@LazyTranslator
... By: reefergoat. on 23 Jul 10, 06:16:03 @LazyTranslator
That sounds promising. I'll check him out. I've had certain aspects of atonality grow on me lately, but Xenakis isn't my favorite composer. I like Penderecki, Messiaen, Gorecki, Morton Feldman, Schoenberg, and Stockhausen a bit better as far as that goes.
@reefergoat Have ... By: LazyTranslator. on 21 Jul 10, 19:56:18 @reefergoat Have you heard much of the music of Alban Berg? I think he could be the kind of composer you're talking about. He studied directly under Schoenberg when he had just developed the 12 tone method, and he was often chided by his master for not fully abandoning tonality, but instead found a way to integrate principles from both. Give him a listen!
God, I love this ... By: LazyTranslator. on 21 Jul 10, 19:50:30 God, I love this piece. It never fails to make the hairs stand up on the back of my neck!
Thanks for your ... By: claudiogoldman. on 16 Jul 10, 14:45:30 Thanks for your polite replys ! :-)
@claudiogoldman ... By: djredlab. on 15 Jul 10, 19:34:43 @claudiogoldman this was written in 1953-4 and predates cliche horror movie soundtracks ... xenakis was revolutionary and clearly his work has been very influential and not just in the esoteric world of modern art music.
@grandexandi ... By: BenMcCormack91. on 11 Jul 10, 12:11:53 @grandexandi GRAAAAAAAAGH IT'S WHEN THERE'S A TON OF PEOPLE NAMED AL
Sorry, it's not your fault, but I'm seriously done responding to comments on this video.
So how are the non ... By: GordonCSA. on 10 Jul 10, 20:20:47 So how are the non standard sounds marked in this? (Like the drums in the beginning crescendo).
i really liked it By: grandexandi. on 10 Jul 10, 19:07:10 i really liked it
@claudiogoldman ... By: grandexandi. on 10 Jul 10, 19:06:27 @claudiogoldman theres no need to be so passionate about it. just like any other song in the world, in fact anything in the world, there are people who like it and people who don't.
Starts with some ... By: claudiogoldman. on 07 Jul 10, 16:05:21 Starts with some interest... Horror movie... And follows with boringness, like all this "modern" ("contemporary") "art"... (an art made by neurothic musicians for themselves)
@quarknugget Wow! ... By: jedancovek. on 30 Jun 10, 10:50:34 @quarknugget Wow! How's your brain doing after such an excursion? (or whatever is left of it) :))))))))))
@amioparere1 ... By: threviatghei. on 29 Jun 10, 16:50:43 @amioparere1 Accendi le casse.
MA LA MUSICA DOV'è? ... By: amioparere1. on 27 Jun 10, 17:02:32 MA LA MUSICA DOV'è????????
wikipedia
... By: maestross. on 23 Jun 10, 23:32:57 wikipedia
Metastasis was inspired by the combination of an Einsteinian view of time and Xenakis' memory of the sounds of warfare, and structured on mathematical ideas by Le Corbusier. Music usually consists of a set of sounds ordered in time; music played backwards is hardly recognizable. Messiaen's similar observations led to his noted uses of non-retrogradable rhythms; Xenakis wished to reconcile the linear perception of music with a relativistic view of time.
Working with Le ... By: franknwalters. on 23 Jun 10, 21:26:13 Working with Le Corbusier, Xenakis was highly involved with civil planning and architecture, designing some landmark sites throughout the world. For him, architecture was musical, and music was architectural. He frequently used one to inspire the other, basing pieces on computer programs and complex mathematical equations.
I really enjoy ... By: reefergoat. on 10 Jun 10, 05:09:20 I really enjoy atonal music like like that of Xenakis, Penderecki, and Messiaen, but I just realized that it does grow a little tiresome after awhile. Maybe it's just the training my ears have had, but I start to miss a recognizable key or melodies sometimes. Atonal music is good, but if I was a composer, I wouldn't want to limit myself to 12-tone technique or serialism. I like it when composers dabble in both tonal and atonal material.
This is the basis ... By: Sggirnitram. on 09 Jun 10, 21:37:17 This is the basis for just about any suspenseful film score.
