KLAVIERSTÜCK XI

KLAVIERSTÜCK XI
(with my color variation of a Lindsay Vickery slide)
Nr. 7: KLAVIERSTÜCK XI (Piano Piece 11)
(1956)  [approx. 14 min.]

Introduction
     In the earlier analysis of Piano Pieces 5-10, I described the isolated phrases in those works as being in a way "snowflakes in a snowstorm".  In this 11th piano piece, that analogy becomes more appropriate than ever.  However, from a pianist's point of view, it may be more apt to use an "autumn leaves" analogy.  Here, 19 musical "leaves" are spread in front of the player.  He picks one up, "plays" it, returns it to the pile, and then picks up another to play (however, the way he plays this new leaf is affected by what he saw in the previous leaf).  Sometimes he will pick up one that he's chosen before, but he plays it anyway.  However, if he realizes that he's picked up the same leaf 3 times already, he stops, and the performance is over.  In Piano Piece 11, each leaf is a few measures of score, and at the end of each score fragment is the indication of how to approach the next chosen musical fragment (in the terms of tempo, dynamic, and articulation).  Instead of a "pile of leaves", all of these musical fragments are scattered over a huge sheet of paper, and the pianist chooses the phrases randomly.  He stops after he has hit the same fragment a 3rd time.

     (I should mention that Stockhausen has never called these 19 score fragments "leaves" (as far as I know), but I just find it handy to think of them that way.)

Polyvalent Form
     Because of the nature of this piece, there can be an almost unimaginable number of versions.  Each version could start from any one of the 19 "leaves", and end on any one of them.  This is an example of what is sometimes called "open-form" or "polyvalent form", since the composition itself has no set structural arc.  One idea that Stockhausen is exploring here is that each of these leaf fragments create their own "vibration" or color.  In the previous Piano Pieces, grace note "satellites" and "halo tones" were used to create a resonating color over a central note.   In this piece, each leaf (which also has its own internal central notes and satellites) could be considered a single central tone by itself, and the tempo/dynamic/articulation instructions at the end of each leaf are a kind of "resonant-coloration" which affects its surrounding "satellite" leaves. 

     Structurally, if one thinks of each one of these 19 leaves as a single note-entity (as just described), the chance sequencing of the leaves functions more or less the same way as putting these leaves into a serial sequence.  The basic purpose of serialism is to produce variety and unpredictability, and the method employed here can produce the same kind of unpredictability.  Naturally this "eye-contact serialism" is not going to be as "pure" as in a case where these leaves are put into a specific, non-repeating "leaf row", but since the previous piano pieces already covered serial organization on different time-scales, perhaps the idea of an open-form work which could produce a large variety of structural outcomes became much more important.  However, ironically, some pianists prefer to "pre-program" the sequence and play the same sequence of leaves from performance to performance (probably because it was simply too hard to do it the "honest way").

     Stockhausen points out that it doesn't really matter how these leaves are sequenced - in the end it's still a pile of leaves.  The work itself has its own unique "vibration".  "Piano Piece XI is nothing but a sound in which certain partials, components, are behaving statistically...  If I make a whole piece similar to the ways in which (a complex noise) is organized, then naturally the individual components of this piece could also be exchanged, permutated, without changing its basic quality."  (Conversations with the Composer, Jonatan Cott).

Rhythm and Pitch
6 of the 36 possible rhythm patterns from the "final matrix".
(from Truelove's "The Translation of Rhythm into Pitch in KLAVIERSTÜCK XI")
     The melodic material of each leaf was created through a fairly complex method of cross-breeding rhythm patterns (above), layer density and articulation tables (tremoli, trills, fermatas, satellite grace notes, halo tones, clusters, etc..).  The methodology is very structured and mathematical, yet there are many places where Stockhausen broke from the math for the sake of musicality ("composer intuition").  

