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ReginaResnik favorited a video
(6 days ago)

"Herzgewächse" was similar to Erwartung in that it is not musically organized by a strict development of an evident theme. It experiments...
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"Herzgewächse" was similar to Erwartung in that it is not musically organized by a strict development of an evident theme. It experiments with instrumental color and range, But perhaps most interesting about "Herzgewächse," particularly in connection with Pierrot Lunaire, is the relationship of music to text, a relationship made even more evident by the fact that Schoenberg was beginning the text for what would become the unfinished project Die Jakobsleiter. Schoenberg was beginning to explore more deeply the possibilities of expressing in a mixture of language and music the theological and philosophical. He began to search for a link between music and words that would relinquish a dependency on visual props or the creation of mental pictures. But in "Herzgewächse" and to a lesser extent Pierrot Lunaire, the notion of the poetic still reigned as the dominant connecting link between music and language. "Herzgewächse" was not performed immediately after its composition, but only in 1927-1928, partly due to the unusual ensemble employed and the demands made on the vocalist. In the article "The Relationship to the Text," Schoenberg argued, following Schopenhauer, that music, because of its power and character, must never attempt to illustrate text or depict that which texts represent linguistically. Rather, as in the case of a Schubert song or Schoenberg's own songs, Op. 2 and 3, "the direct contact with the sound of the first words" out to be sufficient to permit the development of a musical statement by the composer without any reference to the literal meaning or "poetical context" of the poetry being set. The sounds of words rather than the mental pictures they generated, or their grammatical or sense content, triggered a so-called "direct comparison." The "real" essence of the poems -- no the illustration of content -- was unlocked by music, and essence unreachable and imperceptible without the aid of music. As Schoenberg concluded, music and text relate to each other -- that is to sy they complement each other -- on an extremely high, spiritual level, evident only in retrospect as a result of the integration of the two media at the hands of the composer. But in the ordinary sense, in terms of "declamation" or "tempo" or "loudness," or in terms of narrative description, music and text had to diverge if, in fact, music was to retain its autonomy and power and if the higher realm of connectedness of music and language was to be achieved. In this tantalizing but somewhat inconsistent theoretical exposition, Schoenberg embraced an idea that language needs to be purified if it is to be, as Kraus suggested, the "mother of ideas" in the arts. If language performs its ethical imperative -- to speak its truths in the broadest sense -- a spiritual unity that can be revealed by art and music will emerge. However, the kind of ordinary language we hear in daily life or read in newspapers as an insufficient model. What the painter and the composer must do is to take off from language and generate works in whose expression and through whose perception a higher realm of human experience is created and revealed. Language as a given text provides a hint of the aesthetic idea. That hint is often hidden from the view of the composer who approaches the text in the ordinary way. It is in this framework that would should listen to the connection between the Maeterlinck poem and the music of "Herzgewächse," particularly where the poet describes moods and the evolution of sentiment (e.g., sinking to rest, listless melancholy). It is neither the metaphoric nor the literal leaning of Maeterlinck's poem that connects to the music or justifies its presence. The text has been transformed and has become an integral telement of the musical discourse.
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ReginaResnik favorited a video
(1 week ago)
A film of Louis Clichy
Yes, another short film on love. But, believe me, A Quoi Ca Sert L'amour? (Perils of Love) is well worth the four minutes. Th...
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A film of Louis Clichy
Yes, another short film on love. But, believe me, A Quoi Ca Sert L'amour? (Perils of Love) is well worth the four minutes. This wonderful short follows the ups and downs of a young couple. Even though I'm not completely convinced of all its erratic turn of events, I can't help but love it anyway. Not at all different from the real thing.
This is a beautifully animated film that uses a clever combination of rough 2D ink drawings and some exhilarating 3D environments (the action shots are superb). The result is a great piece of cinema with sharp, cinematic movement and clean cut editing that makes Hollywood jealous.
Cube is a French production company that doubles as an animation studio that has produced a number of noncommercial short films. Their most recent short, Chicky, will be viewable soon.
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Sevgiler,