Notation and Performance of New Music, Earle Brown
Notation and Performance of New Music, Earle Brown
Notation and Performance of New Music, Earle Brown
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The Notationand Performanceof New Music
EARLE BROWN
EVEN had there not been a special seminar on notation and performance
at Darmstadt this year [1964], it would be obvious that a great deal of
new music has come to be intimately dependent upon the practical ap-
plications of research in these aspects of music. Actually, in some music
and in extreme cases, these two elements have attained an equal footing
with compositional processes themselves, seemingly creating an entirely
new condition for music but in reality only new and unfamiliar to those
whose orientation is primarily that of Western "art" music. What is being
challenged by recent developments is not music itself but the concept
of what is "art" in music today and this is rightly a constantly recurring
problem which indicates that the art is still vital and alive.
Notation and performance, heretofore "given" and inherited practices,
have become significant and necessary areas of re-viewing precisely because
of the radical transformations which have taken place within the areas
of compositional techniques and aesthetics. Each has developed independ-
ently, to a degree, on the basis of two seemingly contradictory directions
that new music has taken: serialism and so-called aleatoric' music. I say
"seemingly contradictory" because, in spite of the essential difference
in operation, their "poetics" are similar, and these two directions have
recently come into an extraordinary alignment with each other. Serialism,
however, has been modified more by aleatoric tendencies than the contrary
and it is significant that, in fact, notation and performance innovations
began in the area of aleatoric tendencies.
The recent involvement with "new" notations and performanceprocesses
followed these rather severe challenges to existing compositional attitudes
but once the new problems were confronted notation and performance
became integral factors and new dimensions within the totality of the
new concepts. I will discuss this integral development of notation in terms
of aesthetic and technical necessity. Although there have been numerous
This is an edited version of lectures given by Earle Brown in Darmstadt in 1964.
1 Although this term is disastrously misleading in most of the cases to which it is applied, I will
momentarily exploit its recognition value (see Appendix).
180
New Music 181
scores written which have utilized nontraditional notations, there are rela-
tively few in which the notation has played a really functional role in the
essential nature of the musical conception of the work. By "really functional
role," I mean that the piece could not be notated traditionally and that
the sound of the work is of an essentially different character because of
the new notation. The "decorative" value of a score is in itself a pleasure
but I am more concerned with the possibilities of a notational system
that will produce an aural world which defies traditional notation and
analysis and creates a perfomance "reality" which has not existed before.2
Because of the multiplicity of specific viewpoints among composers
today and the extremely personal nature of notation (which is the only
visible evidence of the composer's initial and developed conception), it
is most important to keep an open frame of reference in regardto ultimate
usefulness for the one using it. Happily, this field has not yet been codified
and academicized, and through this "open frame" can enter all manner
of surprises and unexpected communications which it is the nature of
art to present to us.
area of aleatoric music, very little of which is "chance" music, but for
now it may suffice to say that the underlying existence of autonomous
(not in detail subjective) systems and the acceptance of a generalized
"rightness," and the aleatoric tendency to allow non-subjectively arrived
at conditions to occur as generalized "rightness" produces an admittedly
obscure and tenuous but nevertheless significant "poetic" element as a
connective. Despite this connective, however, the two mentalities from
which these two manifestations of today's music arose were poles apart
in regard to influences and philosophical outlook. From this comes
the "drama" and exciting history of recent new music developments. The
"growing together" of serial composition and aleatoric composition was
latent in the two approaches. It has nothing to do with the musical value
of the products but as things have developed serial techniques has expanded
and been modified in the direction of aleatory rather than the reverse.
This development was latent in what I would call an unrealistic aspect
of serial principles of composition relative to performance itself. Modifi-
cations of aleatory were latent in the extreme nature of a certain American
iconoclastic tradition. Malcomb Cowley said that Americans frequently
correct their own and other peoples' mistakes by going to the opposite ex-
treme... but this is usually only in order to obtain an inclusive perspective.
I hope not to belabor the point, but something should be said about
notation and performance prior to the "standardization"of nineteenth-cen-
tury music. Although a major part of my musical education was in the study
and compositional application of polyphony and counterpoint (from ninth-
century organum through twentieth-century twelve-tone counterpoint), I am
not an authority on early Western music, and despite this exposure my
own involvement in new possibililities arose from totally different in-
fluences. Nevertheless, there is a curious feeling of returning to a musical
condition which prevailed in times past that is apparent in aspects of
rhythmic flexibility and the increase of perfomer involvement on a creative
level; more accurately and to the point, on the level of creative collaboration.
