in vain hyperion

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The ‘harmonic series’ is an artifact”: ideology, process and perception in Georg Friedrich Haas’s in vain There is no tradition of microtonal music. Even into the twentieth century all composers who compose microtonically have begun anew. Nowadays it is considered unusual to use microtones. It is necessary to show cause why one is using tones outside of the tempered system. 1 The music of the Austrian composer Georg Friedrich Haas is most often aligned with the spectralist school of composition, which draws its musical materials from the analysis of natural sounds and their changes over time. His varied and prodigious output includes concerti, operas, homages and several dozen chamber works, yet most of his compositions display the three qualities Joshua Fineberg associated with spectral music: sound color as a central element of musical discourse, the subsumption of individual voices into a rich texture, and a resonant sonic image notable for a kind of “acoustic glow.” 2 The orchestral works in vain and Hyperion move beyond this “acoustic glow” to incorporate optics as both a metaphoric and literal aspect of the composition in a way that recalls the light associations of works by Gérard Grisey or Tristan Murail. But the concerns of Haas transcend the so-called “spectral attitude” to embrace a diverse compositional practice that reflects life both within and outside the concert hall. In this paper I introduce Haas’ aesthetics and musical influences, before turning to in vain as a case study of his compositional process. I analyze how the use of heterogeneous harmonic resources, tempered and untempered tunings and extramusical associations force a convergence of nature and artifice, in a mirror of the political and ethical concerns that motivate Haas’ music. Situating Haas Although the sound and associations of his works identify Haas as a spectralist, all three composers have positioned themselves differently. Manifestos delivered by the founding members of l’Itinéraire were unified less by method than by adherence to a “spectral attitude.” 3 Grisey, for instance, extolled the “living nature” of the sound object, while Murail spoke of sound as a sensation, whose transformation demands a global approach to the act of composition. 4 In contrast, Haas self-identifies as a microtonal composer whose compositional concerns are focused on harmonic alternatives to—rather than extensions of—the equal-tempered system. Bernhard Günther notes further genealogical and methodological differences between Haas and the spectralists, yet adds wryly that in 1 Georg Friedrich Haas, “Mikrotonalitäten,“ Österreichische Musikzeitschrift 54/6 (1999), pp. 9-15. 2 Joshua Fineberg, “Spectral Music,” Contemporary Music Review 19:2 (2000), p. 3. 3 See especially Gérard Grisey, “Did You Say Spectral?,” Contemporary Music Review 19:3 (2000), p. 1. 4 Tristan Murail, “Target Practice,” trans. Joshua Cody, Contemporary Music Review 24:2–3 (2005), pp. 149– 71.

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Page 1: in vain Hyperion

The‘harmonicseries’isanartifact”:ideology,processandperceptioninGeorgFriedrichHaas’sinvain

Thereisnotraditionofmicrotonalmusic.Evenintothetwentiethcenturyallcomposerswhocomposemicrotonicallyhavebegunanew.Nowadaysitisconsideredunusualtousemicrotones.Itisnecessarytoshowcausewhyoneisusingtonesoutsideofthetemperedsystem.1

ThemusicoftheAustriancomposerGeorgFriedrichHaasismostoftenalignedwiththespectralistschoolofcomposition,whichdrawsitsmusicalmaterialsfromtheanalysisofnaturalsoundsandtheirchangesovertime.Hisvariedandprodigiousoutputincludesconcerti,operas,homagesandseveraldozenchamberworks,yetmostofhiscompositionsdisplaythethreequalitiesJoshuaFinebergassociatedwithspectralmusic:soundcolorasacentralelementofmusicaldiscourse,thesubsumptionofindividualvoicesintoarichtexture,andaresonantsonicimagenotableforakindof“acousticglow.”2TheorchestralworksinvainandHyperionmovebeyondthis“acousticglow”toincorporateopticsasbothametaphoricandliteralaspectofthecompositioninawaythatrecallsthelightassociationsofworksbyGérardGriseyorTristanMurail.ButtheconcernsofHaastranscendtheso-called“spectralattitude”toembraceadiversecompositionalpracticethatreflectslifebothwithinandoutsidetheconcerthall.InthispaperIintroduceHaas’aestheticsandmusicalinfluences,beforeturningtoinvainasacasestudyofhiscompositionalprocess.Ianalyzehowtheuseofheterogeneousharmonicresources,temperedanduntemperedtuningsandextramusicalassociationsforceaconvergenceofnatureandartifice,inamirrorofthepoliticalandethicalconcernsthatmotivateHaas’music.SituatingHaasAlthoughthesoundandassociationsofhisworksidentifyHaasasaspectralist,allthreecomposershavepositionedthemselvesdifferently.Manifestosdeliveredbythefoundingmembersofl’Itinérairewereunifiedlessbymethodthanbyadherencetoa“spectralattitude.”3Grisey,forinstance,extolledthe“livingnature”ofthesoundobject,whileMurailspokeofsoundasasensation,whosetransformationdemandsaglobalapproachtotheactofcomposition.4Incontrast,Haasself-identifiesasamicrotonalcomposerwhosecompositionalconcernsarefocusedonharmonicalternativesto—ratherthanextensionsof—theequal-temperedsystem.BernhardGünthernotesfurthergenealogicalandmethodologicaldifferencesbetweenHaasandthespectralists,yetaddswrylythatin

