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Out of Doors (Bartók)

Out of Doors is a set of five piano solo pieces, Sz. 81, BB 89, written by Béla Bartók in 1926. Out of Doors (Hungarian: Szabadban, German: Im Freien, French: En Plein Air) is among the very few instrumental compositions by Bartók with programmatic titles.

Out of Doors
Piano music by Béla Bartók
The composer in 1927
Native nameSzabadban
Catalogue
Composed1926 (1926)
DedicationDitta Pásztory-Bartók
Movements5

Pieces edit

Out of Doors contains the following five pieces with approximate duration based on metronome markings:

  1. "With Drums and Pipes" – Pesante. 1 min 45s
  2. "Barcarolla" – Andante. 2 min 17 s
  3. "Musettes" – Moderato. 2 min 35 s
  4. "The Night's Music" – Lento – (Un poco) più andante. 4 min 40 s
  5. "The Chase" – Presto. 2 min – 2 min 12 s

Period and circumstances of composition edit

After World War I (1914–1918), Bartók was largely prevented from continuing his folk music field research outside Hungary.[1] This increased the development of his own personal style, marked by a sublimation of folk music into art music. Bartók composed Out of Doors in the 'piano year' of 1926,[2] together with his Piano Sonata, his First Piano Concerto, and Nine Little Pieces. This particularly fruitful year followed a period of little compositional activity. The main trigger to start composing again was Bartók's attendance on 15 March 1926 of a performance of Stravinsky's Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments (and Le Rossignol and Petrushka) in Budapest with the composer as pianist.[3] This piece and Bartók's compositions of 1926 are marked by the treatment of the piano as a percussion instrument. Bartók wrote in early 1927:

It seems to me that the inherent nature [of the piano tone] becomes really expressive only by means of the present tendency to use the piano as a percussion instrument.[4]

Another influence on the style of his piano compositions of 1926 was his study and editing of French and Italian (pre)-Baroque keyboard music in the early 1920s.[5]

He wrote the work for his new wife, the pianist Ditta Pásztory-Bartók, whom he had married in 1923 shortly after divorcing his first wife, and who had given him his second son in 1924.

Interrelation of the five pieces edit

Although the set is often referred to as a suite, Bartók did not usually play the set in its entirety. He premièred the first, fourth, and fifth pieces on the Hungarian radio on 8 December 1926, and played the fourth piece separately on numerous occasions. He referred to the set in a letter to his publisher as "five fairly difficult piano pieces",[6] i.e., not as a suite. An arch form in the set has been proposed, with successive tonal centers of E-G-A-G-E,[7] but different tonal centers have also been suggested, e.g., D-G-D-G-F.[8] Nissman shows how individual pieces' motives and endings lead logically into the following piece within the set.[9] Originally, Out of Doors was published in two volumes: one contained the first three pieces and the other the last two.

The compositional process sheds some light on the interrelation of the five pieces. Bartók's first sketches show pieces 1 and 2 as finally published. The third piece was added later, based on unused material for the third movement of the Piano Sonata. Notably, the two final pieces, 4 and 5, form one continuous piece, numbered "3" in the sketches.[10] Bartók applied this juxtaposition of "The Night's Music" in a slow tempo with a presto section in a single piece/movement also in the second (middle) movement of his Second Piano Concerto.[11]

Discussion of individual pieces edit

"With Drums and Pipes" edit

 
The folk song Gólya, gólya, gilice which contains the fragment Bartók used as the main motive of With drums and pipes. The Hungarian title of the piece is Síppal, dobbal,..., the first two words of the third system.

This is the only piece in the set which can be traced to a specific folk song, Gólya, gólya, gilice (see illustration). Bartók called his piece in Hungarian Síppal, dobbal,..., literally translated With a whistle, with a drum, ..., which for Hungarians is up to this day an obvious quote from this folk song. The main motive of Bartók's piece is found in bars 9 and 10. This motive is taken from bars 5 and 6 of the folk song. The only change Bartók made was to accommodate the syncopation. The song text in literal translation:

Stork, stork, [Serbian for turtle dove] what made your leg bloody?

A Turkish child cut it, a Hungarian child cured it.