The early development of musical notation proceeded, of course, in
the direction of more and more discrete control of all the elements and
did not achieve its "standard" appearance until after 1600 and its stan-
dardization of performance practice (the function of the conductor as we
know it) until approximately 1800. Obviously we do not negate the music
prior to these modern acquisitions merely because they do not conform
to present practice. They have their own unique and very beautiful nature
and expressive quality. Varese has said that just because there are other ways
of getting there, you do not kill the horse. And for those who tend to
feel endangered by recent developments, this attitude can be applied as
New Music 183
the highest power that the coefficients of human awareness can provide.
The road from artist to audience is not an "Einbahnstrasse" of meaning,
communication, and responsibility. This is what I mean by "cultural re-
sponsibility," and it moves outward in all directions from every human
endeavor.
Because of the time in which we live, and the tremendous amounts
of sheer information we can be exposed to and the speed with which it
is transmitted from country to country and people to people, the responsi-
bility is greater than at any time in the past. The quality of the responsibility
is not greater but the amount of information to which one must be re-
sponsible is infinitely greater. It is not by chance that some composers
consider a continuum to be the "canvas" for their activity and indeter-
minacy a vehicle for its expression; both of these terms have been in the
vocabulary of science since Heisenberg.4 They have also been functions
in all of the arts for a very long time but only recently have they come
to the surface as functions to be dealt with consciously; another (perhaps
paradoxical) indication of everything seeking further "clarification" and
the continuation of the human tendency to go deeper and deeper into
the nature of nature, both human and physical.
Gertrude Stein once said that "nothing changes from one generation
to another except the things seen and the things seen make the generation."5
With this inevitable change in what is being seen by each succeeding genera-
tion, there as inevitably follows a tremendous thrashing about in the pro-
fession of art criticism and all of the values seem to have been undone.
Although artists and critics are for the most part of different generations,
I do not see why there should be such a gap in "what is being seen." The
same "world" is available to both but I suppose that it is the difference
between the essential natures of the two involvements. I hesitate to think
that it is the "authoritarian" position of the critics which leads them to
excesses of absolutism but at times I wish that they would hesitate to
think that artists are nihilistic by nature. The air is constantly filled with
messages and communications, but if you do not have a radio or a telephone
or other means responsive to the conditions of transmission, you are not
going to get the message, and as far as you are concerned, there will not
seem to be one. Until the communicatee is on the same wave length as
the communicator he cannot very well complain about the lack of com-
munication.
Some of the "things seen" and heard by today's composers are the sound
and performance characteristics and notation of non-Western music; the
history, characteristics, and aims of jazz; the aesthetics and "notational"
4 Heisenberg "Indeterminacy Principle" (1927).
5 Gertrude Stein, Whatare Masterpieces? (New York, 1970), p. 26.
186 The Musical Quarterly
a special notation for other fractions, so as to avoid the annoying and unscientific me-
thods of setting down triplets, quintuplets,etc.7
This was the assigning of different shapes to the noteheads, each indicating
a different subdivision of the beat. Although no one seems to have adopted
this notation, it was a very reasonable suggestion, as were many in Cowell's
astonishing book, New Musical Resources.
The extreme and startling requests of Ives, for precision and detail
of inflection in all sound elements, did not result in his using a new notation
as such. Out of frustration, he wrote a great many verbal instructions in
his attempt to destandardize the performer's approach to notes and cause
them to collaborate creatively in achieving the elusive sound and feeling
he wanted. His "impracticality" and refusal to be limited (at least con-
ceptually) by traditional conformism are marvelously apparent in his in-
cluding parts for flute and viola in his Second Sonata for piano.
Schillinger advocated total control of every aspect of all musical situa-
tions but proposed nothing radical in the way of notations. Schillinger's
desire for precision led him to recommend precise metric control (notational
control) of rubato, accelerando, and ritardando (not to be entrusted to
a performer) and the numerical plotting of everything. He did, however,
set up a chart of instrumental abbreviations and graphic representations
for use in scores, which is very reasonable, clear, and useful, under some
conditions of extreme complexity. Schillinger was convinced that music
was moving toward a completely mathematically plotted, machine-generated
and -produced period, a conviction with which I could not agree. He worked
on electronic instruments and possibilities with Leon Theremin and his
own theories included the mechanical and mathematical control of all the
art media, as well as non-art media such as the sense of smell, and was
well on his way to the use of computers, cybernetics, programming, and
so forth, at the time of his death in 1943.
