Poeme Electronique
Poeme Electronique
Poeme Electronique
1958),
by Edgard Varese
Edgard Varese (1883-1965), one of the great innovators of twentieth-century
music, was born in France but spent most of his life in the United States. As
early as 1916, he dreamed of freeing music from the limitations of traditional
instruments and expanding the vocabulary of sounds. During the 1920s and
1930s, Varese pioneered in the exploration of percussive and noise-like sounds,
and he wrote the first important work for percussion ensemble (Ionisation, 1931).
But it was the new electronic developments of the 1950s that enabled Varese to
realise his vision of a liberation of sound. In 1958, at the age of seventy-five,
he composed Poeme electronique, one of the earliest masterpieces of electronic
music created in a tape studio. The 8 minute work was designed to be heard
within the pavilion of the Philips Radio Corporation at the 1958 Brussels World
Fair. Varese obtained unique spatial effects by projecting sound from 425 loudspeakers placed all over the interior surfaces of the pavilion. The composers
worked in collaboration with the architect Le Corbusier, who selected a series of
images photographs, paintings and writing that were projected on the walls
as the music was heard. However, Varese did not make any attempt to
synchronise the sounds with the images chosen by Le Corbusier, which included
birds and beasts, fish and reptiles, ..masks and skeletons, idols, girls clad and
un-clad, cities in normal appearance and then suddenly askew, as well as
atomic mushroom clouds.
Listening Guide
The composition opens with the sound of a bell resonating within a space which
is sparse, empty, open and free. The following sounds are isolated and
scattered. The orientation is multidirectional and the image definition localised.
The sounds overlap and cross over or are separated by intervening spaces,
notably the long silence at 5.35. Each time the bell resonates it is with greater
reverb which increases the tension and size of the surrounding space. Panning
adds to the disorientation. Repeated patterns of the bell and the three note
semitones at 0.55 and sirens help to keep the piece connected although the
rhythms of percussion can really be considered the glue that holds the entire
piece together. While the rhythms do not mimic each other, they are the single
constant theme in Poeme, sometimes supportive, sometimes the primary
motive. Each group of sounds is in marked contrast to the sounds that
proceeded it, but although often startling there is also a feeling that whilst new, a
relatedness exists. Hollow wooden sounds follow harsh metal sounds, a frantic,
densely textured section is followed by silence.it is these juxtapositions
which keep the piece interesting and ensure our attention. All parts are echoed
and amplified in the conclusion of the composition.
The composition uses three basic methods to link elements. The first and most
important of these is space. The open, unrestricted space into which the sound
is abandoned becomes one of the comforting familiar constants in the piece.
Secondly, it is held together obviously by pitch both in terms of plateau and
pitches relative to each other. Thirdly the silences become a unifying motif as a
regular bridge to the next element. The only departure from this being the richly
interwoven passage of heavy resonance and echo which follows the
establishment of a theme at the beginning. In this section the sounds overlap
and cross over, whereas at all other times they simply move on in a forward
direction. There is diffusion of sound throughout as the very source of each
sound is in itself tremulous. Linking is also made by repeating the first note as
the last, with repetition of the starting theme and in the connective three note
descending melody which is placed as a recapitulation and resolving device. The
ending is deliberately abrupt, but not unresolved. The last sound is a stronger
more assertive rendition of the first. Happy, established, without need to justify
itself the sound has already been validated by its repetition in its many guises
throughout the piece. We do not question its relatedness to any other . It is
the whole.