» ECM New Series 1688 (2000)
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voices: Jocelyn B. Smith, David Moss
conductor: Peter Rundel
with words by Heiner Mueller, Hugo Hamilton and Paul Auster
"Surrogate Cities" is an attempt to approach the phenomenon of the city from various sides, to tell stories of cities, expose oneself to them, observe them, it is material about metropolises that has accumulated over the course of time. The work was inspired partly by texts, but also by drawings, structures and sounds, the juxtaposition of orchestra and sampler playing a considerable role because of the latter's ability to store sounds and noises ordinarily alien to orchestral sonorities. The associations I have are with a realistic, certainly contradictory, but ultimately positive image of the modern city. My intention was not to produce a close-up but to try and read the city as a text and then to translate something of its mechanics and architecture into music...
When it comes to the power dynamics of the city, the individual is always the more vulnerable party. Art rebels against this overpowering structure by strengthening the subjective element. Music, too, is composed from a highly subjective perspective, for composers usually justify what they write by saying that they "need to get it out of their system". That is only partly true for me. I try to gain a bit more distance. I construct something that confronts the audience and the audience reacts to it, discovering in the music a space they can enter complete with their associations and ideas.
(From a conversation with Heiner Goebbels)
total playing time: 70:10
» Surrogate Cities (composition for orchestra)
» Argia Die Städte und die Toten 4 (composition for orchestra)
» Die Faust im Wappen (composition for orchestra)
» Heiner Goebbels The Italian Concerto (cd)
» In the Country of Last Things with words by Paul Auster (composition for orchestra)
» Suite for Sampler and Orchestra from Surrogate Cities (composition for orchestra)
» Surrogate with words by Hugo Hamilton (composition for orchestra)
» Surrogate Cities Venezia (music theatre)
» The Horatian - Three Songs ensemble version (composition for ensemble)
» The Horatian - Three Songs with words by Heiner Müller (composition for orchestra)