308
See also: Pierrot lunaire 240–245 ■ Quartet for the End of Time 282–283 ■
Gruppen 306–307 ■ Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima 310–311
I
t was Olivier Messiaen who
suggested that Iannis Xenakis
should apply mathematical and
engineering principles to musical
composition. Xenakis, who had
studied engineering, was working
in Paris for the avant-garde designer
and architect Le Corbusier after
fleeing the anti-communist regime
in postwar Greece.
Scientific basis
Pithoprakta, an early work whose
title comes from the Greek for
“actions through probabilities,”
is typical of Xenakis’s technique,
which he called “stochastic,” a
term relating to probability. Scored
for 46 stringed instruments, two
trombones, a xylophone, and a
wood block, the work was inspired
by the scientific theory that a gas’s
temperature derives from the
movement of its molecules through
space. Compiling a sequence
of imaginary temperatures and
pressures, Xenakis translated the
theory to stringed instruments
moving through their pitch ranges,
using a series of glissandi (rapid
slides through different pitches) for
each instrument. Punctuated by
the wood block, trombones, and
xylophone, the effect is of a
seething, gaslike “sound mass.”
Outlined in his book Musiques
formelles (Formalized Music, 1963),
Xenakis’s style has had a lasting
impact. Among others who cite his
influence, Richard Barrett, a Welsh
composer who studied genetics,
says the book helped him decide
to become a composer. ■
THE ROLE OF THE
MUSICIAN ... IS
PERPETUAL
EXPLORATION
PITHOPRAKTA (1955–1956), IANNIS XENAKIS
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
Music and mathematics
BEFORE
1742–1750 J.S. Bach writes
the Art of Fugue comprising
14 fugues and four canons.
1912 Arnold Schoenberg
writes the hyperstructured
Pierrot lunaire.
1933 Ionisation by Edgard
Varèse is premiered in New
York. Xenakis greatly admired
Varèse’s originality.
1936 Béla Bartók composes
Music for Strings, Percussion,
and Celesta, incorporating
symmetrical design.
1950–1952 Pierre Boulez
extends the scope of
Schoenberg’s 12-tone method
by creating serial music.
AFTER
1960 Krzysztof Penderecki
creates blocks of sound in
Threnody for the Victims
of Hiroshima.
The role of the
musician must be this
fundamental research: to
find answers to phenomena
we don’t understand.
Iannis Xenakis
US_308-309_Xenakis_Khatchaturian.indd 308 26/03/18 1:02 PM