With a whistle, with a drum, and with a reed violin.

Károly Viski quotes this song in reference to the shamanistic origin of the text:

If we remember that the Hungarians, like many other people, were adherents of Shamanism in a certain period of their ancient history, these remnants can easily be understood. But the Shaman, the priest of the pagan Shamanism, is not only a fortune teller [….], he is also a doctor and magician, who drives away illnesses and cures them not with medicines, but with magic spells and songs. And if “he wants to hide”-that is in modern parlance- if he wants to fall into trance, besides other things, he prepares himself by dancing, singing and by performing to the accompaniment of drums ceremonial exercises […] Traces of this can be found even to this day in Hungarian folklore; of course […] in children’s playful rhymes: [song quote] In the game which goes with this little rhyme, they beat each other with great noise and rapid gesticulation.[12]

The quotation from the folk song that Bartók used contains only the trichord on the second degree of the tonal center in the song: E, F, and G. In Bartók's piece, this motive makes the tonal center (seem) E. Yet, just like the folk song, the piece comes home to the first degree: the tonal center D appears later in the piece at the end of the legato B section (measure 64) and the repeat of the A section.[13]

The piece is in ternary form with a coda. The opening, closing, and coda sections consist of imitations of drums and lower wind instruments—"pipes". A less percussive, legato treatment of the piano is called for in the middle section in the middle and higher register, imitating gentler wind instruments.[14] Bartók made a sketch of an orchestration for this piece in 1931, using for the opening section timpani and gran cassa ('drums') and (double)-bassoons and trombones ('pipes').[15]

"Musettes" edit

The title refers to the musette, a type of small bagpipe. Bartók's was inspired by Couperin, who wrote keyboard pieces imitating this instrument.[5] The piece consists mostly of imitating the sound effects of a poorly tuned pair of musettes. There is little melody. With drums and pipes and Tambourine of Bartók's Nine little pieces similarly consist of sound imitations of folk instruments.[16]

A noteworthy instruction reads Due o tre volte ad libitum (play optionally two or three times), giving the performer a degree of freedom rare in classical music scores, and underlining the improvisatory and spontaneous nature of folk bagpipe music. The Sostenuto pedal of the grand piano is necessary for a right rendering of the final four bars.

"The Night's Music" edit

This piece was immediately well received in Hungary, unlike many of Bartók's other compositions.[17] Stevens already focuses attention to the quality and importance of this work in his early biography.[18] It is "the locus classicus of a uniquely Bartókian contribution to the language of musical modernism".[19]

The form is described variously in the literature, e.g., a loose rondo, ABACABA[20] or as ternary, with the middle as 'developmental' section.[21]

Three types of material are distinguished:[22]

 
The Hungarian Unka frog Bombina bombina, whose call is imitated in The Night's Music. After making a first noisy appearance in bar 6, he is featured throughout the piece, disregarding metre and tonality, ribbiting a last time in bar 70 before finally hopping off.
  1. A Imitation of the sounds at night in a Hungarian summer,[23] tonal centre G or ambiguous tonality. A highly dissonant arpeggiated cluster chord (E,F,G,G,A) is repeated throughout the section on the beat. On top of this, six imitations of natural sounds (birds, cicadas, and the particular Hungarian unka frog) are scored in a random fashion. This material is found in bars 1–17, 34–37, 48, and 67–71. There and small quotes in bars 25–26 and in 60, while the arpeggiated cluster chord is often inserted in the B and C material.
  2. B Chorale in G. This material is found in bars 17–34 and 58–66.
  3. C Peasant flute imitation strictly in the Dorian mode on C. Bartók frequently composed contrasting sections with a tonal centre which is a tritone apart C-G from a previous section. This material is found in bars 37–58, 61–67, and 70–71.

