Les Froissements des Ailes de Gabriel
Brian FERNEYHOUGH Born 1943, Coventry, England
- Les Froissements des Ailes de Gabriel (2003)
- guitar solo, flute/piccolo/bass flute, oboe/cor anglais, clarinet/clarinet in Eb, bass clarinet/contrabass clarinet, horn, trumpet/soprano trombone, trombone/bass trumpet, piano, guitar, harp, percussion, violin, violoncello
Les froissements des Ailes de Gabriel
(The beatings of Gabriel's wings)
brings together two persisting threads in Ferneyhough?s music of the
past couple of decades. On the one hand, it continues a series of works
for soloist and chamber ensemble, each of which finds a new way of
evoking yet questioning the traditional ?concerto? concept. On the
other, it forms part (in fact, the second scene) of the ?scenic work?
Shadowtime, an ?opera of thoughts? centering on the
philosopher Walter Benjamin that has preoccupied the
composer since 1999. Without wishing
to push paradox too far, one might say that we are dealing here with a
?concerto? that is not really a concerto, forming part of an ?opera?
that is not really an opera.
The figure invoked in the title is, evidently, the angel of the
Annunciation, the rustling of whose wings long ago opened
Heinrich Biber's
cycle of ?Mystery Sonatas?, and more significantly, led the
12th century Persian mystic Sohravardi to surmise that the two wings ?
one orientated to celestial light, the other to earthly shadow ? were
the channel by which divinity could pass from heaven to earth. But
there?s a broader angelology at work here. Since Shadowtime
revolves around Benjamin, the natural starting point is Paul Klee's
picture Angelus Novus ?
in Benjamin?s interpretation, an image of the ?Angel of History?
who gazes back at the debris of everything that still lies in
front of us. This in turn evokes the ?terrifying? angels of
Rainer Maria Rilke's
?Duino Elegies?: the ones who ?serenely disdain to annihilate us?.
Les froissements des Ailes de Gabriel
is the one scene of Shadowtime where ? perhaps self-evidently ?
no words are sung or spoken. So what
is it doing in an ?opera?? It?s no surprise to learn that it has a
symbolic function. After a more or less realistic first scene, at the
hotel on the Spanish border where Benjamin will commit suicide, this
?angel concert(o)? seeks to perform a sort of allegorical ?extinction
of time? analogous to the ?deafness to time? sometimes attributed to
angels (who are alleged to act within time, but to be oblivious to it).
The work is written for solo guitar and an ensemble of 13 players: 4
woodwinds, 3 brass, 2 strings, and various ?struck and plucked?
instruments (harp, piano, percussion, and most notably a second guitar,
tuned down a quarter-tone, which one can partly regard as the soloist's
?dark other?). Ferneyhough describes the piece as ?an investigation of
suddenness as aesthetic and formal category?, and this in itself gives
cause for thought. For most composers (and indeed listeners), musical
?form? acts as a kind of security: as something reliable to cling on.
With Ferneyhough, this is rarely, if ever, the case: on the contrary,
?form? is conceived more as a precarious tightrope over an abyss. But
even in Ferneyhough's terms, Les froissements
represents an extreme. He
once described it, with a touch of gallows humour, as ?245 bars of
total non-sequiturs?; more specifically, there are 124 fragments, each
rarely more than a few seconds in length, and each meticulously
sculpted, with its own distinctive instrumentation and (often
glittering) ?texture types?. The point at issue here is that the
material intentionally passes by too fast for one to make connections,
even if they do in fact exist. This is turn gives an ironic twist to
the invocation of Gabriel: can his message ? his ?annunciation? - in
fact be received within ?human? time? In this context, it may not be
too fanciful to interpret the soloist's last, whirling figure as a
final, exasperated rustling of the angel's wings.
Programme note © 2003 Richard TOOP
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