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Melos

Gunnar Berg

Melos

Bolette Roed, Michael Norman Sørensen, Per Dybro Sørensen
Gunnar Berg (1909-1989) enjoys a unique position among Danish composers. He was part of the international modernist milieu in post-war Europe in the circle around Olivier Messiaen and had inspiring meetings with John Cage, Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen. Berg's music has only recently become properly known and recognized in his native Denmark. This CD offers rare experiences of the experiments with 12-tone music and serialism from the 1950s, with the recorder in focus, as well as complex, pulsating guitar music from the last part of his life.
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Total runtime: 
71 min.

 MELOS

 

Gunnar Berg (1909-1989) is one of the pioneers of serial music and one of the most important representatives of European musical modernism in Denmark. At an early stage he adopted an international orientation and in 1948 he travelled to Paris to study with Arthur Honegger. He joined the circle around Olivier Messiaen, met John Cage and Pierre Boulez, and made the acquaintance of the music of Webern and Varèse. In 1952 he attended the international summer course for contemporary music in Darm-stadt, where his meeting with Karlheinz Stockhausen served as a confirmation of his own musical experiments. The ten-year stay in Paris was of crucial importance to Berg, who from 1950 on uncompromisingly, consistently and personally adhered to the com-plex gesturality of musical modernism as well as the theory and aesthetics of the serial composition method - but without becoming dogmatic. Along with his wife, the French pianist Béatrice Berg (1921-1976), he returned to Denmark in 1957 to introduce the avant-garde music of the period to the Danish folk high schools, and the Bergs came to play an important role in the Danish musical life of the next few years, although there was never any great public response to his music.

From first to last his experiences at the piano had a determining influence on Berg's musical oeuvre. The piano works for Béatrice Berg comprise many small instruc-tional pieces, four virtuoso orchestral works - Essai acoustique, Frise, Pour piano et orchestre and Uculang - as well as the two major solo piano works Eclate-ments 1-13 and Gaffky's 1-10, both in formats that place them among the major manifestations of Danish piano literature in the latter half of the twentieth century.

Encounters with female musicians were highly stimulating for Berg. For the Swiss recorder player Anita Stange (b. 6), who had trained at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis with the legendary Ina Lohr, he composed two recorder works - Triedra for recorder solo and 9 Duos for recorder and cello. Both works are dedicated to Anita Stange, who gave them first performances at Hermann Gattiker's Hausabende für zeit-ge-nössische Music\ in Bern, where Berg, with a total of fifteen performances, is on the top-ten list of just under 400 composers played (Doris Lanz: Neue Music in alten Mau-ern, 2006; the chapter on Gunnar Berg has also been published at www.gunnarberg.dk).

For the German guitarist Maria Kämmerling (b. 1946) Berg composed several works. In 1 she had married the Danish guitarist Leif Christensen (1950-1988) and settled in Denmark. Both as teachers and as musicians, this couple were pace-setters in Danish musical life, and they were greatly respected on the international guitar scene with concerts and a considerable CD production of both classical and modern guitar music.

The encounter with the Danish music scene was a surprise for Maria Kämmer-ling. She had undergone her musical training in the Cologne of Stockhausen and Kagel and at the Hochschule für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Vienna, and not much was known there about Danish composition music and the tendencies towards simplicity that came as a reaction to complex international modernism and became known under the overall designation the New Danish -Simplicity- a movement that with some justifi-cation can be compared to the attitude behind the famous Danish Dogma films of the nineties. As a member of the chamber ensemble Sub Rosa, which played both Baroque and contemporary composed music, Maria Kämmerling participated in first perfor-man-ces of several Danish works - including, in 1976, Per Nørgård's Nova Genitura. It was on that occasion that she first heard music by Gunnar Berg, whose Triedra and 9 Duos were played by Annette Friisholm, recorder, and Hans Erik Deckert, cello.

