All shall have prizes: one for the composer’s pupil

All shall have prizes: one for the composer’s pupil

News

norman lebrecht

May 07, 2024

The latest Mauricio Kagel Music Prize, worth 80,000 Euros, has been awarded in Cologne to the composer, drummer, poet and installation artist Manos Tsangaris.

An early student of Kagel’s in Dusseldorf, Tsangaris has been professor of composition at the Hochschule für Musik Dresden and joint artistic director of the Munich Biennale.

Comments

  • Ruben Greenberg says:

    Kagel is an interesting figure that deserves revival. …a complete original.

    • John Borstlap says:

      Unfortunately originality has nothing to do with artistic quality. It is an invention of European romanticism in the 19th century.

    • william osborne says:

      It’s interesting the degree to which the Germans embraced the ideals of American experimentalism (Cowell, Partch, Cage, Oliveros, Ruggles, Feldman, Varese, etc.) They established that all sound could serve as the material of music, which could be presented even in aleatoric forms independent of the artist’s will. Due to the historical context, this had a profound effect. War ravaged Europeans knew that the Third Reich was, in part, a manifestation of their cultural values. The American experimentalists offered a new world, an emancipation of sound freed from a genocidal past.

      This ethos was taken up by the editors of Musik Texte, Germany’s most influential new music magazine. Three of the editors also had important positions in the German public radio system in Frankfurt, Cologne, and Munich. Cologne, where the magazine had its base, became the center of new music in West Germany. A Germanized ethos of American experimentalism became the new orthodoxy that ran in tandem with the other dominant school of thought, serialism and its stylistic relatives.

      As professor at the Musikhochschule in Cologne, Kagel gained an outsized influence on the future of Germany’s new music world. A sort of preciously arty sound art became a doctrinaire cultural force.

      Another advantage was that this sort of elitist experimentalism stood as a strong riposte to the East Block’s social realism. In one gesture, both fascism and communism could be rejected.

      The irony is that the Herrenvolkish ethos that surrounded German music and its reception, and still does, wasn’t the foundational problem. It was more fundamental cultural factors such as absolutism, a tendency toward cultural orthodoxy, nationalism, the concept of difficult art as a kind of protestant edification of the soul, the idea that art is a kind of arcane secret knowledge the elite pass off to the unknowing masses, the identifier of art as a signifier of cultural superiority, a kind of precious and obscure sensitivity symbolizing social and intellectual refinement.

      These characteristics are often couched behind a hip veil of humor, irreverence, and rebellion to give it a Volkish rather than Herrenvolkish appearance, but in the end both end up in about the same place. It also creates a nice appearance of cosmopolitanism.

      The Munich Biennale is an interesting measure of these changes. It was conceived and built to prominence by Hans Werner Henze, an earlier type of modernist who had a strong sensibility for finding young composers with fairly solid compositional skills. Manos is now the Co-Director of the Biennale and the programming has moved toward a Germanized version of American experimentalism. Sound art, works similar to installations, and updated forms of happenings are more the style. It’s a bit dated, and unfortunately, when it comes to genuinely effective music theater, one senses conceptualism masking a lack of ability. Still, it is all so precious and refined few sense the problems, and those who do are reluctant to say anything since it challenges a dogmatic and all-powerful status quo in Germany’s new music world.

      • John Borstlap says:

        Great summing-up of German’s musical plight.

        “War ravaged Europeans knew that the Third Reich was, in part, a manifestation of their cultural values. The American experimentalists offered a new world, an emancipation of sound freed from a genocidal past.”

        The idea that the nazis were somehow related to the nature of European cultural values and that classical music was partly responsible for fascism, is one of the utterly insane assumptions which drove the totalitarian modernist ideologies, which have so much more in common with nazism than any ‘European value’ could possibly have had, even with the utmost atempts at distortion. This is merely accepting the nazi’s appropriation of high culture as a fact. So, it is a fascist concept.

        The only enlightened mind in Germany today who has properly analysed all of this, is Wolfgang-Andreas Schultz, whose books on new music deconstruct the cult of Klangkunst, who opened new ways of thinking out of the box, and who is therefore avoided as a time bomb:

        https://www.wolfgangandreasschultz.de/publik.html

        • william osborne says:

          Hitler was obsessed with the arts and felt that the essential and foremost purpose of the state was to support the arts (an idea still quite alive in the German-speaking, Nordic countries, and France.) Even humanity was to be re-sculpted to an Arian purity as an expression of beauty. Through eugenics, humanity itself was to become a work of art.

          This was a historical continuation of the rise of cultural nationalism which led to the idea of the artist-prophet as the genius seed of the nation state. These concepts of racial and cultural superiority were nowhere stronger than in the German-speaking world. Nazi ideology and Hitler’s worldview were built around these concepts which had long roots in European history.

          In the aftermath of the war, Germans reacted in horror to what these ideas brought upon them. Hence the developments I describe. Unfortunately, their compositional traditions were disposed of and are now largely lost, but the cultural values that produced that sort of chauvinistic, racial, ethno-nationalism still remain to a considerable degree. A great irony.

          I recommend this book, _Hitler and the Power of Aesthetics._

          It’s an astounding measure of the abuse of art that is always lurking behind the scenes in almost almost all manifestations of power. Mao, Stalin, and the pop-music-industrial-complex are additional examples.

          https://www.amazon.com/Hitler-Power-Aesthetics-Frederic-Spotts/dp/1585673455

    • Guest Conductor says:

      I clicked one of your ‘tube links and gave this a try but found the music to be rather ‘unlistenable.’

      • John Borstlap says:

        Then you should truly enjoy yourself with the links above, they are just right for you.

  • MOST READ TODAY: