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  • This article was downloaded by: [Boston University]On: 04 September 2015, At: 23:46Publisher: RoutledgeInforma Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954 Registeredoffice: 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG

    Contemporary Music ReviewPublication details, including instructions for authors andsubscription information:http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/gcmr20

    On My Second String Quartet ('Reigenseliger Geister')1Helmut LachenmannPublished online: 15 Sep 2010.

    To cite this article: Helmut Lachenmann (2004) On My Second String Quartet ('Reigen seligerGeister')1 , Contemporary Music Review, 23:3-4, 59-79, DOI: 10.1080/0749445042000285681

    To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0749445042000285681

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  • On My Second String Quartet(Reigen seliger Geister)1

    Helmut Lachenmann (translated by Evan Johnson)2

    This is a translation of Helmut Lachenmanns analysis of his second string quartet,Reigen seliger Geister. He describes the background of the piece, discusses some of the

    effects used in the score and shows how it connects to other works in his oeuvre. Althoughintentionally vague at times, it is nonetheless highly insightful. This article, written in

    1994 1995, appears in German in MaeE.

    Keywords: Analysis; Extended Techniques; Listening; String Quartet

    To speak about a piece, for me, means to describe the concept of material evidencedtherein and to explicate the relationships in which it stands and by which it denes

    itself. The transcendental aspect of the piecethat is, its aesthetic and poetic force(Stringenz)is not forgotten; its signicance comes through in all of these

    observations. With all of the bias, incompletionthat is, imperfectionto approachit differently is to lose oneself in words.

    My rst string quartet, Gran Torso, was written 19 years before Reigen.3 Myconception of a musique concre`te instrumentalein which categories are primarily

    delineated not by the usual parameters, but rather through the (always differentlydeployed) bodily energetic (korperlich-energetischen) aspects of their foregrounding

    of sound or of noise (Gerausch)had in Gran Torso to confront for the rst timesuch a traditionally comprised sound apparatus (Klangapparat) as the stringquartet, which has become almost forbidden by its very familiarity. In the earlier

    orchestral works Air and Kontrakadenz,4 the standard instrumental paradigm wasdistorted in terms of sonic realism through the backdoor of expanded percussion

    and additional ad hoc instruments: switches whipped through the air, snappedbranches, rattling electronic alarm bells in Airradio broadcasts, water sloshing in

    resonant basins, noisily rubbed polystyrene in Kontrakadenz ultimately simpliedthe necessary examination of hearing itself; they did not reach the summit,

    admittedly, but they showed the way, they helped aim the antennae and made anumber of things more plausible.

    Contemporary Music ReviewVol. 23, No. 3/4, September/December 2004, pp. 59 79

    ISSN 0749-4467 (print)/ISSN 1477-2256 (online) 2004 Taylor & Francis LtdDOI: 10.1080/0749445042000285681

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  • In Gran Torso, there were no such backdoors. The received playing style itself

    had to be expanded, rendered alien. The habits of hearing and performance impliedby my chosen ensemble (Instrumentarium) created a resistancetheir resistance

    to my initial ideas about poetics and sound syntax. But this was fruitful and myvisions became keener, more precise and more varied, as did my compositional

    means. Tone and noise were not opposites, but rather served as variants of broadersound categories brought to the fore in ever-varying ways. (Witness, for example,toneless string noise as the clear product of tremolo bowing, transformed by

    extreme slowness, that shifts over the strings all the way onto the bridge; or thelegno battuto on stopped strings: here as a means of the pianississimo articulation of

    silence, there as an impulse-variant of pizzicato and other short attacks, as theproduct of vertical strikes of the bow against the string, mediated with other,

    springing, thrown, wiping, stroking forms of bow movement, denable ascharacteristic noises, but also as precise pitches in an appropriately different

    context.) And as in the previously written cello study Pression,5 the polyvalentlyexpressed energetic aspect ultimately thematized itself. Everything was sparked byits development (Durchfuhrung).