1GeorgFriedrichHaas,“Mikrotonalitäten,“ÖsterreichischeMusikzeitschrift54/6(1999),pp.9-15.2JoshuaFineberg,“SpectralMusic,”ContemporaryMusicReview19:2(2000),p.3.3SeeespeciallyGérardGrisey,“DidYouSaySpectral?,”ContemporaryMusicReview19:3(2000),p.1.4TristanMurail,“TargetPractice,”trans.JoshuaCody,ContemporaryMusicReview24:2–3(2005),pp.149–71.

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Austria,“ismsareavoidedmorethanequidistances.”5HencethewritingsofHaasfocusonmicrotonalevents,andontheadhocconstructionsthatfeedhiscreativeprocess.Aswiththespectralists,Haasbeginswithhismaterial:“Theloveofsoundelements,attentiontothesounds,likelivingthingsunfoldinginspaceandtime,isformeoneofthebasicrequirementsofmywork.”6AsLisaFarthofernotes,Haasassignscomplexinnerlifeandnarrativetosounds.Thisnarrativebeginswiththeconvictionthatmicrointervalsrepresentneitheradistortionnorembellishmentofequal-temperament,but"abasichumanneed,”onewhosenecessitywetakeforgrantedasamundanefeatureofeverydaylife,inthesqueakofadoororabird’ssong.7

AMicrotonalAestheticsEarlyinhiscareerHaaswasexposedtonon-temperedtunings,andtheworkofmicrotonalcomposers.AttheUniversityinGrazheperformedworksbyIvanWyschnegradsky,AloisHába,JamesTenney,HarryPartchandJuliánCarrillowithfriendsandcolleagues.AlthoughattractedtotheformalproceduresofHábaandthetuningexperimentsofTenneyandPartch,HaaswasdirectlyinfluencedbythreeofWyschnegradsky’skeyconcepts:the"soundcontinuum,”ultrachromaticism,andnon-octavianttonalcollectionsandcycles.InLaloidelapansonoritéWyschnegradskyintroducedthe‘totalsoundcontinuum’asan“operationallimit”fortheconstitutionofultrachromaticism.8Thistotalsoundcontinuum—“aninfinitenumberofmusicaltonesarrangedatinfinitelysmalldistances”—formsapurelyhypotheticalbackdroptotherelativesoundcontinuum,whichdividestheaudiblespectruminto144soundsperoctave,as12thsofawholetone.Non-octaviantfrequencyspaceswerethoseformedbysubstitutingacontractedorexpandedintervalforthetraditionaloctaveequivalence.[Fig.1]Althoughtheoreticallyanyintervalmightsuffice,Wyschnedgradsky’stablelistedeveryspacesmallorlargerthananequal-temperedoctave,asindicatedbythevolumesbelow,listedinmultiplesofthesmallestsystemunit

Inastructuralanalogywiththediatonicsystem,Wyschnegradskyemployedthesespacesasintervalcyclestogeneratescalecollections.Cyclingthroughdifferentintervalcycleswillproducecollectionsofdifferentsizesandscope.Hisfavoritesemitonalintervals—themajorseventhandminorninth—theoreticallyunfoldover11and13octavesrespectively:beyondtheaudiblerange(oratleastthespanofapianokeyboard).[Fig.2]ThistheoreticalspaceisgivenshapeintheÉtudesurlesmouvementsrotatoires,Op.45,9inwhichtwo