Amazing!!!! Thanks. By: Weffe52. on 05 Jun 10, 13:31:55 Amazing!!!! Thanks.
wow!! By: maxbigazzi. on 04 Jun 10, 10:37:42 wow!!
i am only liking ... By: skquach. on 03 Jun 10, 06:30:10 i am only liking this to bookmark it lol
what the fuck is ... By: neeh000. on 01 Jun 10, 11:28:40 what the fuck is this shit!
Great stuff. By: alexvdbroek. on 31 May 10, 06:07:20 Great stuff.
Actually Xenakis ... By: rmccormack. on 26 Apr 10, 01:03:24 Actually Xenakis wasnt interested in melodies, it was the overall sound of many individual things combining to make an overall sound. Like the sound of rain falling on a hard surface, its one sound but its made up of hundreds of little individual sounds. He talks about it at the start of his book Formalized music.
your name is just a ... By: XcaptainXobliviousX. on 26 Mar 10, 04:49:42 your name is just a few letters off from being epic win @.@
And I'm not denying ... By: reberto. on 22 Feb 10, 09:32:48 And I'm not denying that.
LSD is awesome! By: hicitronella. on 20 Feb 10, 09:09:32 LSD is awesome!
@hicitronella ... By: reberto. on 18 Feb 10, 21:59:16 @hicitronella Melody? The concept of Melody and Xenakis just don't get along. I'm sorry.
HAHAHAH LMAO!! By: ultracoolhomies. on 15 Oct 09, 03:04:05 HAHAHAH LMAO!!
Line Rider!! By: FrankMazeppa. on 15 Oct 09, 01:48:24 Line Rider!!
Xenakis is really ... By: mrpumpkin. on 27 May 09, 19:55:41 Xenakis is really good. But i prefer music composed by Penderecki.
People rightly get ... By: richtomes. on 04 Feb 09, 11:45:47 People rightly get annoyed when this kind of thing is held up as if it were somehow related to or equal to the great works of the 400 year old tradition of classical music. It belongs more appropriately with radical pop or jazz. The Jesus and Mary Chain for instance used to turn up all their amps and just have feedback for a whole 'song'. It was art of a kind. We should give this kind of stuff a new name - sonic theater, or sonic design, not to confuse it with the fine art of composition.
Planet of The Apes ? By: PupuTheClown. on 21 Jul 08, 07:47:15 Planet of The Apes ?
Thanks for let it ... By: kulturkanal. on 22 Jun 08, 18:19:05 Thanks for let it hear...
Hey Jirmu, I ... By: hicitronella. on 17 Apr 08, 13:27:13 Hey Jirmu, I noticed that you've commented on a lot of Xenakis videos and let me say, I totally agree with you. There's something about Xenakis' beautiful melodies that just entrances me.
It's the most ... By: jurmu11. on 08 Apr 08, 06:34:28 It's the most beautiful work of music I have ever heard! I could dance all night long to this!
If you like ... By: uhj4. on 03 Apr 08, 00:09:24 If you like experiment in music, just try TACUARA NOD, available on youtube
Excelente sonoridad! By: embcomposer. on 27 Jun 07, 03:55:52 Excelente sonoridad!
Thank you so much ... By: poldi24. on 22 Mar 07, 19:33:52 Thank you so much for downloading!!!
@LazyTranslator
... By: reefergoat. on 23 Jul 10, 06:16:03 @LazyTranslator
That sounds promising. I'll check him out. I've had certain aspects of atonality grow on me lately, but Xenakis isn't my favorite composer. I like Penderecki, Messiaen, Gorecki, Morton Feldman, Schoenberg, and Stockhausen a bit better as far as that goes.
@reefergoat Have ... By: LazyTranslator. on 21 Jul 10, 19:56:18 @reefergoat Have you heard much of the music of Alban Berg? I think he could be the kind of composer you're talking about. He studied directly under Schoenberg when he had just developed the 12 tone method, and he was often chided by his master for not fully abandoning tonality, but instead found a way to integrate principles from both. Give him a listen!
God, I love this ... By: LazyTranslator. on 21 Jul 10, 19:50:30 God, I love this piece. It never fails to make the hairs stand up on the back of my neck!
