Up with the Birds

July 1, 2016 4 Comments

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I wonder if I had it in me to get up at 3:00 in the morning to be at a concert at 4:30 am. The answer is a resounding NO, unless… the concert took place at a bird sanctuary. And offered music by Messiaen. (Although playing him on the piano was a bear rather than a bird. Ok. Done with the bad puns.)

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DSC_0064Last Sunday the entire grandiose Catalogue of Birds by Messiaen was played across different places in nature during the course of a day into the night. Starting with a walk at dawn to hear the real birds, the concert commenced among the reeds. At night it finished fittingly in a hall, performing the calls of the night owl. Luckily all this happened in England, at the Aldeburgh Festival last week, so I didn’t have to stay up late, which is harder for me than to get up early. Wouldn’t have liked to miss the owl. Unluckily, this seems like an event of a lifetime, organized with British precision, stamina and a sense of adventure, shuttling the audience from one spot to another, an experience I would have relished. The festival director, Pierre-Laurent Aimard, was also the pianist, playing, as you can see in the clip below, with hand warmers in the dawn!  DSC_0069https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15xFa2U5thw

Thirteen individual pieces, each echoing the song of a particular bird from France, comprise this musical work, finished in 1958. From then on, Messiaen traveled all over the world to transcribe songs of birds in the wilderness, including exotic birds, and incorporate the tunes into his compositions. Paul Griffiths observed that “Messiaen was a more conscientious ornithologist than any previous composer, and a more musical observer of birdsong than any previous ornithologist.” Three of my favorite things: music, birds, travel! I wonder if he would have considered taking a photographer.DSC_0040 - Version 2

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Here is a glowing review of the entire Aldeburgh event http://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/what-to-listen-to/messaiens-catalogue-of-birds-pierre-laurent-aimard-aldeburgh-fes/ Makes me jealous.

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friderikeheuer@gmail.com

4 Comments

  1. Reply

    Steve Tilden

    July 1, 2016

    Birds are so exotic, of course — They can fly and I can’t. They are sleek and I’m not. They merge with natural surroundings and I hide in my building. They are full of colors, both of pigments and refracted light, and I’m pink with pain when I get too much sun.

    Paul told me a story yesterday about a man he worked for in a museum many years ago who let dandelions take over his back yard. His neighbors were irritated by this, but the man left his garden to be completely swamped by dandelions. One day, when in full bloom, procreating like mad, several hundred goldfinches swarmed in to feed on dandelion seeds. The man was pleased, and I though maybe . . . but maybe not. The flowers would work nicely in a Goldsworthian way, though. Maybe . . .

    • Reply

      friderikeheuer@gmail.com

      July 1, 2016

      The birds in the montage are finches and they feed on sunflowers – whole fields of them on Sauvie Island last year, 100s of birds. Sunflowers survive in poor soil as long as they get the light – you could plant them along the public path Easy of your house.

  2. Reply

    Lee Musgrave

    July 1, 2016

    I continue to be amazed at how often you and I are on the same wavelength about a variety of subjects… I have always been fascinated by birds and even made a series of large paintings about a male raven and a woman-bird-chimera playing together. Including music into the mix adds a nice touch.

  3. Reply

    friderikeheuer@gmail.com

    July 1, 2016

    You have lots of birds up where you live that don’t show here- I can never identify them but delight when I see them. And right now you must be surrounded by wildflowers! Go paint!

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