Notable overlap occurs in bars 61–66, where the chorale (B) and peasant flute (C) materials sound together. This is far from a traditional duet, because the characters, tempos and tonal centers of the two parts vary widely, as often in Bartók's night music.[24]

The random scoring of nature's sounds in the A-material makes memorisation extremely difficult. But memorisation turns out to be not necessary as witnessed by the anecdote of Mária Comensoli, a piano student of Bartók. She was astonished when she first played The Night's Music by heart (as required at Bartók's lessons) and Bartók remarked

Are you playing exactly the same number of ornaments that imitate the noises of the night and at exactly the same place where I indicated them? This does not have to be taken so seriously, you can place them anywhere and play of them as many as you like.[25]

The many precise dynamic and stress signs witness how Bartók aimed for very specific performance and sound effects.[26] Three footnotes in the score deal with the exact execution of arpeggios and grace note figurations. The fourth footnote instructs the pianist to play the cluster chord E, F, F, G, G, A, B, C with the palm of the hand.

"The Chase" edit

This piece consists of five melodic episodes. They are prefaced and separated (except for the fourth and fifth episode) by 'ritornello' type sections of repeated cluster chords in a clashing rhythm (duplets in 6
8
measure).

The piece is related to the pantomime The Miraculous Mandarin, in character to the chase scene and harmonically to the important two building blocks which are presented directly at the start of the pantomime:[27]

  1. A three-note chord consisting of the ground note, and a tritone and a major seventh above, e.g. F, B, E.[28]
  2. A scale spanning an augmented octave

The left hand plays an ostinato arpeggiated quintuplet chord of F, G, B, C, E, of which the E is on the beat (6
8
measure). This figure consists of the ‘pantomime’ chord of F, B, E, to which the fourth of G, C, is added. This ostinato changes at every new episode:

  1. In the second episode, the C is moved an octave down, making the whole figure span a minor tenth (C, F, G, B, E).
  2. In the third episode, the B is moved an octave down B, F, G, C, E, calling in Bartók’s own fingering for a change of hand position in the execution of this figure (1, 5, 4, 2, 1).
  3. In the fourth episode, the figure is expanded to B, D, G, A, F, G, C, E (in two quadruplets per two beats). This figure can be interpreted in different ways. Firstly, as two ‘pantomime’ chords, (F, B, E & B, F, A; or F, B, E & D, G, C) to which four or two notes are added (D, G, G, C; and G, A respectively). The chords are remarkably symmetrically distributed over the figure. Secondly, two ‘pantomime’ chords (F, B, E and G, D, G) with two added notes (A, C). Thirdly, the figure consists of two four-note figures, exactly a tritone apart. Lastly, the pitch inventory consists of two diminished seventh chords, on B and G, symmetrically divided over the figure.
  4. Within the fourth episode, the figure is limited to A, B, D, G for a few measures. This seems mostly a necessity for pianistic reasons, but the resulting figure is quite similar to the one bridging the fourth and fifth episodes
  5. Bridging the fourth and fifth episodes, for only one measure the figure changes to B, D, F, G, A. This figure is the first half of a cadence which resolves in the recapitulation of the first theme.
  6. In the fifth episode, the figure is the same as in the first episode, except that it is stretched to ten notes over two octaves in two beats, F, G, B, C, E, F, G, B, C, E.

The melody features the augmented octave scale.

This piece is technically difficult: "From the standpoint of technique and endurance, especially for the left hand, this [piece] could easily be the most demanding in Bartók's entire output.[29]

Editions of score and recordings edit

Score edit

The Boosey & Hawkes printing is a facsimile of the original edition from Universal Edition. There is a new edition from Boosey & Hawkes by Peter Bartók and Nelson Dellamaggiore.

