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(ways
of seeing "Fratres" by Arvo Pärt)
From dot
dot dot #9
Fratres-Arvo
Pärt.mp3
Late
in the evening, with a glass of wine, I’m sitting in a
dark room trying to consider the packaging of an album by an
Estonian composer named Arvo Pärt that will include a piece
of his called "Fratres,"
which is nearly 12 minutes long. Mine is an imaginary job, a problem
for thinking through after dinner. But suppose I were to be faced
with it. Suppose I were to try to contain this piece of Pärt’s,
a piece that arises from design and vanishes from it just as quickly.
How could it be done?
Memories strike first and hardest, and I begin to sort through
them. The first time I ever heard Pärt was Thursday, 12 March
1998 on a cold night at the Basilica of Saint Mary in Minneapolis.
That night, the sun set at 6:16pm according to the Almanac, but
new snow and a full moon kept the city looking bright and blue
well after nightfall. Earlier that day I had been at the Walker
Art Center to see a show by the artist Robert Gober, and, by chance,
I picked up a brochure that said "Sound Visions Spring Music." I
still have the brochure in my files today, and getting out of my
red chair, I set down my glass to find it.
In my hands is a CD-booklet-sized, 16-page brochure printed in
black and cyan only. The typography is neurotic—four weights
of Akzidenz Grotesk including the Condensed and Bold Condensed
weights, a rounded vernacular gothic, and close-set Clarendon caps.
Looking at it today, I think what it said was more important than
how it looked. A "rare opportunity," a "hypnotic
vocal tapestry" in an "acoustically superb sanctuary." The
language now sounds as clumsy as the type. But at a time in my
life when I thought Minneapolis to be so provincial that any rare
opportunity was one worth taking, here was a promise to hear something
beyond hearing. I remember walking to the box office to buy tickets
immediately. Hours later, sitting in the Basilica, the singers’ voices
started the "Kyrie" of the Berlin Mass. There were no
words for these sounds, nor shapes to give them form. The music
existed as an encounter with thresholds, like standing on the firm
earth over a void. The encounter was thrilling.
Once I was aware of him, I began to encounter Pärt more and
more often. I remember finding him in the listening library at
college by accident when someone had left a CD in the wrong tray.
Then again at a friend’s debut recital in New York City.
His music seems to inhabit the films I watch: Denys Arcand’s The
Barbarian Invasions, Gus Van Sant’s Gerry, Michael
Mann’s The Insider, Bernardo Bertolucci’s Little
Buddha, Julie Bertucelli’s Since Otar Left, and
Terrance Malick’s The Thin Red Line. You will find
him in the films of Jean-Luc Godard, of Werner Herzog, of Mike
Nichols and Michael Moore. I fell in love with a girl as I watched
Tom Tykwer’s Heaven, where Pärt plays more
than once.
As I consider the package, trying to bring a form from facts, I
consider the process of listening itself. It is a process of building
and unbuilding. The music I hear is first built for me, note by
note, and I simply apprehend it. Then, with more listening and
repeated playings, I break the shimmering thing back into pieces
in an effort to understand its whole. There is, must be, a reason
the filmmakers I watch, the designers I work with, the people I
love, hear these sounds of Pärt’s and respond as they
do. We all want to know: is what we’re hearing about Pärt
or about us? Who is this package for, and what do its contents
yield?
Part of me thinks of "Fratres" as a design. Its structure
exists independently from its orchestration. It exists already
as a piece for strings and percussion, winds and percussion, eight
cellos, string quartet, violin and piano, and MIDI sequencer. Its
phrases of four, six, and eight notes are voiced in three voices—high,
middle, and low—over nine variations, or three triads of
three. "Fratres"
has three beginnings, three middles, and three ends in each of
its three movements, and the arrangement of the three phrase-sets
in the three different voices of each of these three movements
creates first one, then two, then—just barely—three
tonal centers to the piece. More than a third of the tonal experience
of "Fratres" comes from the overtones that result from
the three perfect intervals played—the octave, the fourth,
and the fifth. So nothing exists: no given orchestration, no single
experience, not even all of the notes on the page. This is fitting:
Pärt often tells the story of a Russian monk he met, who,
when asked how to improve oneself, said he knew of no way. Pärt
said he tried by writing prayers and setting them to music. The
monk shook his head. "You are wrong," he said. "All
the prayers have been written. Everything has been prepared. Now
you must prepare yourself."
This preparation comes from transcendence. In Pärt’s
music, what is unknown is summoned from what is known through the
natural variance of incantaton—of reciting something over
and over—like the casting of spells and the saying of prayers.
With no preordained thematic drive to obey, the music literally
goes nowhere and operates with great drama by placing you where
you are, intoning the same tones again and again to create a world
of very few parts, a space that holds only the players, the sounds
they play, and the person listening.
