Mirka CutGordianKnot 2001
Mirka CutGordianKnot 2001
Mirka CutGordianKnot 2001
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide
range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and
facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
https://about.jstor.org/terms
Duke University Press and are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend
access to Journal of Music Theory
KRZYSZTOF PENDERECKI'
Danuta Mirka
435
I. Categories
436
vibrators
m w
inciters
m mm wm Im
w mw ww lw
1 ml wl 11
h mh wh lh
f mf wf If
437
438
439
440
441
II. Morphology
Let us turn from the problems of the practical realization of the tim-
bre system to the main subject of this article, a reconstruction of the sys-
tem itself. As explained earlier, the material pairs shown in Figure 2 fix
classes of timbres represented by individual generators and-what for
Penderecki is one and the same thing-by the individual sounds they
generate. But individual sounds are secondary in Penderecki's music. In
his pieces based on the timbre system the elementary unit is a set of
sounds, which I will call a segment. Sound phenomena contained in one
timbral segment can be identical or different, in the sense that they are
generated by collisions of bodies representing identical or different pairs
of materials. If all sounds are produced in the same way, that is, through
interactions of the same two materials, then the timbre of a segment will
be covered by only one material pair. Yet such "monochromatic" seg-
ments occur comparatively rarely. Much more frequent are segments
whose component sounds belong to several different classes. How can
their overall, resultant timbres be determined?
The initial analytical procedure in such cases is an enumeration of all
the material pairs producing the sounds of these segments. At this stage
of the description of a single segment, a given material can occur several
times as a component of different pairs. This is so because bodies repre-
senting one material category can interact with bodies made of either the
same or different materials, in this way producing sound phenomena that
differ in timbre. From this it follows that different materials may vary as
to the number of occurrences in a segment description. Of course, the
442
him
. . . . . .
.. . .
Fig
com
que
seg
how
leat
just
The
a "common denominator search." This search is easiest and most obvious
when all pairs belonging to a given segment form different conjunctions
with one primary material. The latter, which occurs in all pairs and in this
way forms their "common denominator," is the main material for the seg-
ment. Such a segment thus has only one main material (Figure 3). If no
single primary material constitutes a common denominator of all the
pairs within a segment, one has to search for the common denominator
of the greatest number of pairs within this segment, and then for the com-
mon denominator of the remaining pairs. If such a denominator as a pri-
mary material does exist, the segment has two main materials, and the
search procedure ends (Figure 4). However, if a common denominator
still cannot be found within the group of remaining pairs, one has to
repeat the procedure: first find the common denominator of the greatest
number of pairs, and then the common denominator of the last remaining
group. In such a case, the segment has three main materials (metal, wood
443
S.......................
Sf i
S............. ....
1....
if?
h?
Figure 4. Seg
and leather), th
the richest, tho
Needless to say,
occur in a segm
no more mater
stage of the ab
pen that two or
same number o
trarily and the
not affect the
same irrespectiv
It is, however, p
lytical procedu
this is the case,
ing sound gener
ically by only o
dure for the ma
situation arises w
plication of the
grouping with h
mary material,
more complicat
sists of two dif
444
.............................
445
w w
S- -
(b) m.
w
I I
446
III. Syntax
The timbre system based on material categories rules not only the
inventory of the elementary units (segments) that determine the mor-
phology of timbre in Penderecki's early output, but also its syntax, that is,
the succession of segments over the course of a piece. In its essence, this
course is formed by a play of timbral oppositions between metal, wood
and leather as primary materials. First, material categories singled out in
a given piece as opposing timbral qualities may be contrasted by way of
a direct juxtaposition of segments whose main materials constitute poles
of opposition. For instance, a segment whose main material is wood may
come directly after a segment exhibiting a metallic timbre. In such a case,
a presentation of a timbral opposition will happen. Secondly, an opposi-
tion may be submitted to mediation, that is, a soft, gradual change form-
ing a transition from one timbral extreme to the other. Segments of op-
posing main timbres are in this case separated by one or more segments
whose main material is either: (1) neutral in relation to the opposition,
standing outside the material opposition operative in a piece (leather in
the case given); (2) a sum of the opposing materials; or (3) a sum of all
three primary materials. Other types of transition result from varying
temporal relations between segments. Segments need not form a simple
447
1I
ff
(b) hh
w
,ii ...
ww
fl. ....
ff
Figure 7. One-pair segment with two main materials, metal and wood,
in two different contexts such that these materials are contained (a) or
are not contained (b) among main materials of the adjacent segments
448
449
i (3) I
i2 w
3 4 4 I
(1
he
,. n ii e
|(2(~3)~U (
W
450
The timbre system, whose rules are presented briefly in this article,
governs the organization of sound color in eight pieces of Krzysztof Pen-
derecki: Anaklasis for 42 strings and percussion (1959-60), Threnody-
To the Victims of Hiroshima for 52 strings (1960), String Quartet No. 1
(1960), Dimensions of Time and Silence for mixed choir, strings and per-
cussion (1960-61), Fonogrammi for flute and chamber orchestra (1961),
Polymorphia for 48 strings (1961), Fluorescences for orchestra (1962),
and Canon for string orchestra and tape (1962). It was thus employed by
Penderecki for just three years: from 1960 until 1962. Beginning with the
St. Luke's Passion (1963-66), and in later works, the composer abandoned
this system-most likely for rather prosaic reasons. Since Anaklasis,
Dimensions and Fluorescences all required large groups of percussion-
including several instruments rare within the orchestra, but indispensable
for articulating the basic material categories-they were prohibitively
expensive and at times logistically impractical to perform. In turn, atyp-
ical techniques of playing instruments frightened conventional perform-
451
452
453
454
WORKS CITED
455
456