stockhausen: sternklang
welcome to the magical world of stockhausen!
Karlheinz Stockhausen: Sternklang
MIKAMO Central European Chamber Orchestra
Artistic Director: Ajtony Csaba
Dancer-Choreographer: Krisztián Gergye, Domokos Kovács, Csilla Gesztelyi Nagy
At night, in a park, far apart from each other, several groups of musicians play in the open air, and the source of their playing is the different constellations of the stars – this is the idea of the German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen in his work Sternklang, written in 1971. This concept was redesigned for the rooms of the Reaktor and House of Music Hungary by the MIKAMO Central European Chamber Orchestra for the premiere in Austria.
Visually represented star constellations such as the Big Dipper, Leo, Aquarius or Virgo determine the composition: the composer reads the stars as scores and writes rhythms, timbres and melodies from them that influence the interaction of the musicians and their relationship to one another. Between the ensembles, “sound carriers” and “torch bearers” (dancers) bring and carry the sounds. The result is like a journey into a fairytale world of sound in which the boundaries between performer, audience, and environment blur and go beyond the concept of a traditional concert hall.
During the three-and-half-hour experience, which appeals to all the senses, the stargazing audience can freely choose how they want to inhabit this multidimensional experience space, from walking between the ensembles to watching from their seats.
What to expect?
- Not your usual concert experience.
- The music is approximately 3-3.5 hours long. This is one musical piece, so we recommend you listen from the very beginning to the end, but you are welcome to join in for a shorter period.
- Musicians play the same piece at different spots in the building, and sometimes, they move between the spots. Dancers are also moving among the audience
- During the concert, you are welcome to walk around the building (each step will bring you a different experience), sit down, or meditate. Please do not talk loudly to let others enjoy the music.
- There are chairs in the different rooms, but you are free to bring your own pillows and blankets and sit down at the indicated spots.
- A café/bar is open before the concert. Food and drinks are not allowed in the concert hall rooms, but you can bring your own water in a closed bottle to stay hydrated.
- Feel free to take photos (no flash), and remember to tag @mikamoorchestra and @reaktor_wien.
star constellations in the piece
About Stockhausen
Karlheinz Stockhausen is one of modern music’s most controversial figures. He was at the centre of the post-war generation’s reinvention of art music in the 1950s and 1960s. By the 1970s he had become a cult figure, attracting mass audiences. His commitment to avant-garde aesthetics and religious mysticism continues to elicit extreme responses. To some, he was a fantasist whose musical gifts were less substantial than his charisma. To others, his commitment to technological innovation, particularly in electro-acoustic musical techniques, has ensured a legacy of lasting influence.
Stockhausen understood his musical ambitions as an attempt to restore music to the position of philosophical and ethical significance it held in the ancient world. Recalling the ancient Greek conception of music, he remarked that ‘the highest calling of mankind can only be to become a musician in the profoundest sense; to conceive and shape the world musically.’ He argued that human imagination and sensibility was increasingly dominated by the visual field, and that we were in danger of forgetting how to use our ears to ground and orientate our awareness of the world. He considered his work as a composer in terms of an attempt to ‘re-attune’ mankind to its environment.
Two aspects of Stockhausen’s childhood were crucial to his development as a composer: his attraction to the rituals and music of the Catholic Church, and his aversion to war and to Nazism in particular. In 1933, when Stockhausen was five years old, his mother entered an asylum for the insane, where she remained until her death in 1942, probably as a victim of the Nazis’ euthanasia policy. His father, a village schoolteacher with a penchant for amateur theatre, wholeheartedly embraced the ideology of the regime. The continual airing of military marches on the radio left Stockhausen with a profound aversion to forced, regular rhythms and an association of music with coercion. His father’s death on the Eastern Front in 1945 left Stockhausen orphaned. He enrolled in the Cologne Musikhochschule in 1947, graduating in 1951. He took composition lessons with the Swiss composer Frank Martin, and considered a career as a writer, encouraged to do so by his early hero, the novelist Hermann Hesse. But it was Hesse’s espousal of a holistic philosophy of music in his novel The Glass Bead Game that proved most influential.
In 1951 Stockhausen attended the avant-garde music summer school at Darmstadt, where he discovered the music of Messiaen. Attracted by the Frenchman’s experiments in timbre and rhythm, he travelled to Paris, studying in Messiaen’s composition classes. In Paris he met the composers Pierre Boulez and Pierre Schaeffer, whose experiments with musique concrète (electronically produced and manipulated sound) proved formative.
Stockhausen’s first composition for tape, Konkrete Etüde, dates from this time. Even at this stage, however, he cut a fiercely independent figure. Schaeffer later remembered him as ‘absolutely unwilling to follow my advice’. Stockhausen returned to Cologne after a year in Paris, and many of his most seminal works date from this period. Together with his teaching in Cologne and Darmstadt, works such as the set of piano pieces, Klavierstücke (1954–5), and Gruppen (1955–57) cemented his reputation as one of the central figures in the European musical avant-garde. A successful extended lecture tour in the United States in 1958 widened his influence further still. By the end of the 1960s he had become one of the world’s most widely recognised and best-selling composers. He travelled widely, invited to perform his music all over the world, often in unorthodox or outdoor venues. In the spherical German pavilion of the 1970 World Expo in Osaka, Stockhausen and a team of musicians performed his music daily for six months.
From 1977 onwards, Stockhausen concentrated his efforts principally on the composition of his grand cycle of seven operas. Entitled Licht (Light), the individual operas were to be named after the days of the week and would present a version of the creation myth. In this cycle, the struggle between Lucifer and the archangel Michael would lead to the ‘rebirth, in music, of mankind’ through the third character of Eve. Composed over 26 years and completed in 2003, Licht provides a good key to Stockhausen’s changing attitude to style and the renewed growth of his interest in electro-acoustic and other unorthodox sources of musical sound. Stockhausen’s last major composition, Klang (‘Sound’) was intended as a cycle of 24 chamber works, each devoted to an hour of the day and intended to reconcile our awareness of time with the activity of listening. Filled with long silences and patient explorations of particular pitch-combinations and timbres, the pieces are of a vastly different style from the angular and busy worlds of Gruppen and Klavierstücke. Although he composed the pieces at unusual speed, Stockhausen did not live to complete Klang. He composed 18 works in the cycle before he died suddenly of heart failure. (Deutsche Grammophone)