Berg's musical idiom reminded Maria Kämmerling so much of Cologne that she visited Berg and invited him to write for her instrument. Berg had no experience of the guitar and refused with the words: \\Berlioz, in his Traité d'Instrumentation, is supposed to have said: If you do not play the guitar yourself, don't write for this instrument\\. However, Maria Kämmerling insisted, and Berg was persuaded to let her introduce him to the instru-ment. For the next year they jointly explored the guitar. Maria Kämmerling speaks of Berg's special interest in the guitar's quarter-tones, which are easy to execute in practice by pulling or pushing a string aside, but which were a relatively new pheno-menon in the guitar literature of the time. Without regard to ordinary, normal playing and composition style, Berg went to work using quarter-tones, not only as individual notes, but also in chords, and sometimes in combination with harmonics. The new, unusual and different, boundary-breaking tonal landscape that arose reveals Berg's profound familiarity with the physiognomy of the tones; but technically Berg's scores were a great challenge to Maria Kämmerling, who had to write small arrows into her music to mark the direction in which the string had to be displaced so that the chord notes on the adjacent strings would not be prevented from sounding.

In 1978 this unusually fruitful collaboration between composer and musician resulted in Fresques for solo guitar, which with its array of quarter-tones, previously unheard combinations of harmonics and an extreme spectrum of dynamics and stroke types is one of the most concentrated works that modern guitar music has to offer. The Swiss guitarist Mats Scheidegger has called Fresques a great vision for the instrument and regards the almost hour-long piece as one of the century's most significant guitar works, presenting nothing less than a whole sound-topography of the instrument in a beautiful and complex way; he compares Fresques to Helmut Lachenmann's Salut für Caudwell and Brian Ferneyhough's Kurze Schatten II.

Maria Kämmerling gave Fresques its first performance in 1978, and the next year she recorded it for the label Paula Records - a recording that stands as striking testi-mony to an extraordinary musician and an unusual ability to realize complex scores, a dexterity she lost in the tragic car accident in 1988, which Leif Christensen did not survive.

Gunnar Berg's guitar works comprise:

-  Fresques (1978) for solo guitar

-  Hyperion (1978) for soprano, guitar and nine instruments to a text by Friedrich Hölderlin

-  Melos I (1979) for solo guitar

-  9 Duos (1957/1984) for recorder and guitar (originally recorder and cello; the recorder part can also be played on a flute)

-  Ar-Goat (1984-85) for two guitars

-  A small collection of early songs where the piano has been replaced by the guitar

Ar-Goat

In 1980 Gunnar Berg left Denmark and returned to Switzerland, where he was born. In Igis, some 100 km south of his birthplace St. Gall, he concluded his guitar chapter with 9 Duos for flute and guitar and Ar-Goat for two guitars. Ar-Goat was first per-formed on 2nd February 1986 at the Royal Danish Academy of Music by Maria Käm-mer-ling and Leif Christensen.

Berg was not particularly communicative about his music, and several of his work titles are enigmatic. This is the case with Ar-Goat, although he pointed to a Celtic connection: Argoat is the Breton name of the wooded inland region of Brittany where Berg spent the summer of 1949.

The dominant character of Ar-Goat is pointillistic. In all three movements single notes in changing textures and density predominate; notes from the two guitars rarely coincide, although they both play all the time, and the use of chords is limited. The first movement's shifting metronome speeds, time signatures and dynamic range from ppp to f, along with the frequent use of quarter-tones, create a fluctuating character. Sometimes the movement comes together in a swinging pulse, solidifies and begins anew. There is a surprisingly alien contrasting section with tremolo glissandi in both guitars, which ends just as suddenly as it began. The fast second movement is a tour de force with dynamic shuttling between ppp and f. The metronome speed and time signature remain the same throughout the movement, but one guitar part is notated in 4/8, the other in 5/8, and this has an electrifying effect, creating a rhythmic drive that at some points recalls free jazz. In a very few places the notes are supplemented by rapping on the guitar body. The third movement is one long fade-out; there are no dynamic markings, but there are changes in both metronome speed and time signature. The pulse is slower, sometimes coming together march-like in a more stable tempo, sometimes coming to a complete halt. A few chords are allowed to sound fully - as the concluding note D does, when the two instruments finally meet.

