- Tan Dun
Death and Fire: Dialogue with Paul Klee (1992)
- G Schirmer Inc (World)
- 2(2pic)+pic(afl).2.2+bcl.2+cbn/4331/4perc/hp/str
- 27 min
Programme Note
Some years ago, I went to an exhibition on the painter Paul Klee at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Extremely moved, I decided to write a symphony, which unfolded like a discussion - a dialogue between myself and Klee’s paintings. Though, it is not in any sense a musical description of particular works, the symphony is constructed of many small sections reminiscent of Klee's method and imagined as a complete, continuous whole.
Klee was concerned with finding formal means to embody deep universal feelings without bitterness or pathos, using a sophisticated complexity to make a concentrated simplicity. Line, which in his thinking was associated both with melody and dynamics, was a major element in his work. This is closely related to the Chinese aesthetic, which is linear, non-harmonic, and seeks the soul of the work rather than its surface effects.
Tan Dun
Klee was concerned with finding formal means to embody deep universal feelings without bitterness or pathos, using a sophisticated complexity to make a concentrated simplicity. Line, which in his thinking was associated both with melody and dynamics, was a major element in his work. This is closely related to the Chinese aesthetic, which is linear, non-harmonic, and seeks the soul of the work rather than its surface effects.
Tan Dun
Media
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": I. Portrait
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": Insert 1: Animals at Full Moon
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": Insert 2: Senicio
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": Insert 3: Ad Parnassum
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": II. Self Portrait
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": Insert 4: Twittering Machine
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": Insert 5: Earth Witches
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": Insert 6: Intoxication
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": Insert 7: J.S. Bach
Death and Fire, "Dialogue with Paul Klee": III. Death and Fire