    When I conceived Reigen in 1988/1989, it was clear to me that every innovativepush that Gran Torso represented (at least for me) had set a standard against which

    the new engagement with this ensemble (Besetzung) must measure itself. I could, incomposing, neither simply make use of the earlier, already-developed means, nor

    could I abandon the terrain that I had conquered. It came down to how to proceedfrom there and this meant: to go deeper andwith an outlook, as always, changed

    in the meantimeto see into the already-developed landscape more keenly. (Thisalso entailednot only in Reigenthe recollection of things previously excluded, the

    reconciliation with the temporarily obsolete: with melodically, rhythmically andharmonically dened, even consonant elementsa reconciliation that could not becalled a retreat into a pre-critical (vorkritischen) state, but had rather to signify

    forward-looking integration on a somehow resulting path.)In fact, the sonic landscapes developed in Gran Torso opened themselves even

    wider in Reigen, both inward and outward.In terms of sound technique, the workas a eld of categories completing and at

    the same time transforming itself poco a pocoemerges rst through autatogestures, while the mapped-out sound world gradually transforms itself into a

    diametrically opposed landscape of quite differently structured pizzicato elds. (Iborrow the indication autato from Luigi Nonos Varianti, although its meaning andperformance in his and my case do not overlap 100 per cent.)

    The autato technique itself, in its absolutely basic form, is not only dened herethrough the relatively quick, light breathing bowstroke on a string loosely held in a

    muting grip (Dampfgriff): there is also the simultaneous movement of the drawnbow between the bridge (at the frog of the bow) and the damping nger (at the tip).

    On the cello it is naturally reversed: movement between the bridge with the tip andthe ngerboard (specically, the damping nger) with the frog. (The sound of

    60 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • harmonics must be mufed when using this technique. They represent a different

    part of the hierarchy of categories [Kategorien-Hierarchie].)A dull darkening of tone of more peripheral signicance in other pieces, the

    autato technique trades that in here for what I called air seized from tone (Luft ausden Tonen gegriffen) in my rst introduction to this work (Lachenmann, 1996, p.

    399). It is, at rst, a sonic centerin other words, a central depot and hub for acharacteristic wealth of variations of noise and sound. It mediates between absolutetonelessness on the one hand and full C-at major consonance on the other.

    Through the movement of the bow from bridge to the damping nger (but alsothrough the occasional ethereal glissando (Spharische Glissando) performed with the

    left hand, beginning or ending extremely high toward the bridgein the snow, themusicians say) the rustling opens up seamlessly into the pitch-oriented area

    (tonhohen-orientierten Bereich).According to the narrowing or widening distance between the bridge and the

    bowing location on the string, the autato bow movement itself results in abrightness-glissando in the rustling component (Rausch-Anteil). It is accompanied bya crescendo of ngered pitches shining through when the bow moves over the center

    of the string. At the end of the string, by contrast, the rustling predominates. Whenthe bow moves completely onto the bridge, the ngered pitches change completely

    into string noise (see Figure 1).The toneless string noisealmost a peripheral instantiation (Randerscheinung) of

    autato playingforms, along with analogous playing techniques on the scroll, thetuning peg, the rib, the tailpiece, or even in a very highalmost arcticposition,

    andat the end of the pieceon the wooden mute, a more or less unique,characteristic repertoire of usable rustle variations (Rauschvarianten).

    Figure 1 # 1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    Contemporary Music Review 61

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  • The temporary drowning of pitch in toneless string noise on the bridge allows a

    hidden variation of the ngering so that, when the bow returns to the strings, theautato sound resumes with pitches different from the ones it had when it was

    subsumed.Such disappearances and modied returns are achieved in Reigen through gures

    that can somewhat recklessly be called trill variants.These are exercised and exorcised through a wide variety of distortions: one

    could say that they propel the piece onward from the opening. Their most lavish

    variants appear as fast gures in an ordinario-bowed tutti texture that draws (real andimitated) overtone-glissando gures out of a polytonal eld, and from there into

    tonelessness (see the score, mm. 85 112).That tutti texture can be brought, through synchronized dynamics and shared bow

    movements, onto the bridge and back onto the strings, from disappearance intotonelessness back into re-emergence in the same way as the simple autato sound:

    what takes place in a single instrumental voice can be transferred to the wholeinstrumental apparatus (see Figure 3).

    Again and again in the course of the overall processes of the piece, we nd

    ourselves involved with a single, almost homophonically treated 16-stringed sonicmechanism (Klang-Gerat).

    Its further instantiations:

    . Unison sound and unison rustling, i.e. the synchronous multiplication oramplication of sound or noise (which by successive switchings off of single

    instruments shift the resulting sound or noise into a different light, as the resultof a subtraction process) (Figure 4).