Though I am describing the music to myself now, the package I’m
trying to design is no closer. Here is what I hear: "Fratres"
begins quietly. A beat maps the space, a pulse. Then, a breath,
the drawing of bows, timed with the beat. Four notes, arching like
a sunrise, then six in a similar pattern, then eight. The four
return again, slightly different but hopeful, then six, then eight.
The players are quiet and find the pulse again. Now four tones
dipping like a valley, more laboured on their journey uphill. The
same pattern of six then eight. Four. Six. Eight. The sound is
broadening, rounder. The pulse. The beats are a rhythm, an organiser
for the arrangement of the notes, sounding as they did before,
but more insistently now. Two forces in opposing directions. The
movements in this interval are laboured and driving forward. At
last, the sound rings. The pulse returns and the first third is
complete.
More falling than rising, the opera is greater. The drama of the
second third. Beat, beat, beat. Beat, beat, beat. The music insists
and refuses to resolve, simmering, then vapourising the structure
it found before. Now it finds itself in two states at once. Beats
and then the weather. A thunderclap and air fronts inside and out.
The music hall trembles, tensing for the storm.
The final third begins. The warmest sounds so far, like a folk
dance or children running in a ring, yelling with joy. The pulse
of night-time beats with the regularity of vespers. A hushing when
the sounds resume. The quieter of the two voices is found lower
down. On the refrain, it is quieter still, sounding as if, in an
icy forest, someone has just stopped walking. The pulse trails
off, drifting. Now, after the storm, the wind settling, the intensity
of resting after a hard day, of releasing breath. A good job. The
pulse, calm, falls silent.
Ideas from Pärt of a typographic sort: the tabula rasa (or
blank slate)—his name for a skittering piece written for
the violinist Gideon Kremer. The package is empty. When I was younger,
learning to play the piano by ear, I would play intervals that
made the best shapes. The beauty of a perfect interval is more
than sonic. The Estonian alphabet has 32 letters. Bracketing those
that are only used in foreign words,
27 letters remain. Three nines, each of three threes. Pärt’s
process for composing much of his music, including "Fratres,"
is one he calls "tintinnabulation," which takes a certain
chord and inverts it several times over to evoke the pealing of
bells, modulating its register in a manner that suggests overtones.
This is the beauty of well-chosen arrangements. The sound is simultaneously
static (the chord is not changing) and in flux (the chord is permuting).
The triad sounds over and over again as instruments trade its notes,
passing them through the auditorium as other, quieter voices wander
afield, uprooted. These bell-like overtones are slippery, toning
and overtoning and changing between the soundings. Something happens
when metal is struck with that kind of force, I think to myself.
Something else resonates.
I am searching for answers by considering form. I pour another
glass of wine. Digging through a pile of articles I’ve made
on the floor, I find Pärt searching for answers, too:
Tintinnabulation
is an area I sometimes wander into when I am searching for
answers—in my life, my music, my work. In my dark hours,
I have the certain feeling that everything outside this one
thing has no meaning. The complex and many-faceted only confuses
me, and I must search for unity. What is it, this one thing,
and how do I find my way to it? Traces of this unimportant
thing appear in many guises, and everything that is unimportant
falls away.
I
am frustrated by the answers I am getting. Maybe it’s enough
just to enjoy the music. As quickly as I can ask, "Is Pärt
a designer?" I am asking myself, "Should I try to be
claiming him as one?"
With "Fratres" on the stereo, I am on the noisy internet,
and it is getting later. I find I can type F-R-A-T-R-E-S with one
hand. When I translate a French interview with Pärt, the word
for "composer"
comes out "type-setter." I find that Pärt’s
birthday is 11 September 1935—66 years (two 33s) before the
towers fell. In his music, he says, the second iteration of the
triad represents
"terror." I find the moment of Pärt’s musical
transformation from his early serialism to his later minimalism
coincides to the month with my own birth. I find a quote about
the packaging of his music that coincides with this coincidence:
Alex Ross of The New Yorker writes, "Even the packaging
of the disks, all crisp lines and monochromatic fields, is a beautiful
exemplar of minimalist style." I find each of the package
designs and note the typefaces: Palatino, Palatino Titling, Trajan,
Gill Sans, stretched Avant Garde, Garamond Bold, Akzidenz Grotesk,
Times Roman, Frutiger, Rotis Serif. These facts refuse me.
Pärt says,
We
must count on the fact that our music will come to an end one
day. Perhaps there will come a moment, even for the greatest
artist, when he will no longer want to or have to make art.
And perhaps at that very moment we will value his creation
even more—because in this instant he will have transcended
his work.
We reach a consensus
on things, and these things should be noted down. Here is one: the
Estonaian composer Arvo Pärt. Here are my notes. The wine is
done. The room is quiet. As I get ready for bed, I remind myself
that there is, in fact, no problem here to be solved.
—New York City, 7 November 2004
© 2005 Rob
Giampietro.
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