Schillinger's famous graphs were just that: a method of numerically
analyzing and synthesizing sound materials through both the horizontal
and vertical axes and an aid to correlating them and seeing their numerical
proportions graphically. They were a kind of geometrical shorthand and
not meant to be used in performance. His theory of musical composition
is, to paraphrase Schoenberg, a "structural functions of sound" approach,
accepting none of the inherited techniques as essential today.
Indian and other Oriental musics have survived very well and achieved
incredible degrees of subtlety and expressive nuance of rhythm, pitch,
timbre, and intensity. It is basically an "ear" music, however, and precision
on paper (and the veneration of that paper) has never seemed important
7
"HenryCowell," in American Composerson AmericanMusic, ed. HenryCowell (New York,
1933), p. 59.
190 The MusicalQuarterly
to them. Music is more a way of life than a way of making the final state-
ment, and their lack of accurately notating their very complex music has
in no way inhibited their musical life. The spirit and sound of a Javanese
gamelan orchestra is a very moving experience, by any standard.
Jazz is similarly an "ear"-oriented music, actively unnotatable and
not particularly concerned about it, micro-flexible in all dimensions, and
specifically definable only in the hearing of it. The rapport between jazz
performers and Indian musicians is a joy to behold and a revelation to hear.
They immediately connect with one another and make music together
as if they had always been associated, and with obvious pleasure on a pro-
found level of communication. (It is the more "progressive"jazz musicians
who make this connection.) Some American "avant-garde"jazz musicians
have done away with the traditional harmonic basis and the rhythmic
rationale. They know what is going on in "our" music and most of them
have been very much influenced by its "abstract" sound world. They,
of course, never having been attached to notation, produce their version
of it by simply spontaneously playing it, in aural imitation of its general
style and character. Notated jazz, such as that for an orchestra, is perfectly
standard, but the reading and instrumental expression of the notes is very
far from what the notes would lead one to expect. They are constantly
between, under, over, and around the notation, but collectively so, pro-
ducing, at its best, the sound of a single, intuitively unified conception;
"as one man" as all music should. Here is the best example of a tradition
which is not "literally" attached to its notation, which is both its greatest
virtue and its most serious limitation. But it is overcoming that limitation,
peculiar to aural traditions, as we are, relative to the limitations of our
"literal" tradition.
sing them. (I did not ask how accurately.) To interpose a not so relevant
but very amusing Schoenberg story: A violinist once told me that his Violin
Concerto needed a violinist with six fingers, and Schoenberg said, "I'll
wait"; and today five-fingered violinists play it. (There is the hurdle of
aesthetic inertia, not to be discounted, of course.) The other Cowell story,
somewhat contradicting his first, and told on another occasion, is that
someone had been making electronic analyses of musical performances
and that, in a passage of uniform eighth notes, at a moderate tempo, no
two of them were given the same actual durational value and that none
of them conformed to the written value.
So, where is accuracy and finite control and what is a good performance?
It is precisely in the hands and mind, the physical and mental responses,
of a fine and devoted performer, who is in an indefinable and unnotatable
relationship to the clearest possible graphic representation of a potential
sound event. To be clear is to have foreseen and removed the barriers be-
tween cause and effect, as well as to be explicit. Cause and effect are not
rationally connected, and the shortest distance between two people is
not a straight line.
Given the fact that there is a need for new notational possibilities,
apart from my personal needs and particular aesthetics, the existence of
the problem in a general sense implies three things: either human performers
are obsolete, the standard notation is obsolete, or compositional intentions
themselves are on the wrong track.
However, contrary to some attitudes, electronic music did not come
into existence because composers considered human performers obsolete.
The limited attraction (and infinitely frustrating) possibility of finite rhy-
thmic control was not nearly as exciting as the possibilities of a new and
theoretically unlimited world of timbre, space, and density; not to mention
the, also theoretical, simplicity of performance, relative to orchestral per-
formance. (It eliminates a lot of arguments with performers, but the re-
sources are nearly as elusive.) The conflict between notation and human
performance, and the possibility of music on tape, occurred at about the
same time, but except in the attitudes of a few hypnotized composers
it did not generally convince composers that there was no alternative.
No decent piece of electronic music (or rhythmic articulation) defies human
performance.
As to compositional intentions being on the wrong track, this is, of
course, a profoundly disturbing and much-discussed possibility, but so
it has been throughout the history of all the arts, sciences, and philosophies
for those not actively engaged in the doing of it. Art, as a spectator sport,
creates all manner of disturbances and disruptions in the complacency of
those who expect it to always follow their book of rules and regualtions.
