hovering over and beneath
by Douglas Messerli
The Harry Partch Ensemble and Lyris Quartet Partch: Daphne of the Dunes (music by
Ben Johnston and Harry Partch) / performed at Redcat (Roy and Edna
Disney/CalArts Theater), Los Angeles / the performance I attended was on June
15, 2018
This, second part of the program, presented his Daphne of the Dunes (1967), a kind of comic short opera, with
choreographic flourishes by Casebolt and Smith and with video art by Joel
Smith.
To
play out the encounter of Apollo, the god of music (and Zeus’ son) who fell in
love with the river Naiad Daphne, the performers used comic masks, and
presented the work itself in a somewhat comic manner—despite the beautiful
shower of quivering music, particularly when Ray played Chromelodeon, with
Barnes on the Diamond Marimba, and John Schneider on Viola—that satirized
“music’s” attempt to charm the hard-hearted woman, who was protected by an
arrow of lead.
I
had previously seen and heard this group’s performance of Partch’s
long-gestating work Barstow—created
first in the 1940s and 50s, and finalized in 1968—in which, somewhat in the
manner of Woody Guthrie, Partch sets to music the hitchhiker graffiti of
several travelers wandering through that San Bernardino County desert town,
known as a hub for various forms of transportation. As I wrote in My Year 2009:
…Upon first hearing each of these numbered pieces, presented in a Sprechstimme-like performance by guitarist John Schneider, the words are almost laughable. But Partch allows us after the original statement to hear the echoes of those words, by repeating them with emotionally-charged aftertones and dramatic additions (“ha-ha-ha” “dum-de-dum,” etc.) that transform them into haunting expressions of fear and joy.
Yet, somehow, that appeared to have missing from this performance, and
it seemed as if the whole piece had somehow been cut back. Perhaps it was just
that, since this was the last piece of the evening, my mind was still filled
with the sounds and sensations of the other works I describe below; but I do
feel the small choreographic additions to this piece, probably inspired by the
fact that the dancers had temporarily joined the company for the evening,
literalized these pieces and stole some of the haunting quietude surrounding
these pencil and ink musings.
Indeed, the Partch works seemed, this time around, almost an
afterthought to the great works that began the evening concert. Performed by
Lyris Quartet (Sara Andon, James Sullivan, John Stehney, and Scott Worthington,
Ben Johnston’s String Quartet No. 9 (1988)
and the American premier of the same composer’s Octet (1999/2000) were clearly the featured pieces of the concert.
Johnston, now 92, was as close as one can get
to having been a “student” of Partch. Yet Partch and Johnston, despite both
their use of “just intonation,” in some ways couldn’t be more different.
Although I have studied music, playing saxophone in high school and
almost majoring in voice in my early university years (I did sing in the major
University of Wisconsin choral groups and performed in a musical production
there as a singer and dancer), I find it almost impossible to comprehend
“extended just intonation” and its effects. Although I can certainly read
music, I am afraid I could not quite interpret a musical score that transforms
musical notes into numerical fractions. But the effects of this, so I believe,
is that the compositions allow the musicians to work between the rigid
structures of traditional scoring to create a music that sometimes hovers just
below or over the pitches (what are described as “microtonal variants”) that
create a very different sound overall, allowing for the natural harmonic
pitches which are preferred by the human ear.
Particularly in the very first movement of String Quartet No 9, Johnston’s work immediately alerts us to a
fresh expression of quartet music, spirited and lush at the very same moment.
The audience is immediately awakened from the pre-concert silence. The program
notes include a long paragraph by Bob Gilmore which describes the entire piece,
but I’ll quote simply his comments of that first movement, titled “Strong,
calm, slow”:
…the most extraordinary movement is surely the lst, where Johnston
achieves
a real compositional tour de force in creating a six-minute movement,
the pitch
world of which remains entirely between middle C and the C an octave
above
and yet retains our interest throughout. Here the richness of just
intonation with
its luminous pure intervals and their microtonal variants, lets us hear
as never
before one of Western music’s familiar clichés: the C major scale. Like
all of
Johnston’s best music, this movement looks both backward (to a musical
heritage that he feels is still vital to our contemporary world) and forward,
to a world of new sounds and untried harmonies that will continue to engage
us as his compositional achievement becomes better known.
The
newer piece, Octet, takes as its
central tune Folk musician Jay Unger’s famed tune “Ashokan Farewell,” a piece
used notably as the theme of Ken Burn’s PBS television series, The Civil War. Such a beautiful tune, as
the program notes, made the film series’ audiences believe that the work was
from the 19th century; but Johnston’s final variation of this piece deracinates
the prettiness of the piece through his just intonation dissonant harmonies,
helping us to see this work as a far less sentimental song, while revealing
some of its darker elements which were at the heart of the terrible war.
In this concert it seems as if the always inventive “father” was
wonderfully outshined by his quite brilliant “student.” And I praise the Partch
group for allowing their hero to share the stage, so to speak. Surely, I will
now attempt to see any concert with Johnston on the program—of which I hope
there will be many.
Los Angeles, June 17, 2018
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (June 2018).
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