Notable recordings edit

  • Bartók had planned to record the fourth piece himself, writing it would last approximately four and a half minutes. No recording is now known to exist.
  • György Sándor: Béla Bartók: Piano Music. LP recording, 9 discs in 3 volumes: 33⅓ rpm, stereo. Vox Box SVBX 5425–SVBX 5427. New York: Vox Records, 1961–63. Sándor was a pupil of Bartók.
  • Zoltán Kocsis: Béla Bartók: Works for Piano. Sonata for Piano, BB 88; Out of Doors, BB 89; Two Romanian Dances, BB 56; Three Hungarian Folk Songs from Csík, BB 45b; Romanian Christmas carols, BB 67; Fourteen Bagatelles, BB 50; Sonatina, BB 69. Recorded Hamburg, Friedrich-Ebert-Halle, 1991, 1993, and 1996. CD recording. 1 disc, stereo. Philips 464 676-2 PM. [Germany]: Philips Classics, 2001. Kocsis recorded all Bartók solo piano music, attempting to stay close to Bartók's score and Bartók's own performance. Tempos are strictly followed from the score, including the extraordinary 160 dotted quarters per minute in The Chase.[citation needed]
  • Murray Perahia: Murray Perahia Plays Bartók. Sonata; Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs, Op. 20; Suite, Op. 14; Out of Doors. LP recording, 1 disc: 33⅓ rpm, stereo. CBS Masterworks M 36704. New York: CBS Masterworks, 1981.
  • Barbara Nissman: Out of Doors. Bartók's Out of Doors, plus music by Schubert, Chopin, Rachmaninoff, Hummel, Mendelssohn and Prokofiev. CD recording, 1 disc: stereo. Three Oranges Recordings 3OR-19, 2014.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Somfai, 1996, 18.
  2. ^ Somfai 1993, 173.
  3. ^ Gillies 2006, 317–318 and see also Schneider 1995, 183–187.
  4. ^ Bartók 1927/1976: 288. Bartók's answer to a questionnaire prepared by the Musikblätter des Anbruch.
  5. ^ a b Somfai, 1993, 179, 186–187; Nissman, 145; Yeomans, 105–6.
  6. ^ Somfai, 1993, 174.
  7. ^ Nissman 2002, 146; Somfai 1993, 178.
  8. ^ Yeomans 1988, 106–107.
  9. ^ Nissman 2002, 155.
  10. ^ Somfai 1998, 178.
  11. ^ Danchenka, 22.
  12. ^ Viski, 1932, 16. (quoted in the presentation On the Shaman’s Trail – Béla Bartók’s Szabadban by Dr. Damjana Bratuz during the Ninth international congress on Musical Signification, 19–23 September 2006)
  13. ^ Somfai, 1993, 178.
  14. ^ Yeomans, 106.
  15. ^ Somfai 1998, 91.
  16. ^ Yeomans, 110.
  17. ^ Schneider 2006, 81–86.
  18. ^ Stevens 1953, 135–37.
  19. ^ Schneider 2006, 81.
  20. ^ Yeomans 1988, 107.
  21. ^ Nissman 2003, 162.
  22. ^ Schneider, 84–87; Somfai, 1993, 180.
  23. ^ Schneider 2006, 84.
  24. ^ Schneider, 116.
  25. ^ Bónis 1995, 148, quoted in translation by Vera Lampert in Bayley 2001, 240.
  26. ^ Nissman, 159–163.
  27. ^ Stevens, 1953; Somfai, 1993, 182.
  28. ^ Bartók 1976, 338.
  29. ^ Yeomans 1988, 108.