5BernhardGünther,programnotesforinvain(2000),availableatUniversalEdition,http://www.universaledition.com/composers-and-works/Georg-Friedrich-Haas/in-vain/composer/278/work/75666Georg-FriedrichHaas,„AnmerkungenzumKomponieren,“inMusikundMetaphysik,ed.EckhardTramsen,(Hofheim:WolkeVerlag,2004),p.117.7LisaFarthofer,GeorgFriedrichHaas:„ImKlangdenken“(Saarbrücken,Pfau-Verlag,2007),122–27.8IvanWyschnegradsky,UnePhilosophieDialectiquedel’ArtMusical:Laloidelapansonorité,ed.FranckJedrzejewski(Paris:L'Harmattan,2005;rep.1936edition).9RepublishedM.P.Belaieff, BEL 571, 2003.

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Bauer, SMT 2014, The ‘harmonic series’ is an artifact”: ideology, process and perception in Georg Friedrich Haas’s in vain

1)Wyschnegradsky’s Structures de base de volume et de densité diverse, in “Ultrachromatisme et les espaces non octaviants,” La Revue Musicale 290–91 (1972), pp. 73–138.

2)Ivan Wyschnegradsky, Étude sur les mouvements rotatoires for two pianos and four hands, Op. 45, showing cycles of 11 semitones (score) and the subdivision of those cycles by 11 quartertones (below)

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circlesofminorninthsinterlockattheintervalofthirteenquartertones,expressingaconstant,eight-notepulsethathelpsusimaginetheunheardportionofthecycleasitclimbsupwardonlytoreappearatthebottomofthepitchspace.

Semitonalcyclesgeneratedbythemajorseventhandminorninthofcoursegeneratethetwelve-notescaleofthetotalchromatic.Ifbyanalogyweuse11and13torefertoquartertones,asintheÉtude,wetraverseall24tonesofthesystem.[Fig.3]Butthiscyclecanalsobethoughtofastwoindependentcyclesof11semitones,interlockedatthedistanceofamajorfourth.Theinternalstructureofthisperiodicunitmaybefurthersubdividedbyperfect(equidistant)orimperfect(non-equidistant)intervals.[Fig.4].Thusthespan11insemitonalspacemaybedividedimperfectlyintoatritoneandperfectfourth,orperfectlywithabisectionby11quartertones,toproducetheintervalpairWyschnegradskylabeledmajorfourth/minorfifth.Themajorfourthwasimportantbecauseitsequal-temperedinterval—550cents—approximatestheratioof11:8(551.28cents)foundintheharmonicseries.[Fig.5].

Althoughthecycleofmajorfourthstheoreticallyspans11octaves,Wyschnegradskyreliedononlyitsfirst13pitchestoformhiswidelyusedchromatiquediatoniséescale:similartothediatoniccollection,thisscalecanbegeneratedcyclicallyfromafourth/fifthcycle,yetitcanalsobepartitionedintotwoheptachordsrelatedbythesameinterval.10Thediatonicizedchromaticwasfodderforatheoryofharmonythatreplacedstackedthirdswithsuperimposedfourthsderivedfromthedivisionof11and13,inspiredbytheharmonicpracticeofScriabin.Bysuperimposingbothperfectandimperfectfourthsandfifths,Wyschnegradskycouldrealizeobliquevoice-leadingandavoidthestaticprogressionsinherentinsymmetricalstructuresoflimitedtransposition.

