• Out of Time: Morton Feldman’s String Quartet II – Scott David Briggs

    Date posted: June 14, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Out of Time: Morton Feldman’s String Quartet II

    Scott David Briggs

    I
    first became aware of Morton Feldman about ten years ago, when the Village Voice did a feature on him and his friendship with John Cage that left me intrigued by both their personalities. Who the heck was Morton Feldman, I mused to myself. Who was this strapping gentleman with the spectacles and the greased-back hair, puffing on cigarettes? He looked like an astronomer or history professor; and with titles like Rothko Chapel, The Viola In My Life  style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> or Triadic Memories style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>, he was both a jovial figure and a true enigma. One thing was certain: the man had an irreverent sense of humor, which was not something one would normally associate with a classical composer.
    http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/units/music/spcoll/feldman/imagesth.html

    http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/units/music/spcoll/feldman/imagesth.html

    Finding out
    who exactly Feldman was became a quest unto itself. I was fascinated to learn
    that he was a native of Woodhaven, Queens, and later a professor at SUNY
    Buffalo until his untimely death in 1987. As a 1982 interview with Feldman
    explains: “…interacting with New York’s abstract expressionist painters, as
    well as such composers as John Cage, Earle Brown, and Christian Wolff, Feldman
    began writing music that would, in his words, ‘project sounds into time, free
    from a compositional rhetoric.’ “1            Elsewhere,
    Feldman tells us that he has “always been interested in touch
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> rather than musical forms."2

                      In
    order to appreciate Feldman’s music on a deeper level, I had to first discover
    his sources in painting and the visual arts and, later, in the textural physics
    and hypnotic patterns of oriental rugs. Rothko Chapel
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>(1971), one of his early master
    works, was dedicated to and inspired by Mark Rothko, a friend of Feldman’s from
    the New York School. Similarly, String Quartet II
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>(1983) culminates Feldman’s
    ambitions in a musical, visual and temporal synergy, transporting one field of
    reality into another. Feldman famously said that he and Cage both felt, in the
    1950s and ‘60s, the need to escape from the “clich� of the 20-25 minute piece,”3
    feeling it to be a modernist creative prison; String Quartet II
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>, a monumental six hours long,
    represents the ultimate prison break. Performing this piece,The Flux Quartet
    were faced with music that presented a sheer physical challenge in addition to
    its mind-bending temporal qualities.

    Zankel Hall, a newly renovated all-wood recital room, lent
    an extra warmth to the music. The Flux players were seated stage left, with
    their chairs turned slightly inwards to almost face one another. There was a
    small desk in the middle for libations and other marathon materials. An
    oriental rug was placed stage right, and the audience were invited at the start
    of the concert to come onstage whenever they felt like: as violinist Tom Chiu
    exclaimed, “It’s fun!” Many took him up on this offer, and this added yet
    another visual layer of audience participation to what could have been a static
    experience. Thus String Quartet II was a performance that you had to get involved in if you
    stayed for the duration, even if you were only meditating on or dozing into the
    sound. The quartet and the audience became a symbiotic unit, and the audience
    was compelled to come to grips with the music. The piece was a total
    environment to “inhabit.”

    String Quartet II shares some thematic similarities with Feldman’s Piano
    and String Quartet (1985)
    and is a staggering achievement that hangs together better than it should at
    six hours. In it, Feldman frequently employs oscillating violin and viola
    phrases alongside percussive cello pizzicato interludes. The Flux Quartet
    performed it exquisitely, never looking or sounding fatigued. Finally, by
    12:10 a.m., after the music decayed into a few quiet final note clusters. The
    quartet stood up, and received at least four rousing standing ovations. One of
    the players taking a swig of his special Feldman marathon “Gatorade” (or what
    looked like it) from a bottle on the desk. He’d earned it, and so had we. We
    had witnessed and participated in a true work of art that had engulfed our
    senses.

    Morton Feldman once exclaimed about his chosen form, “I
    don’t feel that music has been and I don’t feel that music to this day is
    involved with the real world. The people are involved with the real world, and
    that’s why we have names like Philip Guston or Rothko or Bob Rauschenberg or
    Jasper Johns or Jackson Pollock.”4 String Quartet II
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> is an escape that matters.

     

     

    Morton
    Feldman

    String
    Quartet II (1983)

    Part of
    the “When Morty Met John” festival, October 25-26, 2003

    A John
    Cage/Morton Feldman Festival

    Performed
    by The Flux Quartet:

    Tom Chiu, Violin, Jesse Mills, Violin, Max Mandel, Viola, Dave Eggar, Cello

     

     

    Notes
    and Works Cited

     

    1.
            Soundpieces: Interviews with
    American Composers by Cole Gagne and Tracy Caras                               (Metuchen,
    New Jersey: The Scarecrow Press Inc, 1982) pp 164-177.

    2.         Frank
    O’Hara, jacket essay for New Directions in Music 2/ Morton Feldman
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana;color:black’>, Columbia                            Masterworks
    #MS 6090 (sound recording; Columbia CBS Odyssey, 1960).

    3.       
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana;color:black’>The Morton Feldman Page
    web site.

              
    href="http://www.cnvill.demon.co.uk/mfhome.htm">http://www.cnvill.demon.co.uk/mfhome.htm
    name="_Hlt126161943">

                http://www.cnvill.demon.co.uk/mfbio.htm

    4.
            Thomas Moore, pianist, Web site:

              
    href="http://research.umbc.edu/~tmoore/interview_frame.html">
    style=’color:black’>http://research.umbc.edu/~tmoore/interview_frame.html

    5.         Interview
    with Morton Feldman, published in Sonus (Volume 4, Number 2, Spring 1984)

    6.         Give
    My Regards to Eighth Street: Collected Writings of Morton Feldman
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana;color:black’>, edited and                              with
    an introduction by B.H. Friedman, afterword by Frank O’Hara (Boston: Exact

                Change,
    2000)

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