     From a pitch-perspective, the notes were derived from proportionate durations contained in the melodic rhythms.  For example, if two notes had a proportionate duration ratio of 3:2 or 2:3, an interval of a 5th was called for (sometimes augmented or diminished).  A ratio of 2:1 would dictate an octave (sometimes flatted or sharped).  In Stephen Truelove's KLAVIERSTÜCK XI thesis (which was a major source of info for this particular section), he claims that these flat/sharp "alterations" were methods to make the work "atonal", but Stockhausen responded that these "off" notes are just approximations of harmonic relationships (I assume this is related to discrepancies between equal- temperament and just intonation).  In any case, the idea of translating rhythm into melody is a logical one because rhythm can be turned into pitch if played very fast.  In other words, if 2 different rhythms were looped at super-high speed, they would sound like 2 different noise drones, and if the rhythms were periodic, actual pitches could be heard.  If the ratio were 2:1, an octave interval would be produced (this idea is very important in the electronic work KONTAKTE).

     Additionally, after the melodic shapes were derived from rhythmic proportions, pitches could be freely shifted to higher or lower octaves, and in general, longer note values were given lower register pitches.  Satellite grace notes did not follow any duration-ratio rule (since they are to be played "as fast as possible", after all), so these pitches were chosen intuitively. 

Score
     The player starts by choosing one of 6 tempi and playing the first randomly-selected leaf.  At the end of that leaf is the tempo, dynamic and articulation for the next randomly-chosen leaf.  After a pause, or during a sustained chord, the next leaf is chosen and then played with the indicated markings.  If a previously-played leaf is chosen a second time, the leaf is to be played in a slight variation, such as in a new octave (like looking at the backside of a leaf?).  Not every leaf needs to be played in a performance.  If the same leaf is chosen a third time, the pianist ends the performance (without playing the thrice-chosen leaf).

     One of the interesting things to consider is that each of these 19 leaves can be played in 19 different variations (depending on the tempo, dynamic and articulation instructions from the previously-played leaf).  Out of these 361 leaves, theoretically anywhere from 2 to 39 could end up being played for a given performance. The number of possible performance sequences is....well, very big.

     Below are 5 of the 19 leaves (melodic fragments).  Ellen Corver recorded 2 versions of KLAVIERSTÜCK XI on Stockhausen Edition CD 56.  The first version (Disc 2, Track 2) starts with the 3rd and 4th score examples below. The second version on Track 3 begins with the 5th example.  All of the score excerpts below are copyright Universal Edition and www.karlheinzstockhausen.org.
This leaf descends into a long trill.
T1 indicates that next leaf should be played at the lowest speed, the indication "N" means "neutral" articulation.  The "(8....)" at top means that the 2nd time this leaf is played, it should be an octave higher.

This leaf has large interval leaps.
T6 means that the next leaf is to be played at the highest speed.  The "(8....)" at bottom means that the 2nd time this leaf is played, it should be an octave lower.
(with wide and narrow tremoli; the articulation for the next chosen leaf must use staccato attacks with silent redepressions)
(with pedaling and halo chords)
(dense syncopation with intermittent pauses, halo chords, etc...)

Live Performance
Prodromos Symeonidis, February 2006

Sound Impressions
     The general textural language of this piece fits very well as somewhere in between KLAVIERSTÜCK VI and X (naturally).  Because of the pauses and fermatas between (and inside) the fragments, there is a natural tension and release in the flow, and plenty of time to absorb the silences.  Because of the open nature of a performance, each can be something of a new experience.  However, unlike a "set" work where repeated exposure can help the listener become familiar with larger dramatic arcs, this one could be different every time (and of course, there is no "normal" score to follow visually).

     Stockhausen considers the whole work to be an atomized timbre, stretched out over several minutes, and I suppose one could listen to it like that, but perhaps there are a few other ways to follow this work.  One possibility is to try to get a feeling for each of the leaf fragments as they occur, and then re-appreciate them when they repeat (in a new tempo/dynamic, etc...).  Another idea is to compare the juxtapositions of the leaves.  Since the leaves are chosen at random, some transitions would naturally work better than others.  Repeated listenings of different versions of KLAVIERSTÜCK XI would eventually make the leaves familiar, and these ideas of comparing returning leaves and leaf sequences would probably be easier.  Even if only a few leaves become familiar, their appearance could bring out these aspects to the listener.  In a live performance, it's easy to know the transitions between leaves since the pianist will look up at the score to choose the next fragment (hopefully).