Haasreadilyadmitshislong-standingpreferenceforWyschnegradskychords,especiallythoseofthe“imperfect”variety.11Heemploystheseharmoniesasaunit,andclaimsthat,to10ExplainedinIvanWyschnegradsky,“Ultrachromatismeetéspacesnon-octaviants,”RevueMusicale290–291(1972),pp.73-141.SeealsoMarcBeaulieu,“CyclicalStructuresandLinearVoice-LeadingintheMusicofIvanWyschnegradsky,”extemporeV/2(Fall1991),archivedathttp://www.ex-tempore.org/beaulieu/BEAULIEU.htm;J.-P.Caron“IntotheFull:Strawson,WyschnegradskyandAcousticSpaceinNoiseMusics,”in �Resonances�:�NoiseandContemporaryMusi�c,editedbyMichaelGoddard,BenjaminHalligan,NicolaSpelman(London:BloomsburyAcademic,2013),286–93;andchapter5ofMylesSkinner,“TowardaQuarter-ToneSyntax:SelectedAnalysesofWorksbyBlackwood,Hába,Ives,andWyschnegradsky,”Ph.D.diss.,StateUniversityofNewYorkatBuffalo(2007),archivedathttp://www.tierceron.com/diss/index.php.11GeorgFriedrichHaas,“JenseitsderZwölfHalbtöne–VersucheinerSynopsemikrotonalerKompositionstechniken,”ProgrammheftNextGenerationSalzburgerFestspiele1999,ed.FriedenSchafleiter(Salzburg:Residenz-Verl.,1999),pp.17–23;hisarticlesonWyschnegradsky’smusicinclude“Arc-en-cielop.3.IvanWyschnegradskysbehutsameAnnäherungandasZwölftonintervall,”inMikrotöneIV(berichtdes4.SymposionsüberMikrotonforschung,Salzburg1991)(Munich:Nymphenburg200),pp.79–82;and“DieVerwirklichungeinerUtopie:Ultrachromatikundnicht-oktavierendeTonräumeinIvanWyschnegradskysmikrotonalKomposition,“inHarmonikim20.Jahrhundert,ed.ClausGanter(Vienna:HochschulefürMusikundDarstellendeKunst,1993),pp.87–100.

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Bauer, SMT 2014, The ‘harmonic series’ is an artifact”: ideology, process and perception in Georg Friedrich Haas’s in vain

3) Semi- and quarter-tone interval 11 cycles and their relation.

4) Perfect and imperfect binary chord divisions in semi- and quarter-tone space.

5)Wyschnegradsky’s diatonicized chromatic scale

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Wyschnedgradsky,itwasirrelevantwhethertheearcouldseparateoutitsconstituentpitches.YetHaashasthoughtlongandhardaboutwhatitmeanstonotonlycomposeoutsideoftwelve-toneequaltemperament,buttolistenandperforminamicrotonaluniverse.HisFiveThesesonMicrotonalMusic12beginwiththedeclaration“the"harmonicseries"isanartifact,”thefirstofthreephilosophicalstatementsaboutourgeneralconceptionofmusicintheWest.

Thesis1:The"harmonicseries"isanartifactThesis2:ThereisabasichumanneedforbeatsinmusicThesis3:inmicrotonalmusicthereisnolongertheprincipleofidentically-namedpitchesindifferentoctavesThesis4:ConventionalmusicalnotationisobstructivetomicrotonalthinkingThesis5:MicrotonalmusicrequiresitsowncompositionoftimeTable1,FiveThesesonMicrotonalMusic

Thepartialseriesstandsasoneofthefundamentalsofmicrotonalharmony;whethercalculatedbymeansofFourieranalysisorfilteredfromaninstrumentalrecording,itenrichesourmusicallanguagewitha“sensualcharm.”Buttheterms"harmonicseries"and"puretemperament”areloadedwithideology,wheninfacttheyrepresentamodelasabstractasanyserialprocedure.Actualinstrumentalsoundsarealwaysslightlychanging,theirhigherpartialsshiftingasthephysicalmassoftheirsoundsourceandsurroundingsshift.Hencetheparadoxicalphenomenonthatsoundswhichmostclearlymanifesttheharmonicseriesarecompletelystatic:oldrefrigerators,electricalsubstations,andothermachines.Haasdeclaresthat“anyattempttopreciselygraspthisovertoneseriesisdoomedtofailure.”13YetitisthisverystrivingafteranimpossibleidealthatseemstocharacterizeHaas’compositionalprocess,andhisaestheticsasawhole,downtothemotivationbehindinvain.Thesis2—thebasichumanneedforbeatsinmusic—servesasafurtherillustrationofthedifferencebetweenabstractmodelsandthemessinessofactualsounds.Augmentedordiminishedoctaves,“slightlydetuned”unisonsandotherexamplesof“friction,notfusion”proliferateacrossmusicalcultures.Indeed,Haassuspectsthatthenearuniversalsuccessofthetwelve-tonetemperedharmonicsystemmaybeadirectresultofits“false”butbeat-richmajoranddominantseventhchords.Thesis3notesthat,justaswehaveabstractedthenotionofaharmonicseries,sowehaveabstractedthenotionofpitchinspace.Buteachpartialtoneisboundtoanoctaveposition,aswellastoaneighborhoodofintervalsaroundit.Thefinaltwothesesdirectlyconcernthecomposition,performanceandperceptionofexplicitlymicrotonalmusic.Ourcumbersomeinheritednotationoftencloudstheintervalrelationshipsandharmonicrelationshipsofthescore,distractingbothcomposerandperformer.Butagreaterchallengelieswiththeperceptualdifficultiesofworkingwithsmallintervals.Thesmallertheintervaldifference,themoretimeittakesthehuman12“FünfThesenzurMikrotonalität,”Positionen,48(2001),42ff;reprintedinFarthofer,pp.122–27.13“FünfThesen,”inForthofer,p.122.