Triedra

Triedra was composed in 1952, the year Béatrice and Gunnar Berg married. The honey-moon went to Darmstadt, where Berg attended a 12-tone course and where his meeting with Stockhausen was of great importance. In his first 2-tone work, Suite pour violoncelle seul from 1950, Berg adheres to the traditional Baroque form; Triedra too is a 12-tone work in traditional three-movement form and expression - two playful, fast outer movements and a slow, melancholy, lamenting middle movement.

In his subsequent works Berg tried out freer rhythms and forms and established a true serial composition method with its basis in Olivier Messiaen's division of the twelve chromatic notes of the tempered scale into groups, the so-called \\modes with limited transpositions\\, but expanded to apply to all the parameters of the music. The result is a minutely calculated structuring of durations, pitches, volumes and instrumen-ta-tion, which was one of the main themes in Darmstadt in 1952. Gunnar Berg described the method as static, and spoke of game rules where, with the aid of techniques such as mirroring, crab-inversions and transposition, he established a basic body of material ordered so that the individual movements could be ‘cut out'.

9 Duos for recorder and guitar

9 Duos for recorder and cello from 1957 is a typical example of Berg's works in the latter half of the fifties with several short movements or variants of differing characters and idioms. The first manuscript score of 9 Duos bears the title Thèse et Anthithèse, but Berg abandoned this title - without revealing why, or the background for using the Hegelian concepts. In a letter to Herman Gattiker in 7, Berg implies that the work posed problems: \\The duos for recorder and cello were a bad business, gave me a lot of trouble ... Whether this work succeeded for me in the end remains to be seen.\\

The interval of the third provides the common structural factor in the nine move-ments, which exhibit varying degrees of complexity and intensity - all the way from unison passages to polyrhythms, great interval leaps, changing time signatures, many notes tied over the bar line, and entries in unaccented times - with the last and longest movement as a Synthèse. The cello part, thoroughly reworked in 1984, has been tailored to the playing techniques of the guitar, and the work has the feel of an independent composition, in no way of an arrangement of something else for the guitar. On 18th January 1987 the flute version was performed for the first time at the Winterthur conservatory in Switzerland by Susanne Huber and Christoph Jäggin. On 23rd February 1987 the recorder version was given its first performance at the Royal Academy of Music in Århus by Anne Mette Karstoft and Maria Kämmerling.

Melos I

Maria Kämmerling premiered Melos I on 13th January 1980 in the rehearsal hall of Folke-teatret in Copenhagen during Danmarks Radio's ‘Music New Year' 1980. Kämmer-ling herself wrote in the programme that \\the composer uses, in condensed form, some of the instrument's most distinctive but rarely used possibilities: quarter-tones - both individually and in chord structures - extremely high harmonics and harmo-nic chords, passages for the left hand alone.\\ Berg makes use of a total of seven different stroke techniques and positions, yet the piece never takes on the character of a display.

Berg did not reveal much about the background of the title of the work, or the motto-like sentence he wrote on the inside of the manuscript cover: Das Verschwiegene oder die Legende vom Nichtsein - ‘the unspoken, or the legend of non-being'. Melos is the name of the Greek island where the Venus de Milo was found, but it is also the Greek word which from the time of Plato on was used to designate both the ordering of different pitches into a melodic progression and the connection between language, rhythm and harmony. Berg's Melos I is one long monodic progression - a tone-colour melody - borne up by harmonics and quarter-tones, with the relatively few chords as ‘coloured' notes. Something similar can be said about the sister work Melos II for organ, also from 1979. The widespread use of tied notes, triplets, quintuplets, the exten-sion of crotchets by a semiquaver, and sudden dynamic leaps between pp and ff, create a supple sense of pulse and an unusual drive with expression varying from tenderness to aggressive gesticulation, with the character of a valse mélancolique in long passages.