Thanks for your ... By: claudiogoldman. on 16 Jul 10, 14:45:30 Thanks for your polite replys ! :-)
@claudiogoldman ... By: djredlab. on 15 Jul 10, 19:34:43 @claudiogoldman this was written in 1953-4 and predates cliche horror movie soundtracks ... xenakis was revolutionary and clearly his work has been very influential and not just in the esoteric world of modern art music.
@grandexandi ... By: BenMcCormack91. on 11 Jul 10, 12:11:53 @grandexandi GRAAAAAAAAGH IT'S WHEN THERE'S A TON OF PEOPLE NAMED AL
Sorry, it's not your fault, but I'm seriously done responding to comments on this video.
So how are the non ... By: GordonCSA. on 10 Jul 10, 20:20:47 So how are the non standard sounds marked in this? (Like the drums in the beginning crescendo).
i really liked it By: grandexandi. on 10 Jul 10, 19:07:10 i really liked it
@claudiogoldman ... By: grandexandi. on 10 Jul 10, 19:06:27 @claudiogoldman theres no need to be so passionate about it. just like any other song in the world, in fact anything in the world, there are people who like it and people who don't.
Starts with some ... By: claudiogoldman. on 07 Jul 10, 16:05:21 Starts with some interest... Horror movie... And follows with boringness, like all this "modern" ("contemporary") "art"... (an art made by neurothic musicians for themselves)
@quarknugget Wow! ... By: jedancovek. on 30 Jun 10, 10:50:34 @quarknugget Wow! How's your brain doing after such an excursion? (or whatever is left of it) :))))))))))
@amioparere1 ... By: threviatghei. on 29 Jun 10, 16:50:43 @amioparere1 Accendi le casse.
MA LA MUSICA DOV'è? ... By: amioparere1. on 27 Jun 10, 17:02:32 MA LA MUSICA DOV'è????????
wikipedia
... By: maestross. on 23 Jun 10, 23:32:57 wikipedia
Metastasis was inspired by the combination of an Einsteinian view of time and Xenakis' memory of the sounds of warfare, and structured on mathematical ideas by Le Corbusier. Music usually consists of a set of sounds ordered in time; music played backwards is hardly recognizable. Messiaen's similar observations led to his noted uses of non-retrogradable rhythms; Xenakis wished to reconcile the linear perception of music with a relativistic view of time.
Working with Le ... By: franknwalters. on 23 Jun 10, 21:26:13 Working with Le Corbusier, Xenakis was highly involved with civil planning and architecture, designing some landmark sites throughout the world. For him, architecture was musical, and music was architectural. He frequently used one to inspire the other, basing pieces on computer programs and complex mathematical equations.
I really enjoy ... By: reefergoat. on 10 Jun 10, 05:09:20 I really enjoy atonal music like like that of Xenakis, Penderecki, and Messiaen, but I just realized that it does grow a little tiresome after awhile. Maybe it's just the training my ears have had, but I start to miss a recognizable key or melodies sometimes. Atonal music is good, but if I was a composer, I wouldn't want to limit myself to 12-tone technique or serialism. I like it when composers dabble in both tonal and atonal material.
This is the basis ... By: Sggirnitram. on 09 Jun 10, 21:37:17 This is the basis for just about any suspenseful film score.
Amazing!!!! Thanks. By: Weffe52. on 05 Jun 10, 13:31:55 Amazing!!!! Thanks.
wow!! By: maxbigazzi. on 04 Jun 10, 10:37:42 wow!!
i am only liking ... By: skquach. on 03 Jun 10, 06:30:10 i am only liking this to bookmark it lol
what the fuck is ... By: neeh000. on 01 Jun 10, 11:28:40 what the fuck is this shit!
Great stuff. By: alexvdbroek. on 31 May 10, 06:07:20 Great stuff.
Latest comments made on this video:
By: reefergoat. on 23 Jul 10, 06:16:03
@LazyTranslator That sounds promising. I'll check him out. I've had certain aspects of atonality grow on me lately, but Xenakis isn't my favorite composer. I like Penderecki, Messiaen, Gorecki, Morton Feldman, Schoenberg, and Stockhausen a bit better as far as that goes.