     The use of random eye-contact does bring a few questions to mind, though.  As just mentioned, Stockhausen conceives of this piece as a single, vibrating molecule made up of aleatory sub-particles (randomly-chosen and articulated), but I think a performer would naturally have certain "non-random tendencies" after he/she has become familiar with all of the leaves.  Is it possible for a pianist to be truly random after becoming intimately familiar with the piece?  Or perhaps, Stockhausen expects sub-conscious factors and familiarity to affect the choices of leaves...  Interestingly, Lindsay Vickery has proposed (or maybe completed, at this writing) a software score display program (Decibel ScorePlayer) which I gather will do all of the choosing for you, getting rid of the eye-contact element and just randomly choosing the next leaf.  I assume the performer would have to be very familiar with the work to pull this off effectively.

     Personally, I would have preferred that Stockhausen had published a "Cologne Version" sequence, just to have a "director's cut" version of this piece.  MIKROPHONIE I and MOMENTE have such published realizations, and something like that here would have been interesting.  I suppose that since the Aloys Kontarsky and Ellen Corver versions were recorded under Stockhausen's supervision, these would be the closest to something like that.

The KLAVIERSTÜCKE:
KLAVIERSTÜCKE I–IV
KLAVIERSTÜCK V
KLAVIERSTÜCK VI
KLAVIERSTÜCK VII
KLAVIERSTÜCK VIII
KLAVIERSTÜCK IX
KLAVIERSTÜCK X
KLAVIERSTÜCK XI
KLAVIERSTÜCK XII (EXAMEN)
KLAVIERSTÜCK XIII (LUZIFERs TRAUM)
KLAVIERSTÜCK XIV (GEBURTSTAGS-FORMEL)
KLAVIERSTÜCK XV (SYNTHI-FOU)
KLAVIERSTÜCK XVI (w. Sound Scene 12)
KLAVIERSTÜCK XVII (KOMET)
KLAVIERSTÜCK XVIII (MITTWOCH-FORMEL)
KLAVIERSTÜCK XIX (SONNTAGS-ABSCHIED)

Links
KLAVIERSTÜCKE I-XIV (Ellen Corver) Sound samples, tracks listings and CD ordering 
Buy the Scores 
KLAVIERSTÜCKE Wiki 
Stockhausen on the KLAVIERSTÜCKE (1955,1957)
"Clavier Music 1992", Stockhausen on Piano Music (1992)
"The Translation of Rhythm into Pitch in Stockhausen's Klavierstück XI" (Stephen Truelove, Persp.of New Music Vol. 36.1)
"Mobile Scores and Click-tracks: teaching old dogs" (2010) Lindsay Vickery
KLAVIERSTÜCKE I-XI by Aloys Kontarsky (flac)

MITTWOCHS-GRUSS

MITTWOCH AUS LICHT
Greeting
MITTWOCHS-
GRUSS
Scene 1
WELT-PARLAMENT

Scene 2
ORCHESTER-FINALISTEN
Scene 3
HELIKOPTER-STREICHQUARTETT
Scene 4
MICHAELION

Farewell
MITTWOCHS-
ABSCHIED

Stockhausen Edition CD 66 CD cover
The boxes show examples of the spatial mapping notations (as if seeing the room from above).
www.karlheinzstockhausen.org)
Nr. 65: MITTWOCHS-GRUSS (Wednesday Greeting)
8-Channel Electronic Music
(1998)  [54']

Introduction
     MITTWOCHS-GRUSS (Wednesday Greeting) is the electronic "entrance music" portion of Stockhausen's dramatic music work MITTWOCH AUS LICHT (WEDNESDAY from LIGHT), which was the 6th-composed entry of his 7-part, 29-hour opera cycle LICHT (Light).  LICHT is a work of cathedral-like proportions for acoustic and electronic operatic forces, divided into the 7 days of the week (one opera for each day).  This opera cycle revolves around 3 archetype characters, MICHAEL, EVE and LUCIFER, and over the 29 hours each of these characters are introduced, come into conflict, face temptation and finally come into union.  The music is almost entirely based on a "super-formula", which is a 3-layered melodic-thematic representation of the 3 characters.  These formula-themes are together and separately threaded throughout the opera's vocal and instrumental fabric.  Story-wise, actors and narrative can (and often do) change from scene to scene, and the libretto text is sometimes made up of non-traditional grammar (or even purely phonetic sounds).