Jens Rossel, 2009

\\Seeking throughout an -enchanted life\\

This line from Herman Hesse's poem Traum von dir is an apt description of Gunnar Berg's motivation for creating music. Gunnar Berg's compositions are not ‘know-ing' music; they are a music that listens as closely as it possibly can: a wondering music that searches longingly, obsessively and unyieldingly for its own secret, perhaps for a vanished dream. \\Interesting and vital, unresolvable and unfatho-mable, deep as the sea and shining,\\ Rudolf Kassner calls such a compelling longing for the borrowed element that mankind seeks within himself. And the work of such an artist becomes an emotive symbol of life, a never-ending, circling movement around a centre at rest in itself.

Against this background it becomes under-standable that Gunnar Berg has -never commented on his musical craft. Braced by among other influences the -serial music of the 1950s, it is no more - nor is it any less - than an open door to all that is -spiritual, or perhaps rather a fine-meshed net which, even from -apparent nothing-ness, is able to catch the smallest particle of life, a seismograph that senses even the slightest tremor.

Gunnar Berg's compositions are not depictions of given situations, as little as they are stories. Gunnar Berg's music evokes an event: an emotional-spiritual epi-sode that is triggered by sound and is played out within the listener. This makes his music above all a vessel with an abstract, open content.

It is certainly no coincidence that Gunnar Berg, in his late creative period, when he was strikingly preoccupied with the guitar, returned to an earlier setting of Traum von dir, and added a guitar accompaniment. His Lied becomes more intimate than before, as well as more sensitive and fragile, but above all calmer, appropriate to the tried, mature, experienced man.

Gunnar Berg's guitar works, apart from a re-instrumentation of an early Lied composition in the 1960s, were written between 1976 and 1985. In number, diver-sity and variety they form an astonishing totality that is not oriented towards the traditional guitar repertoire, yet still seems to have listened thoroughly to the instru-ment and to have grown organically out of it. How much ‘unheard' and what great independence one discovers here! But more than anything, these compositions are characterized by a profound seriousness and sincerity that is far removed from any superficial amenability.

The inspiration for this rich process of creation was the meeting with the guitarist Maria Kämmerling, in whom Gunnar Berg found his ideal listener and interpreter. After Fresques I-IV, the monumental first work, the others came in quick succession: Hyperion(1977) for guitar, soprano and nine instruments, various reworkings of the piano Lieder(1977/1978), Melos I (1979), and after a pause due to the composer's emigration to Switzerland, the re-instrumentation of the 9 Duos for recorder or flute and guitar (originally composed for recorder and violoncello), and finally Ar-Goat(1984-85) for two guitars.

These guitar works, recorded for the first time on CD, and the integrated piece for recorder are, despite all differences, illustrative examples of what I have just described. True, for the seeker the titles of these works are more of an enigma than an explanation. And that is good, for they are only meant to lay down a trail, a scent, that \\may lead astray, but not deceive.\\

Christoph Jäggin, 2008

 \\\
Release date: 
June 2009
Cat. No.: 
8.226526
FormatID: 
CD
CoverFormat: 
Jewel Case
Barcode: 
636943652626
Track count: 
16

Credits

Recorded at Boholte Church in February 2008 (Duos), Hørsholm Church in September 2008 (Triedra) and Køge Music School in June and December 2006 (Ar-Goat and Melos)
Recording producer: Viggo Mangor
Sound engineer: Viggo Mangor

Graphic: Denise Burt
Design:

Publishers: Edition Svitzer, (Triedra) and Arbejdsgruppe Gunnar Berg,

This CD has been sponsored by KODA's Collective Blank Tape Remuneration and Solistforeningen af 1921