HENRY, PIERRE & PIERRE SCHAEFFER — Symphonie pour un Homme Seul

Format: LP
Label & Cat.Number: Doxy DOZLP 401
Release Year: 2009
Note: revolutionary work recorded 1950 - the first piece of musique concrete! ; plus an early solo-piece by PIERRE HENRY, "Concerto des ambiguites" for piano and piano
Price (incl. 19% VAT): €15.50
Out of Stock

This release is no longer available in our current inventory. If you are interested in this title and would like to enquire about a possible repress or reorder, we would be very glad to hear from you.

 Get in Touch

More Info

Der Begründer der "Musique Concrete", PIERRE SCHAEFFER, und sein Schüler zur damaligen Zeit, PIERRE HENRY, sollen zusammen dieses allererste Musique Concrete Stück geschaffen haben! 1950!

"Electronic / avant-garde music pioneer and founder of the French musique concrète movement, Pierre Schaeffer, a radio engineer, believed that any sound could be music, and was one of the first to experiment with tape looping, splicing and sampling. He was also one of the first to record music on magnetic tape. Drawing inspiration from the Italian Futurists, he emphasized the double meaning of the word "play", meaning to play an instrument, but also to have fun and enjoy oneself. Pierre Henry, a classically trained musician, was one of Schaeffer's disciples and together they co-wrote the revolutionary Symphonie pour un Homme Seul, recorded in 1950. Despite its title, it is not a symphony in the classical sense, but a kind of suite divided into 12 movements. It is a musical collage featuring vocal fragments, that are at times recorded backwards, accelerated or repeated, and other sounds like whistles, footsteps, doors slamming, metallic sounds, and a prepared piano. However, what is important about this piece is not merely its intrinsic musical value, but its influence on so many future generations of musicians in so many genres. Symphonie pour un Homme Seul, over half a century later, remains a pioneering experiment in the search for new aural horizons. The Concerto side reveals Henry's personal approach to dissonance, with a strong impact of illogical sequences in the piano "duel": the two instruments seem to collide in a furious rejection of the traditional idea of music, generating a clash of noises that reproduces the sonic pollution of the modern times." [label info]