Next was Study II for Treatise on the Veil (2005) for violin, viola, and cello, followed by Study III (2007) for violin. The two pieces, inspired by a monumental Cy Twombly abstraction, shared a similar structure. At first, the instruments’ strings were muted by paper clips, sounding otherworldly, vague, submerged in a dream. It was as if all “tone” had been removed from the sound, with only mechanical, ambient noises left behind: fingers sliding over strings, wood creaking under chin, a fractured panorama of scratches, squeaks, and overtones (that is, all the background elements we normally don’t pay attention to, but which are always present within an instrument’s sound, and which combine to make up its distinctive color). After attuning the listener’s ear to these sounds, Pintscher has the performers trade their paper clips for conventional mutes, and gradually bits of musical phrases start to emerge, as if from behind a veil. The instruments have recovered their usual voices, but we have been given new ears to hear them. They appear transfigured: a simple, held note on the cello is irradiated and multiplied by the layering of our new perspectives on it. As Pintscher commented, he wanted to show “the inner life of one stroke.”
Anne Midgette, Phillips Collection concert showcases Matthias Pintscher (Washington Post, December 15) |
Tomorrow's concert at the Phillips Collection will feature pianist Shai Wosner (December 16, 4 pm), featuring music of Beethoven and Debussy.
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