     MITTWOCH (Wednesday) is the Day of Cooperation and Reconciliation.  The scenes in MITTWOCH do not have a dramatic arc connecting them, instead the theme of Cooperation and Reconciliation between the characters is achieved through musical, visual, and spatial means.  The main element connected with MITTWOCH is air.  The 4 Scenes in MITTWOCH AUS LICHT are preceded and followed by "entrance" and "exit" works: MITTWOCHS-GRUSS (Wednesday Greeting) and MITTWOCHS-ABSCHIED (Wednesday Farewell).   In a staged production, MITTWOCHS-GRUSS is projected in the foyer and auditorium as the audience arrives, and MITTWOCHS-ABSCHIED is projected as the audience exits.   The Wednesday Greeting is also played live by a synthesizer player as one of the electronic background layers to Scene 4, MICHAELION, while the concrète-based "multi-environmental" tape of Wednesday Farewell is played in the background of Scene 2, ORCHESTER FINALISTEN.

Formula Layers to Drone Pitches
The form structure for the first 3 Scenes of MITTWOCH AUS LICHT.  The bottom 3 staffs are the LICHT super-formula with the "rotations" of the layers indicated (M/E/L).  Above the 3 super-formula staffs are the stretched out Wednesday measures.
www.karlheinzstockhausen.org)
MICHAELION Form Scheme
The form structure (continued from left box) showing the 4th Scene of MITTWOCH AUS LICHT, MICHAELION.  Unlike the previous 3 Scenes, this Scene has a layer rotation in the middle (at subscene OPERATOR).
www.karlheinzstockhausen.org)
     When Stockhausen mapped out the 7 operas of LICHT, he divided the 19-measure LICHT super-formula into 7 "day sections", starting from Monday.  Wednesday is the 3rd day of the week, so it is mapped to measures 6 and 7 (the somewhat middle measures).  In the version of the LICHT superformula above, the bottom 3 staff lines are the full LICHT super-formula, with the major difference being that the 3 staff layers are "rotated" into different orders a few times (with the timing matching the Scene changes mostly).  The staff lines above the bottom 3 lines are a "stretched" version of the 2 Wednesday measures over the full 19 measures of the LICHT superformula below them.  This layering of an extremely slowed-down fragment over the full super-formula is a technique Stockhausen uses in all 7 of the LICHT operas, and notes and durations of the stretched-out fragment are sometimes used to determine pitch transpositions, scene durations, background drone textures, etc...  The MITTWOCH-FORMEL (Wednesday Formula) shown above is performed 3 times at 3 different tempos in the piece KLAVIERSTÜCK XVIII, with each iteration also reassigning the voice timbre for each character.

(Note: The first staff system (above left) only has 4 lines since that part of the Wednesday measure has silent rests for the MICHAEL and LUCIFER layers (only the EVE staff is shown). Also, the first 2 notes heard are from the ending of the Tuesday segment of the EVE formula.)

     The pitches employed in the long, held tones of MITTWOCHs-GRUSS are from the form structure measures in the top right picture (which could be considered to be the "MICHAELION form-scheme").  Appropriately enough, the form structure of MITTWOCHs-ABSCHIED is based on the top left picture.  In any case, the MICHAELION form-scheme's seven (and change) 6-staff measures are temporally-stretched out through extreme rhythmic augmentation to last over the 54 minutes of MITTWOCHs-GRUSS.  The only real alteration to this portion of the original MITTWOCH-FORMEL is that in the "LUZICAMEL" portion of the formula (from middle of measure 3 to end of 5), the two G-flat "tongue-click" notes in the top EVE staff are replaced by the inverted EVE Nuclear formula (a simplified pitch row version of the EVE formula).  In the bottom staff of the graphic (labeled "OPERATOR", middle of measure 6), the single G-flat tongue click is replaced by the non-inverted EVE Nuclear formula.  These note sequences are expressed in the EVE electronic layer by 20 different "Points" (some repeating), which are basically sound events made of irregular pulse tones or soprano vocal sounds.