Sources edit

  • Bayley, Amanda (ed.) (2001). The Cambridge Companion to Bartók. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-66958-0
  • Bartók, Béla (1976). "About the 'Piano' Problem (1927)". Béla Bartók Essays. edited by Benjamin Suchoff. London: Faber & Faber. p. 288. ISBN 0-571-10120-8. OCLC 60900461.
  • Bónis, Ferenc. 1995. Így láttuk Bartókot: ötvennégy emlékezés. Budapest: Püski. ISBN 978-963-8256-53-9
  • Danchenka, Gary. "Diatonic Pitch-Class Sets in Bartók's Night Music" Indiana Theory Review 8, no. 1 (Spring, 1987): 15–55.
  • Fosler-Lussier, Danielle. (2007). Music Divided: Bartók's Legacy in Cold War Culture. California Studies in 20th-Century Music 7. Berkeley : University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24965-3
  • Gillies, Malcolm (2006). "Bartók's "Fallow Years": A Reappraisal". Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Volume 47, Numbers 3–4 / September 2006. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. ISSN 0039-3266 (Print) 1588–2888 (Online) DOI 10.1556/SMus.47.2006.3-4.7
  • Nissman, Barbara. (2002). Bartók and the Piano: A Performer's View. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4301-3
  • Schneider, David E. (2006). Bartók, Hungary, and the Renewal of Tradition: Case Studies in the Intersection of Modernity and Nationality. California Studies in 20th-Century Music 5. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24503-7
  • Schneider, David E. (1995). "Bartók and Stravinsky: Respect, Competition, Influence and the Hungarian Reaction to Modernism in the 1920s". In Bartók and his world, edited by Peter Laki, 172–202. Princeton: Princeton University Press ISBN 978-0-691-00633-8
  • Somfai, Laszlo (1993). "The 'Piano Year' of 1926". In The Bartók Companion, edited by Malcolm Gillies, 173–188. London: Faber. ISBN 0-571-15330-5 (cloth), ISBN 0-571-15331-3 (pbk) American printing, Portland, Oregon: Amadeaus Press, 1994. ISBN 0-931340-74-8 (cloth) ISBN 0-931340-75-6 (pbk)
  • Somfai, Laszlo (1996). Béla Bartók: Composition, Concepts, and Autograph Sources. Ernest Bloch Lectures in Music 9. Berkeley : University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08485-8
  • Stevens, Halsey. (1953). The Life and Music of Béla Bartók. New York: Oxford University Press. Revised edition. New York: Oxford University Press, 1964. Third edition, prepared by Malcolm Gillies. Oxford: Clarendon Press; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816349-7
  • Viski, Károly (1932). Hungarian Peasant Customs. Budapest: George Vajna & Co. ASIN: B002LY2XQM (No ISBN).
  • Yeomans, David (1988). Bartók for Piano: A Survey of His Solo Literature. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-31006-7 Paperback reissue, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-253-21383-5

External links edit

  • Free recording of Out of Doors: Movements 1–3 and Movements 4–5 by Neal O'Doan in MP3 format
  • An interactive score of Bartók’s The Night's Music from the cycle Out of doors with Sir András Schiff.

