Hanspeter KYBURZ 
	Malstrom SWR-SO Baden-Baden & Freiburg/Zender;
	
	The Voynich Cipher Manuscript Sudfunk-Chor Stuttgart/Klangforum
	Wien/Huber; 
	Parts Klangforum Wien/Rundel
	
 Kairos 0012152K [59
	mins]
	(PGW)
	Kairos
	
	
	
	
	
	New Saxophone Chamber Music 
	Hanspeter KYBURZ Cells 
	Christoph STAUDE Obduktion 
	Isabel MUNDY Composition for
	saxophone & tape 
	Walter ZIMMERMANN Fragmente der Liebe 
	
 Ensemble
	UnitedBerlin/Hirsch with Johannes Ernst (saxophones)
	
 Col legno wwe 31890 [71
	min] (PGW)
	Col legno
	
	
	
	Hanspeter KYBURZ 
	Parts Klangforum Wien/Rundel 
	The Voynich Cipher Manuscript Sudfunk-Chor Stuttgart/Klangforum
	Wien/Huber 
	Cells Klangforum Wien/Rundel with Marcus Weiss
	(saxophones)
	
 Grammont Portrait MGB CTS-M
	52 [68 mins] (PGW)
	
	There is a purchasing link at
	Klangforum
	
	
	
	
	I remain haunted by Hanspeter Kyburz (b. 1960), little known in UK
	yet although widely performed in Europe, whose Cells for saxophones
	& large chamber orchestra, was heard in a
	London
	Sinfonietta concert at South Bank Centre, when
	S&H's Jean Martin provided
	fuller background about Kyburz & Cells:
	
	  
	  Hanspeter Kyburz is very much interested in the idea that small causes lead
	  to unpredictable results, unpredictable because too many variables are involved,
	  e.g. the famous stroke of a butterfly which eventually causes a storm on
	  the other side of the globe.
	  
	  Kyburz uses a computer to develop and test compositional scenarios. After
	  he has made an aesthetic or musical decision - the computer algorithms mere
	  tools - he transcribes the results into conventional notation for traditional
	  instruments.
	  
	  Kyburz has said: "I use the computer in a dialogical way. I translate
	  my musical imagination into instructions for the computer and then listen
	  to the result. Thus I can experience whether the result can match
	  my imagination. Sometimes I am disappointed to find that I could only grasp
	  rationally a very small part of the requirements, the instructions for the
	  computer are too reduced and the result doesn't live upto my expectations.
	  On the other hand I get surprised by the computer, because unexpected
	  consequences in complex processes can stimulate my imagination again. It
	  is a dialogue: I can correct myself, and I love to be surprised by the computer."
	  
	  
	  In listening to this complex and surprising piece one can sense the intellectual
	  vigour applied in the composition process, even though there is far too much
	  to grasp on first hearing. There seem to be similarities with the way that
	  Magnus Lindberg, now well established and regularly played in UK, also works.
	  Its success should encourage further exploration here of Hanspeter Kyburz's
	  oeuvre.
	  
	
	
	See also Munich Festival
	review
	
	There are two recordings of Cells, one also including these same
	performances of The Voynich Cipher Manuscript and of Parts,
	the other a highly desirable collection of New Saxophone Chamber Music by
	various composers (col legno wwe 31890). I described Cells as enveloping
	us for nearly half an hour in a multiplicity of ideas and swirling sounds,
	the soloist impressive in deploying saxophones of all sizes in the midst
	of the maelstrom.
	
	That last is the title of the most recent work in the present release,
	Malstrom (1998) for large orchestra in four groups, based on an E
	APoe narration of 1841. The same complexity and the exilaration and excitement
	engendered by Cells is evident here too.Hans-Peter Jahn, artistic
	director of the admirable Stuttgart Festival (to which S&H intends
	to return in February), writes of its rotating centrifugal force and 'ecstatic
	giddiness' becoming addictive. Do not be put off by the underlying theoretical
	structure and Kyburz's use of computers to mediate his intention and rich
	imagination.
	
	If you have enjoyed
	Lindberg
	, who also makes good use of computer technology in getting his notes
	down onto paper, you will respond to the physicality of Kyburz's
	Malstrom and Parts (1995) for chamber orchestra,
	the notable Klangforum of Vienna. 
	
	The Voynich Cipher Manuscript derives from Kyburz's preoccupation with a
	secret script which has eluded all attempts at deciphering it (or, in
	consequence, pronunciation!) since the 16th Century, when the manuscript
	was sold for astronomical prices as supposedly containing the 'elixir of
	life'. Kyburz sets rows of numbers deriving from scholarly attempts to crack
	the code, and poems in a futuristic-archaistic 'star language' by Chlebnikov
	(given in German only). Quite easy, really? It is a typically avant-garde
	collage of choral and instrumental music, at one fascinating for its sheer
	sound and, inevitably and no doubt designedly, perplexing.
	
	The New Saxophone Chamber Music CD gives a fine conspectus of this
	versatile instrument in a variety of contexts. Apart from the Kyburz, of
	which much above, I enjoyed particularly the Zimmermann Fragments of
	Love with string quartet.
	
	I would recommend adventurous purchasers to go for this one and the new
	Kairos, both of which are well recorded and expertly played, with
	useful supportive written material; the Grammont may be harder to locate.
	
	Peter Grahame Woolf