for two groups of five instrumentalists
Scoring2pan fl-2 pft.2elec.pft-2bass gtr-2 sets of congas-2asax(ad lib)
World Premiere5/31/1976
Mayconcerts, Royal Conservatory, The Hague
Hoketus
World premiere of version9/18/1989
Shaw Theatre, London
Icebreaker Ensemble / James Poke
Composer's Notes Hoketus is the result of the minimal art project I started in January 1977 at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague. This project’s purpose was to study the history of the American avant-garde movement both theoretically and practically, and I intended to finish the project by performing a composition that, making use of certain stylistic devices of minimal art, would at the same time criticise this style. The principal quality of minimal art compositions is the consistent limitation of musical material: the advantage is that all possibilities of one single musical aspect (usually rhythm) can wholly be explored and worked out. It is true that this is at the expense of other musical aspects.
Hoketus, too, has only one musical subject: the hoketus. The hoketus is a stylistic device of the Ars Nova (14th century, Machaut and others): the melodic tones are divided between two or more descants.
The ensemble
Hoketus consists of two identical quintets: panflute, piano, Fender-piano, bass-guitar and percussion. The pitch material of both groups is (nearly) identical. This applies to the rhythm as well. It is, however, complementary: in
Hoketus the groups never play simultaneously. What makes the piece
Hoketus differ from most minimal art compositions is that the harmonic material is not diatonic but chromatic, and that it radically abandons the tonal continuous sound-masses characteristic of most minimal art, with the inclusion of all accompanying cosmic nonsense.
Louis Andriessen
Reproduction RightsThis programme note can be reproduced free of charge in concert programmes with a credit to the composer
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