doors, bartók, doors, five, piano, solo, pieces, written, béla, bartók, 1926, doors, hungarian, szabadban, german, freien, french, plein, among, very, instrumental, compositions, bartók, with, programmatic, titles, doorspiano, music, béla, bartókthe, composer,. Out of Doors is a set of five piano solo pieces Sz 81 BB 89 written by Bela Bartok in 1926 Out of Doors Hungarian Szabadban German Im Freien French En Plein Air is among the very few instrumental compositions by Bartok with programmatic titles Out of DoorsPiano music by Bela BartokThe composer in 1927Native nameSzabadbanCatalogueSz 81 BB 89Composed1926 1926 DedicationDitta Pasztory BartokMovements5 Contents 1 Pieces 2 Period and circumstances of composition 3 Interrelation of the five pieces 4 Discussion of individual pieces 4 1 With Drums and Pipes 4 2 Musettes 4 3 The Night s Music 4 4 The Chase 5 Editions of score and recordings 5 1 Score 5 2 Notable recordings 6 Notes 7 Sources 8 External linksPieces editOut of Doors contains the following five pieces with approximate duration based on metronome markings With Drums and Pipes Pesante 1 min 45s Barcarolla Andante 2 min 17 s Musettes Moderato 2 min 35 s The Night s Music Lento Un poco piu andante 4 min 40 s The Chase Presto 2 min 2 min 12 sPeriod and circumstances of composition editAfter World War I 1914 1918 Bartok was largely prevented from continuing his folk music field research outside Hungary 1 This increased the development of his own personal style marked by a sublimation of folk music into art music Bartok composed Out of Doors in the piano year of 1926 2 together with his Piano Sonata his First Piano Concerto and Nine Little Pieces This particularly fruitful year followed a period of little compositional activity The main trigger to start composing again was Bartok s attendance on 15 March 1926 of a performance of Stravinsky s Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments and Le Rossignol and Petrushka in Budapest with the composer as pianist 3 This piece and Bartok s compositions of 1926 are marked by the treatment of the piano as a percussion instrument Bartok wrote in early 1927 It seems to me that the inherent nature of the piano tone becomes really expressive only by means of the present tendency to use the piano as a percussion instrument 4 Another influence on the style of his piano compositions of 1926 was his study and editing of French and Italian pre Baroque keyboard music in the early 1920s 5 He wrote the work for his new wife the pianist Ditta Pasztory Bartok whom he had married in 1923 shortly after divorcing his first wife and who had given him his second son in 1924 Interrelation of the five pieces editAlthough the set is often referred to as a suite Bartok did not usually play the set in its entirety He premiered the first fourth and fifth pieces on the Hungarian radio on 8 December 1926 and played the fourth piece separately on numerous occasions He referred to the set in a letter to his publisher as five fairly difficult piano pieces 6 i e not as a suite An arch form in the set has been proposed with successive tonal centers of E G A G E 7 but different tonal centers have also been suggested e g D G D G F 8 Nissman shows how individual pieces motives and endings lead logically into the following piece within the set 9 Originally Out of Doors was published in two volumes one contained the first three pieces and the other the last two The compositional process sheds some light on the interrelation of the five pieces Bartok s first sketches show pieces 1 and 2 as finally published The third piece was added later based on unused material for the third movement of the Piano Sonata Notably the two final pieces 4 and 5 form one continuous piece numbered 3 in the sketches 10 Bartok applied this juxtaposition of The Night s Music in a slow tempo with a presto section in a single piece movement also in the second middle movement of his Second Piano Concerto 11 Discussion of individual pieces edit With Drums and Pipes edit nbsp The folk song Golya golya gilice which contains the fragment Bartok used as the main motive of With drums and pipes The Hungarian title of the piece is Sippal dobbal the first two words of the third system This is the only piece in the set which can be traced to a specific folk song Golya golya gilice see illustration Bartok called his piece in Hungarian Sippal dobbal literally translated With a whistle with a drum which for Hungarians is up to this day an obvious quote from this folk song The main motive of Bartok s piece is found in bars 9 and 10 This motive is taken from bars 5 and 6 of the folk song The only change Bartok made was to accommodate the syncopation The song text in literal translation Stork stork Serbian for turtle dove what made your leg bloody A Turkish child cut it a Hungarian child cured it With a whistle with a drum and with a reed violin Karoly Viski quotes this song in reference to the shamanistic origin of the text If we remember that the Hungarians like many other people were adherents of Shamanism in a certain period of their ancient history these remnants can easily be understood But the Shaman the priest of the pagan Shamanism is not only a fortune teller he is also a doctor and magician who drives away illnesses and cures them not with medicines but with magic spells and songs