New Music 195
Most people who cling to the book of rules and regulations, and create
the largest disturbance and confusion, are quoting the rules of a game
they remember with fondness, but does not happen to be the one that
is being played for them.
Why is it never learned that art is an exploration of experience and
communication and meaning? There is always a cry for individuality and
originality, but at the first indication of either the cry changes to nihilism,
no values, anti-art, sensationalism. This is the difference between human
nature and the human mind. The human mind recognizes the essential
nature of life as change, but human nature is insecure and protective.
It has been pointed out by many critics that serialism and aleatoric
techniques ultimately arrive at the same point; a relinquishing of control;
in the former case by unconsciously overestimating the coefficient of com-
municative intellectual processes, and in the latter case by a willful act
of not applying rational processes at all. Arriving at this same point, it
is said that they both negate human, subjective connectives which are
essential to a work of art being communicative and human. Needless to
say, this is said in the darkest tones and with all the trappings of severe
and presumptuous criticism.
It is quite true and curious that these two controversial approaches
to composition today have a common basis in the composer's conscious
disconnecting of, in some cases, details of the piece, and in other cases,
the formal configuration, from his subjective control. No one seems to
realize, however, that the details and/or the formal aspects do in fact come
into existence.
I will presume to speak for a great many other composers as well as
for myself and say that music today is certainly on the right track. There
is never only one right track, and the multiplicity may create a feeling of
confusion and lack of direction, but the direction is there nevertheless,
amongst the welter of distracting excesses and impertinence and poetry.
and being influenced by their work was virtually nil. While enjoyable and
valuable, the studies in polyphony and counterpoint, including twelve-
tone counterpoint, were very academic and sixteenth-century oriented.
The Schillinger studies were tremendously interesting and the only con-
nection with a really new and exciting creative line of thought.
At this same time, however, a real revolution was under way in painting
in New York, which, I believe, was the final "push" that made the arts
in general realize that they were somewhere they had never been before.
Like all revolutions in the arts, it was only violent and willful if you had
not followed the trajectory of its coming to be a necessity.
I cannot discuss all the relevant steps which led up to "abstract ex-
pressionist" painting, and obviously cannot trace it all in this context.
If that art is not a "fact" and acceptable art to you, I can only suggest
that we follow Ives's concept that if it is not always beautiful in accordance
with accepted standards, why cannot we accept a few other standards?
The first work of this kind that I saw and heard about was that of
Jackson Pollock in 1947 or 1948, and its impact was considerable and
lasting. The dynamic and "free" look of the work, and the artistic and
philosophical implications of Pollock's work and working processes, seemed
completely right and inevitable. In a sense it looked like what I wanted
to hear as sound and seemed to be related to the "objective" compositional
potential of Schoenberg's "twelve equal tones related only to one another"
and Schillinger's mathematical way of generating materials and structure,
even though the painting technique was extremely spontaneous and sub-
jective.
This play of paradox between objectivity and subjectivity I find to be
the most profound and challenging characteristic of art today and at the
heart of all creative work.
Despite the seeming and the actual "hazard" in the painting process
of Pollock, he and all of his intensity were on the other end of the brush
and it was a unique and transforming intensity. It took a tremendous act
of will to come to paint that way, and a complete devotion and commitment
to himself and all that art might conceivably be, a tremendous risk and
responsibility.
Particularly in Pollock, but also generally characteristic of all of the
artists of that group, was the deep commitment to the act of painting
and to the "objective" validity of the materials themselves, as two forces
keeping each other in balance. When asked if any of his paintings ever
turned out badly, Pollock said in an interview with Frank O'Hara, "It is
only when I lose contact with the painting that the result is a mess."
This extreme personal involvement in the painting process itself is,
from one point of view, subjective, but through the immediacy and intensity
New Music 197
of the creative confrontation with the materials and their formal potential,
the result achieves an objective existence outside of the artist's subjective
control, but obviously having come into existence through his act of will.
This subjectivity is the intense inwardness of reflexive assimilation, which
achieves a state of absolute stillness and unification. Long ago, Max Ernst
said that he wanted to be a spectator at the birth of his works, when re-
flecting upon the subjective-objective technique of "frottage." Ernst also
said that if such techniques continued to have a place in art, it would offend
a lot of people, but it would ultimately "hasten to bring about the crisis
of consciousness due in our time." I think he has been proven right.
We do have a "crisis of consciousness," and it has changed the nature
of the artist's relationship to his work and the relationship of the work
to a performer, reader, viewer, or listener. The "loosening" of notational
controls and the conscious introduction of ambiguity and spontaneity
in performance were, for me, a way to deal with this new situation, as I
felt it, in 1952.
