• Erkki-Sven Tüür
  • Phantasma (2018)
    (for orchestra)

  • Henry Litolff’s Verlag GmbH & Co. KG (World)
  • 2.2.2.2(II:cbn)/2.2.0.0/timp.perc/pf/str
  • 13 min

Programme Note

Had my father, as a boy during World War II, not stumbled upon the overture Coriolanus by L. van Beethoven on the radio, I probably would not have become a composer at all. Apparently, this experience astonished him utterly and completely ­– he had never known that this kind of music could even exist. From that moment he consciously started searching for information about who this Beethoven really was and what else he had composed. This search led him to gradually discover the entire heritage of classical music; by the time I was born, he had a very impressive record collection for his time. And this is how I grew up – in a world of sound created by the compositions my father constantly listened to.

Before I started composing Phantasma I heard from conductor Olari Elts – who is an important catalyst for composing this piece – that many orchestras have inquired whether I could somehow create a “link with Beethoven”. And considering the above, this link was born in a very natural way: as an opportunity to repay a debt of gratitude and as an homage to L van B.

A specific motif from Coriolanus appears as stealthily as a ghost and disperses as mysteriously as it appeared. As it originates from the supporting structure, a listener who does not know the composition inside out might not even recognize it. However, it is not a goal in itself.
At first, the dramaturgy of music is born from the relations among separate chords, their gradual fusion, the onset of movement and the constant growth of its rhythmical intensity. Another hint – by the time the micro-interval clusters appear in the wind section, the phantom (Phantasma) has arrived. And this presence will be highlighted by certain punctuated rhythmic patterns that I normally do not use.

Erkki-Sven Tüür
Translation: Pirjo Jonas

Scores

Reviews

Estonian National Symphony Orchestra, cond. Olari Elts, Estonia Concert Hall, Tallinn  4 October 2019

[...] these three works had elements of the same Tüür thumbprints – woodwind chord clusters, "bending" notes especially awe-inspiring in the brass, a state of becoming that moves in waves, slow or faster according to context, something of an arch form with a quiet coda. At the same time, the gestural ideas that emerge – the essential "hooks" that stop this all just being the familiar contemporary "process" – are distinctive to each. Apparoaching Phantasma, first on the programme, without trying to glean the sense of the (Estonian) note, I sensed something familiar but not quite recognisable. As it turned out, this is partly Tüür's homage to his father, whose hearing Beethoven's Coriolan Overture on the radio as a child turned him into a classical music lover and record collector, and thus by association his son into choosing to become a composer, and partly due to Olari Elts's suggestion that he might write a work with a link to Beethoven. It's reassuring to learn that the composer regards the quotation as subliminal. [...]

David Nice, theartsdesk.com
19th December 2019