And if he wants to hide that is in modern parlance if he wants to fall into trance besides other things he prepares himself by dancing singing and by performing to the accompaniment of drums ceremonial exercises Traces of this can be found even to this day in Hungarian folklore of course in children s playful rhymes song quote In the game which goes with this little rhyme they beat each other with great noise and rapid gesticulation 12 The quotation from the folk song that Bartok used contains only the trichord on the second degree of the tonal center in the song E F and G In Bartok s piece this motive makes the tonal center seem E Yet just like the folk song the piece comes home to the first degree the tonal center D appears later in the piece at the end of the legato B section measure 64 and the repeat of the A section 13 The piece is in ternary form with a coda The opening closing and coda sections consist of imitations of drums and lower wind instruments pipes A less percussive legato treatment of the piano is called for in the middle section in the middle and higher register imitating gentler wind instruments 14 Bartok made a sketch of an orchestration for this piece in 1931 using for the opening section timpani and gran cassa drums and double bassoons and trombones pipes 15 Musettes edit The title refers to the musette a type of small bagpipe Bartok s was inspired by Couperin who wrote keyboard pieces imitating this instrument 5 The piece consists mostly of imitating the sound effects of a poorly tuned pair of musettes There is little melody With drums and pipes and Tambourine of Bartok s Nine little pieces similarly consist of sound imitations of folk instruments 16 A noteworthy instruction reads Due o tre volte ad libitum play optionally two or three times giving the performer a degree of freedom rare in classical music scores and underlining the improvisatory and spontaneous nature of folk bagpipe music The Sostenuto pedal of the grand piano is necessary for a right rendering of the final four bars The Night s Music edit This piece was immediately well received in Hungary unlike many of Bartok s other compositions 17 Stevens already focuses attention to the quality and importance of this work in his early biography 18 It is the locus classicus of a uniquely Bartokian contribution to the language of musical modernism 19 The form is described variously in the literature e g a loose rondo ABACABA 20 or as ternary with the middle as developmental section 21 Three types of material are distinguished 22 nbsp The Hungarian Unka frog Bombina bombina whose call is imitated in The Night s Music After making a first noisy appearance in bar 6 he is featured throughout the piece disregarding metre and tonality ribbiting a last time in bar 70 before finally hopping off A Imitation of the sounds at night in a Hungarian summer 23 tonal centre G or ambiguous tonality A highly dissonant arpeggiated cluster chord E F G G A is repeated throughout the section on the beat On top of this six imitations of natural sounds birds cicadas and the particular Hungarian unka frog are scored in a random fashion This material is found in bars 1 17 34 37 48 and 67 71 There and small quotes in bars 25 26 and in 60 while the arpeggiated cluster chord is often inserted in the B and C material B Chorale in G This material is found in bars 17 34 and 58 66 C Peasant flute imitation strictly in the Dorian mode on C Bartok frequently composed contrasting sections with a tonal centre which is a tritone apart C G from a previous section This material is found in bars 37 58 61 67 and 70 71 Notable overlap occurs in bars 61 66 where the chorale B and peasant flute C materials sound together This is far from a traditional duet because the characters tempos and tonal centers of the two parts vary widely as often in Bartok s night music 24 The random scoring of nature s sounds in the A material makes memorisation extremely difficult But memorisation turns out to be not necessary as witnessed by the anecdote of Maria Comensoli a piano student of Bartok She was astonished when she first played The Night s Music by heart as required at Bartok s lessons and Bartok remarkedAre you playing exactly the same number of ornaments that imitate the noises of the night and at exactly the same place where I indicated them This does not have to be taken so seriously you can place them anywhere and play of them as many as you like 25 The many precise dynamic and stress signs witness how Bartok aimed for very specific performance and sound effects 26 Three footnotes in the score deal with the exact execution of arpeggios and grace note figurations The fourth footnote instructs the pianist to play the cluster chord E F F G G A B C with the palm of the hand The Chase edit This piece consists of five melodic episodes They are prefaced and separated except for the fourth and fifth episode by ritornello type sections of repeated cluster chords in a clashing rhythm duplets in 68 measure The piece is related to the pantomime The Miraculous Mandarin in character to the chase scene and harmonically to the important two building blocks which are presented directly at the start of the pantomime 27 A three note chord consisting of the ground note and a tritone and a major seventh above e g F B E 28 A scale spanning an augmented octaveThe