This truely is modern art! Souch ingenious ways to notate noises that make ears bleed in souch ways i have never got to expierience before! What a masterpiece it is to make people believe this is art. And the best part is if someone criticizes it they are just not cultivitated enough to appreciate this masterfully crafted pile of trash.
I have no doubt it took a great deal of effort, contemplation, and precision to create this work. Skillfully performed. And yet, I'm not moved. It begins, it happens, it ends. A sonic and rhythmic journey without movement; sameness, with momentary spasms of more intense sameness. A fascination with precision that eliminates organization.
i appreciate your comment and completely understand it. concerning my interpretation, it is very difficult to apply that concept of romantic expression (to move someone as you say) to such a specific and concrete piece of abstract art. in the end, this is just sounds organized in a way that is not following the classic conception of tonal music, the one we have rooted inside us. i have to say that to me, after years of listening and playing this kind of music, it doesn't make me feel "moved" either, but i enjoy it anyway: i just try to transport myself to a state of imagination and awareness, where every new sound brings a new colour to the landscape i am creating in my mind. also, it changes dramatically to just listen this piece in opposition to watch it being performed live. visuals add a new dimension to the work and gives much more expression, because movement is what gives life to every different sound, so you can see and understand how everything is being "generated". i did not put the video of my playing because this was intended as a score follower while you listen to it. maybe in the future i will record the piece again and upload it with both sound and video. thanks a lot for the comment again. greetings. G
@@guillee68 It's interesting, though, that Lachenmann still holds on to expressive indications like "molto agitato" or "calmo." What do you make of that?
@@guillee68 I appreciate your thoughtful response to my criticism. You make many good points, though, in the end, the value of art is found in its ability to connect to its audience. No doubt, as noted by others in this thread, it does have meaning to a few people; very few. (That it does, would make for an interesting survey of "why?"). That said, the energy and talents seem wasted in a generally futile effort to connect to an engaged audience. As much as there's a demand that the audience open up to the art, the artist has to reach out to speak to the audience in a way that engages them. This work falls far short of speaking intelligibly to a vast majority of the most ardent and avant garde art lovers. The technical precision and adherence to the score is admirable. Yet, the score is and exercise in penmanship, rather than an artful bridge between artists and audience.
increíble ejecución de una obra increíble! wow! bravo!!!
love it!!
خیلی باحال بود، COOOOOOL
Wow
quite good ...
Incredible and beautiful piece!
so good...
Bravissimo
I’d like very much to see you interpreting Berio’s Naturale very good work here without any doubt it is a full sonorous experience that chills us out
Brilliant Performance! Where did you record it? It sounds incredible
Increíble pieza. Donde la puedo conseguir?¿
www.percussion-brandt.de/epages/228483.sf/en_GB/?ObjectID=5131063
Learn this score. You have 24 hours.
This truely is modern art! Souch ingenious ways to notate noises that make ears bleed in souch ways i have never got to expierience before! What a masterpiece it is to make people believe this is art. And the best part is if someone criticizes it they are just not cultivitated enough to appreciate this masterfully crafted pile of trash.
@@ArminTheAnt i’ll write down everything so i can wipe my ass with, literally, your words! thank u 🙏
I have no doubt it took a great deal of effort, contemplation, and precision to create this work. Skillfully performed. And yet, I'm not moved. It begins, it happens, it ends. A sonic and rhythmic journey without movement; sameness, with momentary spasms of more intense sameness. A fascination with precision that eliminates organization.
i appreciate your comment and completely understand it. concerning my interpretation, it is very difficult to apply that concept of romantic expression (to move someone as you say) to such a specific and concrete piece of abstract art. in the end, this is just sounds organized in a way that is not following the classic conception of tonal music, the one we have rooted inside us. i have to say that to me, after years of listening and playing this kind of music, it doesn't make me feel "moved" either, but i enjoy it anyway: i just try to transport myself to a state of imagination and awareness, where every new sound brings a new colour to the landscape i am creating in my mind. also, it changes dramatically to just listen this piece in opposition to watch it being performed live. visuals add a new dimension to the work and gives much more expression, because movement is what gives life to every different sound, so you can see and understand how everything is being "generated". i did not put the video of my playing because this was intended as a score follower while you listen to it. maybe in the future i will record the piece again and upload it with both sound and video. thanks a lot for the comment again. greetings. G
@@guillee68 It's interesting, though, that Lachenmann still holds on to expressive indications like "molto agitato" or "calmo." What do you make of that?
@@juliusseizure591 I play following every Lachenmann indication, but those are for the musical speech, not to tell you which emotions to feel.
Simply because you're not moved by Lachenmann's music does not mean others aren't
@@guillee68 I appreciate your thoughtful response to my criticism. You make many good points, though, in the end, the value of art is found in its ability to connect to its audience. No doubt, as noted by others in this thread, it does have meaning to a few people; very few. (That it does, would make for an interesting survey of "why?"). That said, the energy and talents seem wasted in a generally futile effort to connect to an engaged audience. As much as there's a demand that the audience open up to the art, the artist has to reach out to speak to the audience in a way that engages them. This work falls far short of speaking intelligibly to a vast majority of the most ardent and avant garde art lovers. The technical precision and adherence to the score is admirable. Yet, the score is and exercise in penmanship, rather than an artful bridge between artists and audience.
Who is the performer?
guillem serrano
@@guillee68 Oh I'm sorry haha! Great playing!
A kaleidoscope of timbres, nothing more. Largely formless. Interesting for one minute, not 15.
Très mal vieilli.
Who takes this nonsense seriously? A clever player can produce the same results while simply improvising, without any score. As a 'piece', it is fake.
your comment as a comment is fake