemble of strings and horns. Kyle Gann has a webpage about the tuning, at: http://home.earthlink.net/~kgann/wtp.html Gann has also written a much longer and more detailed article about the piece, "La Monte Young's The Well-Tuned Piano", published in _Perspectives of New Music_, Vol. 31 No. 1. Beardsley's website also has a link to a comprhensive webpage about Young. His server was down when I tried to get the address to this page, but his site is at: http://www.virtulink.com/immp/lookhere.htm Many thanks to David Beardsley for hosting this -- it was a great opportunity to hear a compete performance of a landmark modern just-intonation piece, in a most effective setting (a Zazeela light- and-shadow environment, which always accompanies a Young piece). It was about as close as one could get to a live Young/Zazeela performance. Anyone with an interest in tuning should wish that these CDs would be reissued. I know I'd buy a copy. Joseph L. Monzo monz@juno.com _____________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com Or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]