Paul Whitty was born in Lisburn,
Northern Ireland in 1970. He has achieved
an impressive amount of performances and his work has been taken
up by a host of leading ensembles and featured at many contemporary
music festivals.
Whitty has written, “Recently I have been engaged in
a series of interventions in pre-existing contexts - re-reading,
re-organising, re-categorising, re-distributing and re-sounding
the materials that I have found there. These contexts can
be scores, actual physical sites or instruments. In the violin
and piano duo thirty-nine
pages
(2005-2007) I re-organised each page of the Henle Urtext Edition
of Cesar Franck's Sonata for violin and piano in A Major”.
I
have no problem with this kind of de–construction, perhaps
Whitty might prefer the word ‘re–evaluation’, of already existing
material and what we have here is a fascinating look at an
old friend. That we can barely recognize the old friend is
neither here nor there for the Franck Sonata is only
the stepping off point for Whitty’s work – I hesitate to call
it a composition.
Thirty–nine
pages consists of 39 (or is it
38?) pages, which can be performed in any order, the longest
playing for a little over 5 minutes, the shortest being 10
seconds. It’s an oddly engaging work and whilst there’s very
little for the listener to latch on to – such as melody, harmony
or counterpoint – there is sufficient material to keep one
wanting to hear more. I should also point out that if you’re
hoping to hear any part of the Franck Sonata that work
is well hidden except for the very occasional fleeting glance.
What
we have here is, in general, a kind of meditation, with minimal
movement. Think of an even more static Morton Feldman but
without the forward motion of the American, and you’ve got
some idea of what to expect. But it’s not without its moments
of humour, which are obviously intentional.
This
is not any easy listen, however, for the source material is
so well hidden that the various sections, or pages, have little,
or no, relationship to each other except the sparseness of
notes, and, as each page is separated by a silence, there’s
little continuity in the classical sense. Despite this, the
music is compelling in a strangely hypnotic and disturbing
way. Even more disturbing is that in the brief notes the composer
writes, “the thirty–eight pages (of a piece called thirty–nine
pages) can be played in any combination and in any order”,
which is odd in itself. What is truly worrying is that the
final track (no.38) contains pages five to forty three. How’s
that for screwing up your perceptions of what you’re listening
to?
This
isn’t a work to be listened to for pleasure alone for the
whole layout of the piece leaves much to the listener’s imagination,
and much work must be done by the listener. One can have hours
of fun re–arranging the order of the tracks to get a different
perspective on the music and I am sure that this is what the
composer would want you to do.
In
the long run, I don’t think that it matters in what way you
listen to this piece as long as you listen to it and give
the music time to get inside you. The performances are very
fine, both musicians sustaining brief lines which seem to
hang in the air as if suspended in nothingness. I am not sure
how often I will return to this work for it is a hard listen
but it will, once one becomes familiar with it, be worth the
work you have to put into the experience.
Bob
Briggs