Editions Mego – REGRM 017
Alternately abstract, immersive and poetically lush concrète tapestries
from the archive of master craftsman, Luc Ferrari. Realised at the GRM
between early ‘60s and mid ‘70s.
“Composed between December 1963 and March 1964
In the field of biology Heterozygous (Hétérozygote) means: a plant whose
heredity is mixed. It implies that this composition is an attempt to
engineer a language located both on the musical and on the dramatic
plane. You could call this music “Anecdotal Music” for if the
organisation of events is purely musical, their choice suggests
situations justified at two levels: the music and the anecdote. However,
the anecdote is hardly formulated and is open to plural
interpretations. The listener is then asked to imagine their own story
by rejecting – if necessary – the one suggested by the author.
More specifically, the author suggests an anecdotal complex, potentially
bearing several meanings. The work preceded by an opening is made of
eight scenes, separated (or not) by interludes. And if we wished to push
the paradox further, we could say that the titles of the scenes are
optional and the interludes are also scenes, etc.
Petite symphonie intuitive pour un paysage de printemps (1973–1974), 25’09
“This electroacoustic music is part of a series that could be called
“imaginary soundscape”. Unlike ‘Presque rien ou le lever du jour au bord
de la mer (almost nothing or daybreak by the seaside)’, where the
landscape narrates itself, here a traveller discovers a landscape which
he tries to convey as a musical landscape. Brunhild and I were in the
Gorges du Tarn area. We chose to take a small path that was going up a
rocky mountain for about ten kilometres.
After a last turn, a totally unexpected landscape opened before my eyes.
It was sunset. Before us, a vast plateau spread open with soft curves
up to the horizon, up to the sun. The colours ranged from dry grass
yellow to purple, in the distance, with the darkness of a few small
groves punctuating the space. The almost bare nature was presenting
itself to the eye, free from any obstacle. We could see everything.
Later, when I Photo © Laszlo Ruszka, 1963 recollected this place and the
sensations I had experienced there, I tried to compose a music that
could revive this memory. The "Causse Méjean" is a high plateau, about
1000 m high, in the Massif Central mountain range. It is dotted by
scattered farms. A few people bring their flocks of sheep home. I
thought about evoking this solitary and hazy human presence by including
snippets of conversations I had had with some of the shepherds. Human
language is woven into the musical texture; the sound of the voice says
more than its actually meaning. Once, a shepherd told me “... I am never
bored. I listen to the landscape. Sometimes I play my flute and then I
listen to the echo responding...” Thinking of him, I used the flute and
its echo in my music.” Luc Ferrari. October 18, 2002”

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