    Figure 2 Cello part, II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 6, mm. 26 28.# 1989,Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    62 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • . The cooperative paraphrasing of simple modes of playing: for example, a sortof composed autato through the synchronization of grit-free harmonics, made

    Figure 3 II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 18, mm. 99 102.# 1989, Breitkopf& Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    Figure 4 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 6, m. 27. # 1989,Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

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  • brilliant through a unison in half of the quartet, with absolutely toneless string

    noise intensied through doubling in the other players (Figure 5).. And, as a further variation of such autato nuances, the parallel deployment of

    tones greatly separated in sonic space (Figure 6).

    Not least, the formation of such an imaginary super-instrument (Super-Instrument) from its component simple sound forms and playing techniqueshelped the compositional process to the diversication and dialectical redenition

    of what appears at rst to be a purely physically oriented sonic correspondence(physikalisch orientierten Klangzusammenhang), of which a speculative idea of

    abstract or concrete formhowever cleverwould not itself be capable, andwithout which the orientation of concrete sounds into a botanized presentation

    would be ruined.Also among the functions of the super-instrument is the hocket-like formation

    of sequences out of mutually cooperative single entries of a few or all of the

    Figure 5 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 30, m. 169. # 1989,Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    Figure 6 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 32, mm. 177 180.#1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    64 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • instruments. The quasi-motivic gesture that is hinted at at the beginning, along

    with the trill variants, and then eliminated, works along these linesas ifdepersonalized.

    The idea of the super-sequence (Super-Sequenz) is the basic vehicle for thecharacteristic transformational process of this piece. It works as a bridge between the

    autato structures of the opening and the pizzicato elds that drive everything elseout at the end. From the viewpoint of the resulting super-instrument, one could alsoconceive of a super-sequence as a wider or narrower arpeggio, in which successive

    entries came together as homogeneous sound sources in a total spectrum(Gesamtfeld) in such a way thatwith large and irregular distances between entries

    and without pedalthey appear as a virtual sonic unity on the inner screen, that is,in the memory of the listener (see Figures 10, 11, 14, 17).

    The muting grip has yet to be discussed: in principle it blocks all of thestrings through a loose laying of the left hand on their actual vibrations, thus

    intensifying the perception of the subsidiary noises (Nebengerausche). Lifting it,on the other hand, leaves the open strings free. Where this muting grip is appliedso that it suddenly closes the mouth, so to speak, through an unexpected

    blocking of an unstoppably eruptive up-bow gesture, a panting sound effectresults; its implosive ascending and sharply cut-off dynamic curve is the reversal

    of an explosive decaying impulse. It proves to be a reversed pizzicato, as it were(Figures 7 and 8).

    (In 1958, when listening to my teacher Luigi Nonos tapes in his house, I foundmyself with a recording of Arnold Schoenbergs voice in my hands. Assuming that it

    was a two-sided tape, I copied both the front and back sides. I found myself listening,unsuspectingly and full of reverence, to the backward-speaking voice of a hoarse/

    happy6 Schoenberg telling stories in what sounded to me like a foreign tongue, fullof fantastic excitement thanks to the tearing-off effect of the reversal of the originalplosives. . .)

    The singular key moment, where the mutually contrasted playing techniques meeteach other, takes place in mm. 183 184. Here the crescendoing up-bow is unmuted:

    it has been freed through a lasciar vibrare indication and creates a minor second withthe pizzicato of the violins open string (Figure 9).

    This moment could be the musical core, so to speak, the magnetic North Pole forthe movement from the autato to the pizzicato located antipodally on this sound-

    globe (Klang-Globus). The true formal corethe geographical poleis, bycontrast, where in the course of the aforementioned sequence-projections the singletones of a G major sixth chord, widely spaced in an outstretched arpeggio, are

    apotheosized and become de-tonalized through extreme spatial and temporalexpanses: sequence, arpeggio and a physically articulated structure in one (Figure

    10).The pizzicato landscape that opens up at the same time consists of a wide spectrum

    of variants. (These events are foreshadowed from the rst bar forward, in the form ofa autato eld constantly counterpointed with or interpenetrated by single impulses

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  • Figure 8 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 26, mm. 143 144.#1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    Figure 9 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, pp. 32 33, mm. 183 184. # 1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    Figure 7 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 23, m. 124. # 1989,Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    Figure 10 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, pp. 38 39, mm. 221 224. # 1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    66 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • like legno battuto dots, extremely short bowings, attacks with a struck or briey

    pressed bow, partially crystallized in square, often dotted rhythms. At the same time,these are reconciled with the autando gesture and the hierarchy oriented around it

    through an increasing saltando presence and the related short hints of tremolo.Nevertheless they also already hint at the pizzicato gesture that will later take the

    upper hand.)The pizzicato variants themselves: their diversity and the forms of their

    conjunction make them virtually impossible to illustrate adequately, except through

    the score itself. As undamped octave and twelfth harmonics (Figure 11a), they areclosely related to the equally reverberant bowed harmonics. Legno battuto (Figure

