Heinz HOLLIGER (b. 1939)
Machaut-Transkriptionen
(2001-09)
Geneviève Strosser (viola); Jürg Dähler (viola); Muriel Cantoreggi (viola)
The Hilliard Ensemble
rec. November 2010, Radio Studio DRX, Zürich.
ECM NEW SERIES 2224 (4765121) [65:29]

Heinz Holliger’s Machaut-Transkriptionen is a cycle of nine pieces written over an extended period, the vocal pieces of which start out as note for note transcriptions of Machaut’s originals, the works for three violas exploring, adapting, deconstructing, fragmenting and transforming these vocal pieces to create new music. These viola trios can be performed separately or can act as the “dividing line between arrangement and new compositions,” though a large part of the fascination is being able to hear them placed directly against their source. The appearance of The Hilliard Ensemble is a pleasant surprise, recorded here some years before they disbanded.

The Machaut pieces for three violas started out as transcriptions, but all of them throw up a veil of further mystery around the original music. The first for instance plays Machaut’s notes in the haunting high sonorities of natural harmonics. Machaut becomes increasingly distant, as for instance “motivic units are quasi-‘atomized’” in the Triple Hoquet. As the cycle progresses, Holliger’s voice also takes over those of the Hilliard’s; Lay VII extending the strangeness of Machaut’s David in lines and phrases that live in the ancient world, but clustering chromatic intervals to create a world almost, but not quite beyond conventional tonality. Virtuosity is increased in the penultimate In(ter)ventio a 3 for violas, described as a “strictly thematically related improvisation.”

The climax of the entire cycle is reached as the violas and voices unite in a final Complainte. As before, the gauze of mystery lies thickly over the music of Machaut, though the atmosphere and devotional expressiveness is never far beneath the surface, and in fact imbues the music’s whole enigmatic texture. The clustering of notes reminds me of Ligeti at some points, though this music remains mobile within itself, melting and dissolving rather than turbulent: a kind of Machaut lava-lamp in which ancient means of expression mix slowly and randomly while retaining enough of their identity to keep throwing up links between the old and the new. The Epilogue resolves some of the previous complexities in the familiarity of canon technique, the voices turning over on each other as the violas return to the celestial heights of their harmonics.

Sublimely recorded and performed with exactly the right kind of ethereal commitment, this is indeed a fascinating meeting between the aesthetics of remote and disparate ages.

Dominy Clements
 
Track-listing:
BALLADE IV BIAUTE QUI TOUTES AUTRE PERE [3:59]
(Guillaume de Machaut ca. 1300-1377)
BALLADE IV FÜR DREI VIOLEN [4:26]
(Heinz Holliger)
BALLADE XXVI DONNEZ, SEIGNEUR [3:53]
(Guillaume de Machaut)
BALLADE XXVI FÜR DREI VIOLEN [5:23]
(Heinz Holliger)
DOUBLE HOQUET (HOQUETUS DAVID) [3:46]
(Guillaume de Machaut)
TRIPLE HOQUET (NACH HOQUETUS DAVID) [6:22]
(Heinz Holliger)
LAY VII FÜR VIER STIMMEN [13:01}
(Heinz Holliger)
IN(TER)VENTIO A 3 UND PLOR-/PROL-/ORATIO FÜR DREI VIOLEN [10:10]
(Heinz Holliger)
COMPLAINTE (AUS: REMEDE DE FORTUNE) UND EPILOG FÜR 4 SINGSTIMMEN UND 3 VIOLEN [14:26]
(Heinz Holliger)

 

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