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perceptualapparatustodistinguishit.Rapidmovementswithinmicrotonalsystemswillsimplyneutralizepitchdifferences,asbothperformersandlistenersneedtimetohearoutslowbeatsandtheupperproportionsofthepartialseries.Thusmicrotonalmusicneedsmorespace,moretime,andmoreopportunitiesfordevelopment.CompositionalProceduresHaasbeganhiscareerworkinginamoreserial,abstractmanner,includingaresidencyinIRCAM.MuchlikeGyörgyLigetiandtheFrenchspectralists,hisworkwithcomputersmadehimmoreawareoftheinnerstructureofsounds,andofthepossibilitiesofextendingthatstructurecompositionally.Thushedevelopedtheconceptofprojection:therealizationofanyabstractmodelwithinagivencompositionalsystem.Ina1995articleheliststhreeformsofprojection:spectrographicsoundmodelsasanaidtocomposition,theprojectionofcomplexfrequenciesonagivenmicrotonalgrid(e.g.,asixth-tonesystem),andprojectionasaharmonic-theoreticalconcept(e.g.adominantseventhchordasaprojectionofthe4th,5th,6thand7thpartialstotemperedtwelve-tonespace).14[Table2]Thosemodelsusedininvaincompriseatleast5categories:1.“superslowmotion”intimatedinthefifththesis,2.composed-outacousticbeats,3.soundsplitting,ormicrotonalfrequencycompactionaroundapitch,asinthemusicofScelsi,4.amusical-thematicapproachtotheShepardscaleeffect,and5.combinationtones.Allofthesetechniquesappearinthe75-minutesinglemovementinvain,writtenfor24instrumentsanda“spotlight,”avisualfeaturethatputsuniquedemandsonperformer,listenerandconductor.

1.spectrographicsoundmodelsasanaidtocomposition2.theprojectionofcomplexfrequenciesonagivenmicrotonalgrid(e.g.a6th-tonesystem)3.projectionasaharmonic-theoreticalconcept(e.g.amajor-minorseventhchordasaprojectionofthe4th,5th,6thand7thpartialstotempered12-tonespace)Table2,Threeformsofprojection

LettherebeLightHaasbeganusinglightasametaphoricalfeatureofhistheatricalcompositionswiththebriefoperaAdolfWölfliin1981.Inthe1996chamberoperaNightthecharacterofHölderlinappearsbathedindifferentcolorstoindicatehismentalstateandthefluctuationbetweenrealityandfiction.Melancholia,anoperaaboutthepoorNorwegianpainterLarsHertervig,useslightsimilarlytodistinguishtheartist’sinnerlifefromhiscoldreality.Butworkingwithlightasa"musicalinstrument"hasbecomeapartofHaas’instrumentalmusicaswell,culminatingwithHyperionin2006,subtitled“ConcertoforlightandOrchestra.”TheartistrosaliedesignedalightsculptureforHyperion’spremiere,butthepublishedscoreallowssomeflexibility,aslongasfourorchestralgroups—placedaroundthefourwallsoftheperformancespace—areeachfacedbyadifferentlightsource.

14“DieAbbildungakustischerPhänomenealsMaterialderkompositorischenGestaltung,“Ton4/1996–1/1997,pp.24–7.