    11b) and pressed (Figure 11c) accents function as boundary forms. Double soundsare formed through the coupling of strings in front of and behind the bridge

    (Figure 11d), simultaneities on the rst and fourth strings at the interval of thedouble octave (Figure 11e), and even the pianississimo placement of the screw of

    the bow onto open stringsso that both halves of the string sound equally (Figure11f)or simply as double-stopped minor seconds (Figure 11g). Arco actions acthere more and more as foreign bodies (Fremdkorper) or, at most, serve to prolong

    resonance articially.After measure 280 the bows are set aside. The string quartet has become an

    imaginary guitar with varying planes of strings: Salut fur Caudwell7 sends its regards.Simultaneities strummed with plectrums create, hocket-style, a composite gesture.

    Eight styles of left-hand grip are rhythmically dovetailed with each other, giving thethus-created super-sequence a structural prole (Figure 12).

    Finally, with the arrival of the sound of four open strings, and fully with thedoubling and quadrupling thereof, one encounters subtraction sounds (Subtrak-

    tionsklangen), which remain from the heretofore six-voice texture through a partialdamping of the strings, as if they had been ltered (Figure 13).

    At the end, the tutti open-string sound, distorted in the meantime through the

    extreme scordaturabefore its broadly rhythmicized repetition gets stuck to thepoint of unrecognizabilityissues from itself an expansive six-note song (Gesang),

    in that after each ripping attack a different string is allowed to resonate undamped:the last form to appear of that meta-melodic category, about which the talk in this

    piece was of a sequence built through hocket (hoquetisch gebildeter Sequenz) (Figure14).

    The Battered Time-Net

    Structure: polyphony of arrangements (Struktur: Polyphonie von Anordnungen): myold denitionalways at hand since the typology of sound I established in the 1960s,

    in which sound and form, sensory and spiritual experience meet and interpenetrate inthe double concept of sound-structure/structure-sound (Klangstruktur/Struktur-

    klang)can be used seamlessly in a more precise analysis of the beginning of Reigen:arrangements of autato bowings, impulse families, restless gestures (saltando/

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  • Figure 11 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, pp. 40 43, 48, mm. (a)231, (b) 239, (c) 245, (d) 236, (e) 280, (f) 246, (g) 241. # 1989, Breitkopf & Hartel,Wiesbaden.

    68 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • Figure 12 (a) Strings stopped at a distance of a minor sixth, or consonant stops. (b)Natural-harmonic nger pressure (second and third overtones). (c) Random harmonics,as resonant as possible, through ad libitum touching (relying on luck) and rhythmicizedrelease of the strings in the area above the fourth partial. (d) Stopping unidentiablepitches through tearing right at the bridge. (e) Tight grip, as high as possible. (f) Stringsbehind the bridge. (g) Open strings. Note: The dotted brackets around the violin clef referto the extreme scordatura, which permits, despite the precise notation of the ngering,no exact denition of the resulting pitches.

    Contemporary Music Review 69

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  • tremolo), and so on overlay each other and work together. They thus t into the time-

    articulating (zeitartikulierenden) particulars of a net8 previously generated for theentire work: a net of extremely aperiodic pulses, traveling alongside as if fromunderground, the measurements of the whole pre-compositionally regulated, that in

    the score is notated above the instrumental parts as a rhythmic frame. (The pitchesnotated there, which owe themselves to easily traced 12-tone permutations, exist

    simply for a possible verication of the generating principle. Musically, they play norole.)