The "objective" aspect in the creation of a work today enters from
philosophy and science, as well as from art. From philosophy and science
come the concepts of relativity and indeterminacy. They do not presume to
give us the final answer and imply that the functional, temporary answer is
given by the ever-changingconditions. The effect of this on art, which is bas-
ically a non-practical "spiritual" activity, is that the conditions (physical and
those temporarily assigned by the artist) have within them their own formal,
structural and communicative justifications. The responsibility of the artist is
then to bring a work into existence through a total commitment to the basic
nature of the materials and the conditions derived from their nature. From
this can come a work having an objective reality and universality of emotive
potential which is not limited by a self-limiting subjective condition (self-
limiting in that if based on a single emotive "idea" it presupposes the under-
standing of idea for its proper effect to the exclusion of all others). If
philosophy and science teach us anything, it is that all points of view are
possible. Given this condition, where is the basis of choice where the func-
tion of art is always an open question? Art is by nature a subjective ex-
perience for the audience, and to allow this nature to be maintained and to
be most free in relation to experience, it is essential that the experience
which it is given is a multi-ordinal, objective, and non-subjectively limited
and conditioned work. What has happened is something like the recognition
of the difference between a message and the general concept of communica-
tion: a message has specific, usually functional information to impart; com-
munication can take place without words, pastoral sounds, pictures of
family, and friends, and so forth, and without a specific message. An in-
tuitive contact with anything outside of oneself is a communication.
198 The Musical Quarterly
and the audience, the composer is attempting to bring all of these elements
into an intense relationship of oneness within the new conception of order
and form, which is new in the sense that it is spontaneously organic and
fulfilled by virtue of its process concept. As ever, if the composer has not
foreseen the environment and process clearly and profoundly in terms
of his materials, the piece will not function well or come to life. Apart
from the indolence and "habit blindness" of performers (which is endemic
to human nature) he must not blame the performers for his lack of aware-
ness and completeness of conception.
To summarize my own particular reasons for becoming involved in
new notational systems and performance processes such as "mobility,"
"open-form," and spontaneous performer determinations in works like
November 1952, December 1952, and so forth; the necessity arose from
the following problems and desires:
1. Belief that the complexity and subtlety of the desired sound results
had passed the point at which standard notation could practically and
reasonably express and describe the desired result.
2. The above belief led to a relaxation of finite notational controls and
to the conscious inclusion of ambiguity in "generalized" notations with
which the performer and the performance process could collaborate.
3. The search for inherent or "process" mobility in the work. The work
as an endlessly transforming and generating "organism," conceptually
unified in its delivery (the influence of the work of Calder).
4. The above necessitates a search for the "conditional" performance state
of spontaneous involvement, responsible to the composed materials
and to the poetic conception of the work; "work" in this case being
the activity of producing as well as the acquisition of a finite result
(the influence of the work of Pollock).
5. The fundamental motivation for all of the above: to produce a "multi-ordi-
nal" communicative activity between the composer, the work, and the per-
former, and a similarly "open" potential of experience for the listener.
The complex word, "multi-ordinal" seems to me to contain the basic
character of communication and meaning to which much of art is addressing
itself today. (Joyce speaks of it relative to concepts of Vico.) The effects
of this concept are overt in the work of Joyce, Mallarme, Stein, Duchamp,
Ernst, Calder, Pollock (to mention only those who were my primary con-
tacts with it), and now in music.
I will presume to say that this is where we are now and where art is most
deeply concerned today in its attempt to "express our time." For me, this
poetic necessity is responsible for the re-viewing of notational performance
practice.
200 The Musical Quarterly
Appendix
limits and the formal outlines are controlled, as in Cage, by the composer,
but here a subjective control rather than the objective or chance control.
This is obviously aleatoric but not at all "chance" music, either in the
compositional or the performance processes.
In my own work (primarily in Folio and Twenty-Five Pages) the form
is left "open" (ultimately arrived at as a function of the actual performance
process) and, in Folio, the content is "graphically" implied and left to the
performers' immediate spontaneous determination, in any continuity and
by any instruments. In Twenty-Five Pages, the content is totally composed
but left "flexible" and subject to immediate decisions as to structure and
continuity; "open form" but controlled content, inherently variable (sub-
jectively) within the conditions of "mobility" set by myself as composer.
As in Feldman, it is aleatoric but with the subjective, spontaneous element
applied to a form process rather than to content.