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AccordingtoHaas,achangeinlightcolorchangesone’sperceptionofsounds,andthestructureoflightintime“actslikeasilentdrum."15Butitistheabsenceoflightthatchangesbothaudienceandperformer’sperceptionofsoundsandspaceininvain.Inthebestknownofitstwoversions,concertlightsontherostrumanddeskfadetofulldarknessatm.70.Theshiftfromlighttodarknessaccompaniesandintensifiesmetaphoricalgradationsoflightintheharmoniclanguageofthework:combinationsof–andtransitionsbetween–vastlydifferentharmoniccollections,andstrategicjuxtapositionsoftemperedandnon-temperedharmoniesthatgenerateauditoryillusions.Wyschnegradsky’snotionofcyclesfeedsintocertainpitchparadoxesthatHaasfavors,suchastheShepardscaleeffectthatservesasthework’sthematicbackbone.Haas’schordvoicingsseemtoreflectWilliamSethares’sdemonstrationsontherelationbetween“sensoryconsonanceanddissonance”andtimbreandtuning.Setharesdemonstratedthattritone-basedchordswillsoundconsonantandfunctiondifferentlyinaninharmonicmusicaluniverse.16Invainbeginswithdescending(0167)tritone/fifthchordsoverC2inthebass,inmarimba,crotales,piano,accordion,andstrings—soonjoinedbywinds—inahetereophonic,descendingcascade.cascade.Inm.2theuppervoicesarefurthersubdividedtoformanoctatonic(1,2)collection,whilethosebeneathG2reflectasymmetrical(0134)tetrachord—octatonic(0,1)withgapsofathird,asshowninapitchreductionoftheopeningbars.[Fig.6]Inmm.2-9theShepard’stoneeffectgathersmomentum:althoughthescalesdescendinpitch,theycirclebacktoriseeverhigher,withinstrumentalgroupsebbinglikewaves.Inm.18asustained(0235)inwoodwindsandstrings,joinedbyaseptachordinstrings,heraldsanewharmonicphase.Hereonewhole-toneoftheoctatonicissubdividedinordertoformnon-octavianscales:adifferentpitchcollectionineachregistralband.Bym.29a3-octavedescentappearsinwinds,malletpercussion,piano,accordianandstringsfromC#6toG#3,asshowninFigure7.[Fig.7]Thelightdramaticallydimsinmm.70-78,andthescalefragmentswaneinwinds,glockenspiel,piano,andaccordion,while,beginninginthebass,staggeredlinesriseinsustainedascentsofsemi-andsixth-tones,asshowninaharmonicreduction[Fig.8].Herethepaceslowsdramatically,andHaasshiftstoletternamesfortheglaciallyslowm.76.Bythistimetheauditoriumiscompletelydark,andtheharmoniccastshiftsfromtritone/fifthchordstothosebuiltonnon-temperedpartials.[Fig.9]TheharpentersatrehearsalEwithpartialsofBb,followedbythestringswithpartialchordsrelatedtoBb2andA2.[Fig.10]Barnumbersresumeinm.77alongwithahesitantmarchbackintolight,accompaniedbywhatisessentiallyanextremely-sloweddownversionoftheinitialascendingdescent,

15IntroductiontoHyperion,trans.PeterBurt,UniversalEdition,http://www.universaledition.com/composers-and-works/Georg-Friedrich-Haas/Hyperion/composer/278/work/12730.16“…consonanceanddissonancearenotinherentqualitiesofintervals,but...aredependentonthespectrum,timbre,ortonalqualityofthesound.”“Boththefifth...andthefourth...lienearpeaksofthetritonedissonancecurve.Thus,thedissonancecurvepredictsthatachordcontainingbothafourthandafifthshouldbemoredissonantthanachordcontainingtwotritones,atleastwhenplayedwith[certaintimbres].WilliamA.Sethares,Tuning,Timbre,Spectrum(London:Springer,2005),pp.1,102.

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Bauer, SMT 2014, The ‘harmonic series’ is an artifact”: ideology, process and perception in Georg Friedrich Haas’s in vain

