Wandelweiser und so weiter is less a compilation than a temporary civilization organized around the act of listening. Six discs and nearly eight hours may initially suggest an encyclopedic attempt to define the Wandelweiser collective, but the title refuses that kind of closure. “Und so weiter” means “and so on,” leaving the boundary open to friends, predecessors,ntal sounds, accidents, and whatever else enters the recording space. Music by Antoine Beuger, Jürg Frey, Manfred Werder, Radu Malfatti, Michael Pisaro, Stefan Thut, Eva-Maria Houben, Taylan Susam, and Sam Sfirri appears beside works by John Cage, John White, James Saunders, Angharad Davies, Dominic Lash, Phil Durrant, and others whose practices intersect with Wandelweiser without necessarily belonging to it. The collection does not build a defensive wall around a school of composition. It demonstrates how an idea can spread through contact, friendship, performance, and shared attention until its edges become beautifully difficult to locate.
Wandelweiser is often summarized as music about silence, but this box quickly exposes how inadequate that description can be. Silence here is not simply the absence of sound, nor is it an austere blank placed between isolated notes. There are many silences: expectant silence, environmental silence, interrupted silence, silence that permits a previous sound to continue inside memory, and silence crowded with noises that ordinary musical concentration would classify as irrelevant. A chair shifts, a bird calls outside, a room hums, an object settles, or a performer breathes. These events are not necessarily interruptions. The compositions create conditions in which the surrounding world can enter without having to disguise itself as art. The music does not claim ownership over every audible occurrence. It shares time with them.
This produces an unusual change in the listener’s role. In most music, attention is guided by melody, rhythm, dramatic development, or the personality of a performer. Here, attention must become more self-reliant. A quiet instrumental tone may appear, remain briefly, and disappear without explaining why it arrived. During the interval that follows, the listener becomes aware of waiting, remembering, anticipating, and perhaps inventing connections. Wandelweiser music reveals that listening is not passive reception. The mind is constantly arranging sound into relationships, even when the composition declines to provide an obvious structure. A note heard after thirty seconds of near-silence does not function like the same note inside a continuous melody. It carries the accumulated weight of the interval before it.
The six disc titles provide a useful map: Confluences, Crosscurrents, Drifts, Eddies, Undertows, and Upwellings. All describe movements of water, but none suggests a straight line from beginning to end. Currents meet, divide, circulate, disappear beneath the surface, and rise again elsewhere. The music behaves similarly. Composed and improvised practices flow into one another until the distinction becomes difficult to hear. On one disc, a precisely notated work may be followed by an improvisation whose restraint and spacing make the transition almost invisible. Elsewhere, an open score permits performers so much responsibility that composition begins to resemble collective discovery. What unites these pieces is not a single sound but a way of allowing sound to move within boundaries without controlling every detail of its journey.
Sam Sfirri’s repeated appearances are especially important because several of his works receive multiple realizations. Natural at Last and Little by Little return with different musicians, instruments, durations, and densities, revealing that a score need not be a blueprint for reproducing one ideal object. It can be a set of conditions capable of generating related but independent events. Each performance becomes evidence of how particular people understood the invitation at a particular time. The differences are not imperfections to be corrected. They are the life of the work. Wandelweiser’s openness therefore does not mean vagueness or lack of discipline. Performers must listen with extraordinary care because every action changes the proportions of the shared space.
The set repeatedly undermines the stereotype that quiet music must be fragile, bloodless, or emotionally withdrawn. Radu Malfatti’s Heikou uses separated blocks of ensemble sound and silence to build considerable tension. The silence following a dense chord is not relaxation; it becomes a charged area in which the ear waits for the next formation. Michael Pisaro’s Fields Have Ears and Descending Series (1) transform gradual change into something almost geological, as though pitches were being exposed one layer at a time. Jürg Frey’s music can feel tender without becoming sentimental, while Stefan Thut’s string writing allows birds and environmental activity to become inseparable from the instrumental field. These pieces do not announce emotion through theatrical gestures. They let feeling gather slowly around duration, color, distance, and recurrence.
John Cage appears as an essential ancestor, yet the collection does not reduce his influence to 4′33″ or a simplistic worship of silence. Three2 for percussion is among the set’s more assertive works, reminding us that Cage’s deeper gift was permission: permission for sounds to exist without traditional hierarchy, for performers to make consequential choices, and for composition to become a process witnessed by the listener rather than a fixed message delivered intact. His tiny Prelude for Meditation appears later like a seed from which several of the surrounding practices might have grown. John White’s Drinking and Hooting Machine introduces another lineage, playful, procedural, and faintly absurd. Its bottles and breath puncture any temptation to treat experimental quietude as a solemn religious uniform.
That playful current is easy to overlook. James Saunders’s various distinct spatial or temporal locations lasts less than two minutes and is performed by label founder Simon Reynell on a coffee carton. Such a gesture could become a joke about experimental music, yet within this context it demonstrates how completely the collection rejects inherited rankings of musical value. A coffee carton may produce exactly the sound a piece requires. Amplified objects, open CD players, paper, bottles, electronics, zither, harp, trombone, piano, strings, and ordinary room noise coexist without one category being automatically more dignified than another. The point is not that every sound is equally interesting. The point is that interest must be discovered through attention rather than assigned in advance by tradition.
Another Timbre’s involvement is central because the label had developed largely through improvised music before moving increasingly toward composition. This box captures the moment when those worlds recognized how much territory they shared. Improvisers accustomed to restraint, microscopic texture, and collective space found natural points of contact with composers whose scores left room for performer agency and environmental sound. The result avoids both rigid interpretation and shapeless freedom. Musicians are not displaying virtuosity in the ordinary sense, yet the performances require a subtler virtuosity of timing, restraint, tone production, and judgment. Knowing when not to play becomes as consequential as producing a beautiful sound.
Listening to all six discs also alters one’s relationship to duration. Eight hours cannot easily be held in memory as a sequence of individual compositions. Pieces begin to overlap mentally, and small events from earlier discs return as faint internal echoes. The collection becomes a place to occupy rather than an object to conquer. It can accompany an entire day, but it resists becoming background music because its quietness continually exposes the listener’s own environment. Household sounds, traffic, plumbing, voices from outside, and the movement of the body enter into temporary partnership with the recordings. The box changes according to where and when it is played. Morning light, late-night exhaustion, headphones, open speakers, a silent room, or a noisy apartment each produce a different realization.
The title’s modest “and so on” may ultimately contain the set’s most generous idea. Wandelweiser is not offered as a completed historical movement with a fixed membership and approved vocabulary. It is presented as an ongoing conversation about how little a composition may impose while remaining unmistakably itself, how silence can frame rather than erase the world, and how performers and listeners can share responsibility for a musical event. The collection leaves doors open behind it. Someone may arrive through Cage, another through free improvisation, Feldman, environmental recording, lowercase electronics, contemporary composition, or simply a desire to hear what happens when music stops filling every available second.
Wandelweiser und so weiter does not demand conversion to a doctrine of quietness. It teaches that reduction can enlarge perception, that a pause may contain more movement than a crowded passage, and that listening closely to almost nothing can reveal how much is always occurring. The six discs form an extraordinary archive of musicians learning to leave room for one another, for the listener, and for the world that continues sounding around them. Anyone familiar with the original box, its booklet, performances, or alternate realizations of these scores could add valuable pathways into this immense, lightly populated territory. The music is deliberately unfinished in that sense. It continues wherever someone becomes quiet enough to notice what is already there.
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