Timbres and Moments
     There are basically 3 electronic layers in MITTWOCHS-GRUSS, one for each of the 3 LICHT characters, and divided into 77 "Moments", with some Moments having subsections.  The durations of each Moment match a proportionate note/attack in the MICHAELION form scheme.  The EVE layer frequencies are usually in the high register, the MICHAEL frequencies are in the mid-range, and the LUCIFER frequencies are in the lower range. The EVE layer, as mentioned earlier, makes use of 20 different "Points", which are basically pulses of relatively pure tones or female voice.  The MICHAEL and LUCIFER layers employ more "grainy" or "rushing" timbres, and in a few times contain male vocal elements (usually distorted in a similar way to what was done in PAARE vom FREITAG).  The one important exception is that Stockhausen himself announces the "Wednesday Greeting" (bilingually!) without any electronic modulation at all, just after Moment 69.  The 77 Moments are distributed according to the 7 MICHAELION form-scheme measures (again, top right graphic) as follows:

Measure Moments
1 1-9
2 10-19
3 20-28
4 30-44
5 45-50
6 51-62
7 63-77

     The table below is a "timbre-map" of the Wednesday Greeting.  Each time marking and horizontal line below marks a timbre change and usually a change in pitch for 1 or more of the 3 synth layers.  All told there are about 161 different sound elements distributed over the 3 layers (49+56+56).  The change in timbre sometimes fades in or fades out past the actual time marking (or is intermittent).  In any case, the changes in sound coloration are sometimes changes in "shade" rather than changes in the color itself, though they are still recognizably different.  EVE's 20 "Point" elements are enclosed in diamonds (<P1>, etc...., starting from Moment 25).
Moment Time EVE MICHAEL LUCIFER
fade in (39s)


1 0:00
2 0:21
3 0:42
4 1:03

5 1:24
6 1:45 (intermittent tinkling)
7 2:06

8 2:27
9 2:48 noise pulsations
10a 3:10


10b 3:48 (synth choir)
11a 4:00 (synth choir)
11b 4:38 rushing
noise

12 4:51
13 5:16
14 5:37


15 5:41

16 6:28
17 6:31

18 7:17
19 7:22 "Operator..."
(overlapping)
20 8:13

21 8:33
22 8:46
23 8:53 high swarms
"plucked" bass" melody
24 9:13
25 9:33 <P1>
high pulses
26 9:49 short "whirring"
noise glisses
(from M29 (10:27) the
noises have
"horse-whinny"
tails)
27 9:53
28 10:14 <P2>

2nd strain of
high pulses (on 2 notes)
29 10:27
30 10:58 oscillating
melody

31 11:11 <P3>
3rd strain of
high pulses
begin
32 11:22 <P4>
"mii..."
33 11:35
34 12:13 <P5>
"chae..."
35 12:39
oscillating
melody
mutating
36 12:53
37 13:29 <P6> 
(w. <P5> in M37 only)
2 layers of female voice, bells, whistling sound

38 14:08 modulated male voice reciting colors in Spanish: "azul, negro, verde, rojo...(etc)"
39 14:23 <P7>
2 layers of echoing high pulses
40 14:34
41 14:46 <P8>
(P8 is P7 w. gliss.)
1 of the 2 layers changes pitch

42 15:24 middle
"wobbly" tone
(constant)
43 15:37 <P9>
"wobbly"
pulses
44 15:58

low
"wobbly" tone 
(constant)
45 16:03 <P10>
"Lu-zi-ka-mel...", wobbly 
pulses (cont.)