6) in vain, pitch reduction, mm. 1–7

7) in vain, pitch reduction, mm. 29-30

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conductedasaprogressionofspectrabasedonvirtualfundamentals,asshowninFigure11.[Fig.11]Duringtransitiontoafinaldarkphase,combinationsofdifferentovertonespectraemergelikesparks:forinstance,inm.483,trombonesplaypartials6and7ofF#1,whilehornsplaypartials5and6ofA1,toproducetwoC-sharp4sa12thtoneapartandtwoE4sa6thtoneapart.[Fig.12]Invaindisorientsthelistenerbymanipulatingseveralfundamentalparadoxesofaudition,paramountamongthoseourdependenceonauditoryimagestoorientourmusicalperception,andourunconscioususeoftimbretomapanacousticenvironment.Shiftsfromlighttodarkness,mutationsofharmoniccollectionandtemperament,andextremeorchestrationsallcontributetoshiftsinwhatCorneliaFalescallsourperceptualizationofsound.Perceptualizationisacognitiveoperationorfeatureoutsideoftheactualacousticelementsofasignalthatnonethelesscontributestoitsperceptualoutcome.Timbreistheparametermostfrequentlyandintenselyimplicatedinperceptualization,whichcontributestotheso-calledparadoxoftimbre:timbreistheparameterofsoundmostimplicatedinsourceidentificationbutalsomostimplicatedinthediscrepancybetweenanacousticsignalandtheperceptitprovokes.Thosemusicalattributescentraltoourdeterminationoftimbreincludespectralcentroid(arepresentationoftherelativeweightsofhighandlowfrequencies,correspondingtotimbralbrightness),averageattacktime,spectralflux,andspectralirregularity.ThesearetheveryattributestargetedbyHaas’manipulationofmicrointervallicfluctuations,“superslowmotion,”combinationtonesandsoundsplitting.If,asFalescontends,“perceptualizationistheguardianofsensoryequilibrium,”thentheauditoryanomaliesfavoredbyHaasseemdesignedtoconfoundmorethanjustourmusicalbearings;asFalesnotes“thecumulativeeffectofamusicalexperienceofdramatic,subtle,sustained,orsporadictimbremanipulation…maymovelistenerswitharangeofspecificityandemotion:fromamoreorlessvaguesenseofperceivingsomethingnormallyimperceivable,toanunaccountablefeelingoftranscendenceorseparationfromtheearthlyworld.”17Theendofinvainreturnstothebeginninginadirectrepresentationofitstitle,withanodtothetraditionofstilllifepaintingknownas“vanitas.”Thebright,untempered,assymetricalharmoniesofthework’smiddlesectionareeventuallyabsorbedintoanequal-tempered,symmetrical,darktorrentofeternaldescent.Asthesoundcontinuumcontracts,thetranscendentsenseofseparationfromthemundaneexperiencedduringm.76anditssubsequentelaborationfades.Thecyclicdesignofinvain—aworkthatjuxtaposesmicrotonalharmonieswithequal-temperament,lightwithdark,anddizzyingacousticillusionswithaclearformaldesign—seemstocontradictitsbrilliantcentralvision,inthewaythatthevanitaspaintingsjuxtaposeddazzlingbeautyandopulencewithsignifiersofdeathanddecay.Haaswrotetheworkinaresponsetotheformationoftheblack-bluegovernmentcoalitionbetweentheAustrianPeople’sPartyandtheright-wingFreedomPartyin1999.Whileaudiencesareoftenthrilledbythetraditionalrecapitulationthatclosesinvain,Haas

17CorneliaFales,“TheParadoxofTimbre,”Ethnomusicology46:1(Winter2002)pp.64,78.

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Bauer, SMT 2014, The ‘harmonic series’ is an artifact”: ideology, process and perception in Georg Friedrich Haas’s in vain

10) in vain, beginning of partial-chord descent, m. 76 E

11) in vain, progression of “virtual” fundamentals in mm. 76–326.

12) in vain, conflicting F#-A thirds in horn and trombone, m. 458

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remarks“Icannotimaginethatanyonewilltakethisrecurrenceofthebeginningasanythingbutoppressive.That'senough.Nothingmoreisneeded.”Yetlikeitsprecursorartworks,invainhasoutliveditspoliticalmoment.Itsexposureofparadoxesinmusicalnotionsofthenaturalandartificialcreatedsomethingaltogethernew,inthewordsofonereviewer“akaleidoscopeofperpetuallyshiftingtexturesandcolours,seeminglyhintingatnocturnalworldsanddarknaturalforcesandthingsmysterious,irrational,andunearthly.”AsHaaswroteofWyschnegradsky’sattempttocarveourindividualworksfromthetotalsoundcontinuum,constructiveconsiderationsarejustthestartingpointforacomposition.Theworkreflectsthetheory,butthe“realizationofutopia”iswithinthemusicitself.