    The sonic events placed in this net, however, become unwieldy in the courseof the piece. Their internal rhythmic structure rips out their stitches as if from

    within. And where that hocket sequence forms, crystallizing entirely into a plasticrhythm, the net has nally become almost totally nonfunctional; it demarcates only

    general temporal areas. For that reason, from measure 280ff. of the score, itspresentation along the upper staff is abandoned. Instead, in that space appearsmerely the total rhythm resulting from the complementary cooperation of the

    played gestures. They crystallize temporarily into a quasi-Waltz (mm. 240 241).These rhythmic gestures, further expanded, nally form in the epilogue the latent

    temporal skeleton for the end of the piece: the internal rhythm has thereforebecome the structural net: regression toward the close, which originates at the

    beginning. . . (Figure 15).Just such a simplication of the structural construction can be discerned as an

    (intermediary) product of a perpetual spatial idea of time, in which events occursuccessively and are homogeneously constructed to merge melodically andrhythmically, but nally form not a succession but a mutually completing attraction:

    an arpeggio in an imaginary universal sound/space/eld [Gesamt-Klang/Gesamt-Raum/Gesamt-Feld], branching out on various scales. (In such pieces as Ein

    Kinderspiel 9 and Tanzsuite mit Deutschlandlied,10 above all in the Siciliano of thelatter, there exists a relative of this type of structure, reduced in complexity, which

    through that reduction has been given room for the aura11 of the soundsthusbringing more intricate complexitiese.g. quoted materialsinto play.)

    Figure 13 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 47, m. 274.# 1989,Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

    70 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • Figure 14 II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, pp. 58 59, mm. 344 351. # 1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

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  • 72 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • Figure 15 II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, pp. 52 53, mm. 303 314. # 1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

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  • Harmony/Scordaturaand a Glance at the Epilogue

    In principle, harmony reigns where tones form the music. But overall, where pitches

    become unit particles in cooperation with other sonic categories, it must be denedin their context. Even when strongly controlled intervallically, harmony can distort

    i.e it can sabotage an expanded musical perception (. . .Which is stronger: C major orpizzicato?. . .).

    The tone rows in Reigen, xed at the beginning from the complete 12 notes of the

    scale on the one hand, and from constantly and/or continuously widening ornarrowing interval elds on the other (Figures 16a and b), become more and more

    inltrated with sounds along the lines of articial natural noises (kunstlichemNaturlaut), that is to say of the unique sound of the apparatuses (Gerate): among

    these are the sound of the open strings along with their harmonic spectra, the soundof the strings behind the bridge, but also all the sounds and noises (Klange und

    Gerausche) that are suppressed in the extremely cultivated technique of theperformance of pitches and other natural sounds: the toneless string noise, thecomplex sonic edices of strings heavily pressed either above or behind the bridge,

    the mufed-string sound, the noise of a legno battuto attack distilled through adamping grip, can all be brought into relation.

    The echo of a pizzicato octave harmonic, depending on the particular tuning, thusbelongs with the toneless noise of bowing on the scroll. The harmony that was

    previously often incidentally weighed down by such a connection, its tonality,becomes the unforced natural presence of the sonic body, prescribed by the external

    mechanical/physical conditions of the structure of the instrument. In the case ofReigen, that nature is manipulated beforehand, as if prepared, through the

    scordatura given at the beginning and its transformations (Figure 17). On them isbased the unique sound of the 16-string super-instrument.

    Such a chromatic setup allows the occasional quid pro quo game between

    articial and natural harmony. Most of the sequences, right in the middle ofReigen, present themselves as artfully organized, but in fact simply collect under a

    particular technical sonic aspect the pitch repertoire that has been standing at theready (Figure 18).

    In the aforementioned large eld of overlaid harmonic glissandi (mm. 96 110),the articial natural harmonics must help out where the open strings do not include

    all chromatic stepslike dummy glissandi played over ctional open strings by thehand; gures that, for their part, t in not merely in imitation, but rather breakformation and bring into play their own interval constellations, differing from the

    nature that is imitated.In measure 117, the basic sound is manipulated anew: an articial scordatura is

    temporarily established: the players hold quadruple stops that complement eachother chromaticallyjust like the open strings themselves. Thus, they form an

    articial keyboard for autato actions tied to larger-scale gestures (super-sequences. . .) (Figure 19).

    74 H. Lachenmann (trans. E. Johnson)

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  • Figure 16a II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 1, mm. 1 5. # 1989, Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

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  • From measure 296, the music, the touched-upon sounds always differently ltered,bangs its head against the wall of this scordatura.

    But by itself, the strike of a st against the keyboard of a well-tempered keyboardcan produce nothing but diatonic or pentatonic clusters. And one can hiss as

    Figure 16a II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 1, mm. 1 5.# 1989, Breitkopf &Hartel, Wiesbaden.Figure 16b Pitch structure at the opening.

    Figure 17 Initial scordatura.

    Figure 18 Reduction of II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 37, m. 210.# 1989,Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

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  • violently as one likes into a harmonica: nothing will emerge but a pre-programmed Cmajor triad.