16:38 (ambient metallic noises?)
46 17:13 gong/
metal sound
47 17:17 <P11>
layers of
"telegraph" or "morse-code"
signal noises

48 18:28
49 18:32 <P12>
falling 
bell
pulses
rushing noise melody organ-like, ends with some volume spikes
50 19:09 <P13>
female laughing
50x 19:50
irreg.
"tolling", ending w.
8
unison tolls
irreg.
"tolling"
irreg.
"tolling",
ending w.
8
unison tolls

22:51 8
unison tolls
(continued next column over)
Top of page 1 of score (my colors) showing Moments 1-3.  The Moment is indicated by the number in the hexagon, and the spatial mapping is shown in the square boxes below each staff. (Click to enlarge.)
www.karlheinzstockhausen.org) 
zzxxz
Moment Time EVE MICHAEL LUCIFER
51a 23:00 tacet slow
2-note tremolo

51b 23:15
51c 23:29 FM distortion
51d 23:46
52a 23:59 Bass melody with upper overtone layer
52b 24:06
from M53:
slow
2-note tremolo
53 24:30
54 25:00
55 25:30 modulating wind tone
56a 26:00
56b 26:13
56c 26:11 ""
57 27:28 <P13>
"haha...
heehee"


58 28:01
59a 28:16 <P12>
with overtones, adding vibrato
tails
"wobbling
arrow"
sound

59b 28:32

60a 29:02
60b 29:19
61a 29:34 <P14>
metallic morse-code ringing

61b 30:04
62a 30:45 <P11>
"telegraph" signal noises
with big glissandi tails

62b 31:35 <P15>
parrots and other fowl

63 32:20 <P10>
"Lu-zi-ka-mel...",
<P9>
high wobbly pulses


64a 32:29 fade in
high oscillation
64b 33:20
65a 33:49 <P16>
glockenspiel

2-note oscillation
65b 34:22 <P16>
(new pitch)
66a 34:33 <P9>
wobbly pulses return
"shaker"
66b 34:47 high
bell
chord
66c 34:59 modulated whispers:
"dreizehn"
 (13)
67a 35:17 <P17>
"ka..."

"zwolf" 
(12)
67b 35:45 vibrato
tones
"elf"
(11)
68a 36:01 "zehn"
 (10)
68b 36:13 soft chord
69a 36:29 synth
choir
69b 36:45 tacet tacet "neun" 
(9)
 (organ-like)
"MITTWOCHS-
GRUSS"

"WEDNESDAY
GREETING"
MITTWOCHS-
GRUSS
37:45
WEDNESDAY
GREETING
38:13
70 40:01 <P17>
"ka..."
synth choir "acht" 
(8)
(modulation somewhat like helicopter 
sounds begin)
71a 40:23 2-note
oscillation,
whistle
71b 40:40
72 41:08 <P17/P18>
"ka...",
laughter
"sieben" 
(7)
73a 41:33 2-note
oscillation,
low timbre
73b 41:50

42:10 tacet 1-note w.
oscillating harmonics
(SOLO)
tacet
74a 42:40 <P19>
"vibreleste"(vibraphone-celeste) sound

"sechs"
 (6)
(helicopter 
mod. cont.)
74b 42:49 synth choir
74c 42:57
74d 43:16 "funf - vier"
(4, 5)

43:35 <P5>
"chae..."
(SOLO)
tacet tacet
75a 44:01 <P4>
"mii..."
melody phrase
begins

75b 44:20 <P4/P13>
pitch-
shifted ("mi..", laughter, etc...)
75c 44:41

44:55 <P7/P8>
bell pulses
"drei" 
(3)
76a 45:25 <P4>
<P10>
<P13>
"mii...",
"lu-ci-ka-mel",
laughter

76b 46:02 "zwei"
 (2)

46:30 (rich
chord melody from 47:09)
76c 46:42 <P7>
high
bell pulses
77 48:22 <P20>
"...ael"
"eins" 
(1)
("HU...")