By: LazyTranslator. on 21 Jul 10, 19:56:18
@reefergoat Have you heard much of the music of Alban Berg? I think he could be the kind of composer you're talking about. He studied directly under Schoenberg when he had just developed the 12 tone method, and he was often chided by his master for not fully abandoning tonality, but instead found a way to integrate principles from both. Give him a listen!
By: LazyTranslator. on 21 Jul 10, 19:50:30
God, I love this piece. It never fails to make the hairs stand up on the back of my neck!
By: wzakrzak. on 20 Jul 10, 20:23:15
rozpierdala beret
By: claudiogoldman. on 16 Jul 10, 14:45:30
Thanks for your polite replys ! :-)
By: djredlab. on 15 Jul 10, 19:34:43
@claudiogoldman this was written in 1953-4 and predates cliche horror movie soundtracks ... xenakis was revolutionary and clearly his work has been very influential and not just in the esoteric world of modern art music.
By: palaechthon. on 12 Jul 10, 09:11:13
? ???????? ????? ??? ?????? ??? ???????.... ..... ...... ...... ..... ... :)
By: BenMcCormack91. on 11 Jul 10, 12:11:53
@grandexandi GRAAAAAAAAGH IT'S WHEN THERE'S A TON OF PEOPLE NAMED AL Sorry, it's not your fault, but I'm seriously done responding to comments on this video.
By: GordonCSA. on 10 Jul 10, 20:20:47
So how are the non standard sounds marked in this? (Like the drums in the beginning crescendo).
By: grandexandi. on 10 Jul 10, 19:07:10
i really liked it
By: grandexandi. on 10 Jul 10, 19:06:27
@claudiogoldman theres no need to be so passionate about it. just like any other song in the world, in fact anything in the world, there are people who like it and people who don't.
By: grandexandi. on 10 Jul 10, 18:59:20
@BenMcCormack91 whats tonality?
By: claudiogoldman. on 07 Jul 10, 16:05:21
Starts with some interest... Horror movie... And follows with boringness, like all this "modern" ("contemporary") "art"... (an art made by neurothic musicians for themselves)
By: jedancovek. on 30 Jun 10, 10:50:34
@quarknugget Wow! How's your brain doing after such an excursion? (or whatever is left of it) :))))))))))
By: threviatghei. on 29 Jun 10, 16:50:43
@amioparere1 Accendi le casse.
By: amioparere1. on 27 Jun 10, 17:02:32
MA LA MUSICA DOV'è????????
By: maestross. on 23 Jun 10, 23:32:57
wikipedia Metastasis was inspired by the combination of an Einsteinian view of time and Xenakis' memory of the sounds of warfare, and structured on mathematical ideas by Le Corbusier. Music usually consists of a set of sounds ordered in time; music played backwards is hardly recognizable. Messiaen's similar observations led to his noted uses of non-retrogradable rhythms; Xenakis wished to reconcile the linear perception of music with a relativistic view of time.
By: franknwalters. on 23 Jun 10, 21:26:13
Working with Le Corbusier, Xenakis was highly involved with civil planning and architecture, designing some landmark sites throughout the world. For him, architecture was musical, and music was architectural. He frequently used one to inspire the other, basing pieces on computer programs and complex mathematical equations.
By: reefergoat. on 10 Jun 10, 05:09:20
I really enjoy atonal music like like that of Xenakis, Penderecki, and Messiaen, but I just realized that it does grow a little tiresome after awhile. Maybe it's just the training my ears have had, but I start to miss a recognizable key or melodies sometimes. Atonal music is good, but if I was a composer, I wouldn't want to limit myself to 12-tone technique or serialism. I like it when composers dabble in both tonal and atonal material.
By: Sggirnitram. on 09 Jun 10, 21:37:17
This is the basis for just about any suspenseful film score.
By: Weffe52. on 05 Jun 10, 13:31:55
Amazing!!!! Thanks.
By: maxbigazzi. on 04 Jun 10, 10:37:42
wow!!
By: skquach. on 03 Jun 10, 06:30:10
i am only liking this to bookmark it lol
By: neeh000. on 01 Jun 10, 11:28:40
what the fuck is this shit!
By: alexvdbroek. on 31 May 10, 06:07:20
Great stuff.