26/04/1977 - Paris - Salle Cortot - Rafaël Andia
Tellur starts off as a kind of wager: how can one produce the long sound continua necessary for my work on procedures, transitions and evolutions, on an instrument that produces brief, plucked sounds ? I found the answer by using the flamenco rasgueado technique and even, more generally, by employing the style and sound of flamenco. The way attacks on the strings, for example, are dealt with is particularly delicate and careful: two textures can be produced on one string simultaneously that evolve in different ways (by disassociating the percussive sound caused by the nails on the strings - a sound that has an exact and controllable frequency - and the sound produced by the resonance of the strings themselves). I also used passages that move progressively from sound to noise (gradual dampening of the strings), the progressive appearance of harmonics, of harmonic resonances of flat chords, unusual fingerings for harmonics, multiple trills using both hands... etc. Tellur is a typical example of a score whose content is derived essentially from sound material provided by the instrument itself - even if the instrument is stretched and used in such a way as to subject it to requirements of style. There is thus, total interaction between basic material and material style. The instrument is tuned in a special way, enabling chords or rasgueado formulae to be used that avoid the guitar's inevitable E-A-D-G-B-E layout.
Tristan Murail
Recordings
1 CD Karlklang, Terra
Jonas Löffler (guitar)
1 CD GHA Records, 126.049, Ritmata
Hughes Kolp (guitar)
1 CD dB Productions, dBCD31, Stephan Östersjö I
Stephan Östersjö (guitar)
1 CD Sappho (Musidisc), 590019, Guitar
Raphaël Andia (guitar)