Spatial Movement and Electronic Realization
     At the 1998 premiere of MICHAELION in Munich, the 3 synthesizer layers (EVE, MICHAEL, LUCIFER) were performed live by Antonio Pérez Abellán, and the signals from each of these 3 layers were sent to 3 individual joysticks which were "played" by Stockhausen to distribute the sound around the room (quadrophonically).  At the premiere, Stockhausen improvised the spatial movements live, but in 2003 he notated the spatial movements in the score using 29 different kinds of bird's-eye box diagrams, and these movements were recorded onto a master tape (the box diagrams are displayed on the CD cover of MITTWOCHs-GRUSS, seen at the top of this page).  The movements were realized in the studio using a graphic tablet pen and touch screen, which Stockhausen used to "draw" the motions of the layers.

     The compositions of the movements themselves were more or less intuitive and not based on a Fibonacci series or anything like that.  One unusual spatial Moment happens in Moment 50x.  Each layer has gong-like booming timbres, both in unison and in counterpoint.  After about 3 minutes (22:51), they line up in unison, and each attack sounds as isolated points surfacing around the room (as opposed to the usually "sweeping" motions of the other sounds).  In the CD cover at the top of the page, the spatial mapping boxes overlaid with "R" and "EE" (part of "GREETING") have the mappings for the MICHAEL and LUCIFER layers respectively in this 8 beat event.  On Stockhausen Edition CD 66,  the surround-sound element is expressed as well as possible in stereo, but it's a little like seeing one of those 360-degree panorama photographs - everything is there, but you are not there.  Ideally one should experience this work in its intended form with an 8-channel surround system.

     The timbres themselves were created in collaboration with Antonio Pérez Abellán, using a Kurzweil K2500X synthesizer and an Akai S2000 sampler.  Some sounds were created by making field recordings of bells, etc..., and the female and male voices heard in the recording are of Kathinka Pasveer, Stockhausen, and Abellán.

Sound Impressions
     MICHAELION is described by Stockhausen as "a galactic headquarters for delegates of the universe."  With this in mind, the synthetic tones of MITTWOCHS-GRUSS serve quite well to portray the background hum of a futuristic alien cosmopolis.  On the surface it seems like a relatively sedate "ambient" piece, but on further examination there's actually quite alot happening, both in the timbres themselves (modulation, aleatory rhythmic shapes, overtone cycling, etc...) and in the way that the timbres change on average every 20 seconds (this is an eyeball-average, based on just looking over the timings).  This work also acts as a kind of "rosetta stone" for the character-specific timbre vocabularies of the MICHAEL, EVE, and LUCIFER formulas, here newly-developed between Stockhausen and Antonio Pérez Abellán, and which would be employed for the remainder of the electronic elements of LICHT.

     It's interesting to compare MITTWOCHS-GRUSS with the other two long-form, electronically-synthesized music works of LICHT: OKTOPHONIE and FREITAGS-GRUSS/FREITAGS-ABSCHIED (WELTRAUM), since those works are also electronic elongations of specific Days of the LICHT super-formula (but with Simon Stockhausen's collaborative contribution instead of Abellán's).  Besides the differences in Simon and Antonio's sound vocabulary, all three works have differing structural shapes.  MITTWOCHS-GRUSS has the fastest-moving "timbre progression" in all of its layers, whereas WELTRAUM is much slower in some layers . OKTOPHONIE could be considered to have more "point-like" textures (shots, bombs, etc...), whereas the other two works are based more on sound "masses".  MITTWOCHS-GRUSS' timbres have more "hard" timbre changes, while OKTOPHONIE and WELTRAUM take a more developmental, modulating approach.  However, MITTWOCHS-GRUSS' frequent "moment-form" timbre changes could be considered a natural outgrowth of the constant timbre changes of the "bass pattern" in WELTRAUM's second half.  This "electronic fantasy trilogy" is probably one of my favorite aspects of the LICHT opera cycle, and each of the three delivers something new every time I listen to them.

Links
CD ordering
Purchase the Score
MITTWOCH AUS LICHT Wiki
Albrecht Moritz Analysis
YouTube clip