    From this point in Reigen, the established pitch frameworks (Tonhohen-Rahmen)renew themselves through the extreme scordatura set up in the course of

    performance. Each player has here a different, freely determined time to detunethe strings of his instrument wildly, i.e. by no particular distance, by which means

    each string will be assigned a different interval, so that from here as few fth-relationships as possible lie behind the music.

    Then, on this no longer controllable gamut of 16 hopelessly detuned stringstransformed by arco con sordinothe Epilogue takes its course. Of all the

    reminiscences that it celebrates under varying conditions (among which the slowed-down tremolo movement sends a greeting in the direction of Gran Torso), theevocation of the originally so delicately produced autato undergoes the most

    conspicuous transformation: since the obligatory bow motion between bridge andngerboard described at the beginning is now performed with pressed bow, the noise

    components brightness changes, which came through subtly, at most, beforehand,here come to light as gently rattling pitch glissandi: downwardly or upwardly directed,

    based on whether the damping grip stops the deepened and thus drowned-out area ofthe strings or not (Figure 20).

    Measure 374, which consists of alternating, overlapping downward glissandi in thetwo violins, can be repeated ad libitum, theoretically ad innitum. It is the point thatis reached somewhere in almost all of my compositions, sometimes more than once:

    where the music pausesin a sounding fermataand an ostinato passage eitherloses or nds itself before it continues. It is the moment in mountain climbing

    where one takes a deep breath and surveys the horizon: its intensity is unexplainablewithout the effort leading up to it. The dynamic time of this traversal (Begehens) is

    something different from the static, timeless time of the traversed landscape itself.These two times interpenetrate: music in search of non-music. But not a magic that

    Figure 19 Articial scordatura through xed harmonic-pressure left-hand positions.

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  • seeks to master perception, rather an open space that takes it captive, in order toshow it where it has freed itselfwhere it may free itself.

    Notes

    [1] Round of the Blessed Spirits.[2] Translators note: I have endeavored wherever possible to retain Lachenmanns often

    idiosyncratic punctuation and sentence structure (including several incomplete sentences);however, commas and dashes have been added and modied where necessary to aidreadability in English. All quotation marks and ellipses, however, are to be found in theoriginal. I have given the German originals at the rst appearance of words and phrases forwhich that information strikes me as useful, either because the word or phrase is integral toLachenmanns technical vocabulary and is used systematically (e.g. Gerausch and Super-Sequenz), or because their usage in German seems idiosyncratic and singular in a way that isnot easily captured in translation (e.g. the many different words used to describe the stringquartet: ensemble, apparatus, device, etc.). As explained in notes 8 and 11, Lachenmann usesitalics only for work titles and for one occurrence each of the two words net and aura, towhich occurrences those footnotes are attached. I have also set Italian musical terms in italicsthat are invariably my own. The article is noteworthy not only for the detailed information itprovides on the formal construction of Lachenmanns second string quartet, but also forwhat it does not provide. The near-total lack (other than a few tantalizing titbits) of specicsregarding the pitch and rhythmic organization of the piece, in comparison to the detailedtaxonomies of different sonic vocabularies and playing techniques, is an interesting reection

    Figure 20 II. Streichquartett, Reigen seliger Geister, p. 62, mm. 366 371. # 1989,Breitkopf & Hartel, Wiesbaden.

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  • not necessarily of Lachenmanns compositional priorities but of his willingness to addressthem to a public audienceand thus, perhaps, his own estimation of their originality, or ofthe importance of their analysis to the understanding of his work. All footnotes, unlessotherwise marked, are my own.

    [3] Editors note: Here Lachenmanns recollection is slightly in error. His rst quartet had beenstarted 18 years and nished 17 years before Reigen.

    [4] Written in 1968/1969 and 1970/1971 respectively.[5] Written in 1969/1970.[6] Heiser/heiter, an odd and difcult-to-translate pun.[7] A work for two guitars (and speaking by both musicians) from 1977.[8] Italics in the originalone of only two usages of italics used in the original other than work

    titles.[9] A set of seven small piano pieces written in 1980.

    [10] For amplied string quartet and large orchestra, written in 1979/1980.[11] The other usage of italics; see note 8.

    Reference

    Lachenmann, H. (1996). Commentary on the Zweites Streichquartett (Reigen seliger Geister)(1989). In J. Hausler (Ed.), Musik als existentielle Erfahrung. Schriften 1966 1995 (p. 399).Wiesbaden: Breitkopf & Hartel.

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