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Holland Baroque|Sounds & Clouds

Sounds & Clouds

Holland Baroque and Jeremias Schwarzer

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The blank spaces on the paper have their own tension, known in Japanese as ma. That tension can be felt in music, between two sounds. Here Hosokawa sees a major difference between European and eastern music: ‘The only thing of importance [in western music] is perhaps the sonorous impact, the sound as of a cathedral where one finds eternity. We find beauty in a cherry tree, precisely because they blossom so briefly – eternity does not exist, we know no God. The flower withers, but next year the cherry tree blossoms anew. Sound is like such blossom, it comes and goes. The silences, the absence, are not empty but full of sound, if we were able to hear.’

Each sound, therefore, is born of silence, as a meditation, and here the rhythm of breathing is crucial for Hosokawa. Sounds grow and fade, the pauzes between the breaths determine the form. Together notes can form clusters, even sharp dissonances – for nature is seldom in full harmony – but they always return to individual notes and silence. Such a cyclic structure does not seek development, completion or repetition, but floats on ongoing movement and variation, which is likewise a significant contrast with western music. ‘In eastern thinking’, Hosokawa writes, ‘the voice (i.e. the sound) is born when the spirit itself is manifest in breath. The expression of this dynamic process, reflecting the sound of the spirit in breath and voice, this, for me as a composer, is the ultimate challenge.’

The contrast with the music of Antonio Vivaldi could hardly be greater. The chasm in time, approach and aesthetics is so deep that it is perhaps futile to look for deeper relationships. Where Hosokawa pursues an expression of an extra-musical breath, Vivaldi surprises us time and again by playing with the form of the Baroque concerto – and then in more than five hundred compositions! This variety is often inspired by a musical effect, a person or a story, as in La notte, blossoming from Hosokawa’s nocturnal imagery as a melodic and rhythmic mirror, or in La tempesta di mare, prompted by the second intermezzo, Das Meer vor dem Sturm. Sometimes the ‘programme’ is less clear, as in Il gardellino (with written-out birdsong) or in the fourth concerto, which

Schwarzer has called La festa.

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Sounds & Clouds

Holland Baroque

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1
Singing Garden in Venice: I. Vorspiel. Nacht
00:07:04

Toshio Hosokawa, Composer - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist - Schott Edition, MusicPublisher

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Flute Concerto in G Minor, RV 439 "La notte" (Antonio Vivaldi)

2
I. Largo
00:01:45

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

3
II. Allegro (Fantasmi) - III. Largo
00:01:31

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

4
IV. Allegro
00:01:04

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

5
V. Largo (Il Sonno)
00:02:16

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

6
VI. Allegro
00:02:31

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Singing Garden in Venice (Toshio Hosokawa)

7
II. Dämmerung
00:06:49

Toshio Hosokawa, Composer - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist - Schott Edition, MusicPublisher

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Flute Concerto in D Major, RV 428 "Il gardellino" (Antonio Vivaldi)

8
I. Allegro
00:03:27

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

9
II. Cantabile
00:03:02

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

10
III. Allegro
00:02:35

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Singing Garden in Venice (Toshio Hosokawa)

11
III. Das Meer vor dem Sturm
00:08:29

Toshio Hosokawa, Composer - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist - Schott Edition, MusicPublisher

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Flute Concerto in F Major, RV 433 "La tempesta di mare" (Antonio Vivaldi)

12
I. Allegro
00:02:25

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

13
II. Largo
00:02:25

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

14
III. Allegro
00:02:30

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Singing Garden in Venice (Toshio Hosokawa)

15
IV. Abenddämmerung
00:07:21

Toshio Hosokawa, Composer - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist - Schott Edition, MusicPublisher

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Chamber Concerto in G Major, RV 101 (Antonio Vivaldi)

16
I.
00:04:23

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

17
II. Largo
00:01:43

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

18
III. Allegro
00:02:33

Antonio Vivaldi, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Singing Garden in Venice (Toshio Hosokawa)

19
V. Nachspiel. Nacht - Schlaf
00:06:46

Toshio Hosokawa, Composer - Jeremias Schwarzer, MainArtist - Holland Baroque, Orchestra, MainArtist - Schott Edition, MusicPublisher

2015 Channel Classics Records 2015 Channel Classics Records

Albumbeschreibung

The blank spaces on the paper have their own tension, known in Japanese as ma. That tension can be felt in music, between two sounds. Here Hosokawa sees a major difference between European and eastern music: ‘The only thing of importance [in western music] is perhaps the sonorous impact, the sound as of a cathedral where one finds eternity. We find beauty in a cherry tree, precisely because they blossom so briefly – eternity does not exist, we know no God. The flower withers, but next year the cherry tree blossoms anew. Sound is like such blossom, it comes and goes. The silences, the absence, are not empty but full of sound, if we were able to hear.’

Each sound, therefore, is born of silence, as a meditation, and here the rhythm of breathing is crucial for Hosokawa. Sounds grow and fade, the pauzes between the breaths determine the form. Together notes can form clusters, even sharp dissonances – for nature is seldom in full harmony – but they always return to individual notes and silence. Such a cyclic structure does not seek development, completion or repetition, but floats on ongoing movement and variation, which is likewise a significant contrast with western music. ‘In eastern thinking’, Hosokawa writes, ‘the voice (i.e. the sound) is born when the spirit itself is manifest in breath. The expression of this dynamic process, reflecting the sound of the spirit in breath and voice, this, for me as a composer, is the ultimate challenge.’

The contrast with the music of Antonio Vivaldi could hardly be greater. The chasm in time, approach and aesthetics is so deep that it is perhaps futile to look for deeper relationships. Where Hosokawa pursues an expression of an extra-musical breath, Vivaldi surprises us time and again by playing with the form of the Baroque concerto – and then in more than five hundred compositions! This variety is often inspired by a musical effect, a person or a story, as in La notte, blossoming from Hosokawa’s nocturnal imagery as a melodic and rhythmic mirror, or in La tempesta di mare, prompted by the second intermezzo, Das Meer vor dem Sturm. Sometimes the ‘programme’ is less clear, as in Il gardellino (with written-out birdsong) or in the fourth concerto, which

Schwarzer has called La festa.

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