left hand plays an ostinato arpeggiated quintuplet chord of F G B C E of which the E is on the beat 68 measure This figure consists of the pantomime chord of F B E to which the fourth of G C is added This ostinato changes at every new episode In the second episode the C is moved an octave down making the whole figure span a minor tenth C F G B E In the third episode the B is moved an octave down B F G C E calling in Bartok s own fingering for a change of hand position in the execution of this figure 1 5 4 2 1 In the fourth episode the figure is expanded to B D G A F G C E in two quadruplets per two beats This figure can be interpreted in different ways Firstly as two pantomime chords F B E amp B F A or F B E amp D G C to which four or two notes are added D G G C and G A respectively The chords are remarkably symmetrically distributed over the figure Secondly two pantomime chords F B E and G D G with two added notes A C Thirdly the figure consists of two four note figures exactly a tritone apart Lastly the pitch inventory consists of two diminished seventh chords on B and G symmetrically divided over the figure Within the fourth episode the figure is limited to A B D G for a few measures This seems mostly a necessity for pianistic reasons but the resulting figure is quite similar to the one bridging the fourth and fifth episodes Bridging the fourth and fifth episodes for only one measure the figure changes to B D F G A This figure is the first half of a cadence which resolves in the recapitulation of the first theme In the fifth episode the figure is the same as in the first episode except that it is stretched to ten notes over two octaves in two beats F G B C E F G B C E The melody features the augmented octave scale This piece is technically difficult From the standpoint of technique and endurance especially for the left hand this piece could easily be the most demanding in Bartok s entire output 29 Editions of score and recordings editScore edit The Boosey amp Hawkes printing is a facsimile of the original edition from Universal Edition There is a new edition from Boosey amp Hawkes by Peter Bartok and Nelson Dellamaggiore Notable recordings edit Bartok had planned to record the fourth piece himself writing it would last approximately four and a half minutes No recording is now known to exist Gyorgy Sandor Bela Bartok Piano Music LP recording 9 discs in 3 volumes 33 rpm stereo Vox Box SVBX 5425 SVBX 5427 New York Vox Records 1961 63 Sandor was a pupil of Bartok Zoltan Kocsis Bela Bartok Works for Piano Sonata for Piano BB 88 Out of Doors BB 89 Two Romanian Dances BB 56 Three Hungarian Folk Songs from Csik BB 45b Romanian Christmas carols BB 67 Fourteen Bagatelles BB 50 Sonatina BB 69 Recorded Hamburg Friedrich Ebert Halle 1991 1993 and 1996 CD recording 1 disc stereo Philips 464 676 2 PM Germany Philips Classics 2001 Kocsis recorded all Bartok solo piano music attempting to stay close to Bartok s score and Bartok s own performance Tempos are strictly followed from the score including the extraordinary 160 dotted quarters per minute in The Chase citation needed Murray Perahia Murray Perahia Plays Bartok Sonata Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs Op 20 Suite Op 14 Out of Doors LP recording 1 disc 33 rpm stereo CBS Masterworks M 36704 New York CBS Masterworks 1981 Barbara Nissman Out of Doors Bartok s Out of Doors plus music by Schubert Chopin Rachmaninoff Hummel Mendelssohn and Prokofiev CD recording 1 disc stereo Three Oranges Recordings 3OR 19 2014 Notes edit Somfai 1996 18 Somfai 1993 173 Gillies 2006 317 318 and see also Schneider 1995 183 187 Bartok 1927 1976 288 Bartok s answer to a questionnaire prepared by the Musikblatter des Anbruch a b Somfai 1993 179 186 187 Nissman 145 Yeomans 105 6 Somfai 1993 174 Nissman 2002 146 Somfai 1993 178 Yeomans 1988 106 107 Nissman 2002 155 Somfai 1998 178 Danchenka 22 Viski 1932 16 quoted in the presentation On the Shaman s Trail Bela Bartok s Szabadban by Dr Damjana Bratuz during the Ninth international congress on Musical Signification 19 23 September 2006 Somfai 1993 178 Yeomans 106 Somfai 1998 91 Yeomans 110 Schneider 2006 81 86 Stevens 1953 135 37 Schneider 2006 81 Yeomans 1988 107 Nissman 2003 162 Schneider 84 87 Somfai 1993 180 Schneider 2006 84 Schneider 116 Bonis 1995 148 quoted in translation by Vera Lampert in Bayley 2001 240 Nissman 159 163 Stevens 1953 Somfai 1993 182 Bartok 1976 338 Yeomans 1988 108 Sources editBayley Amanda ed 2001 The Cambridge Companion to Bartok Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66958 0 Bartok Bela 1976 About the Piano Problem 1927 Bela Bartok Essays edited by Benjamin Suchoff London Faber amp Faber p 288 ISBN 0 571 10120 8 OCLC 60900461 Bonis Ferenc 1995 Igy lattuk Bartokot otvennegy emlekezes Budapest Puski ISBN 978 963 8256 53 9 Danchenka Gary Diatonic Pitch Class Sets in Bartok s Night Music Indiana Theory Review 8 no 1 Spring 1987 15 55 Fosler Lussier Danielle 2007 Music Divided Bartok s Legacy in Cold War Culture California Studies in 20th Century Music 7 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24965 3 Gillies Malcolm 2006 Bartok s Fallow Years A Reappraisal Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Volume 47 Numbers 3 4 September 2006 Budapest Akademiai Kiado ISSN 0039 3266 Print 1588 2888 Online DOI 10 1556 SMus 47 2006 3 4 7 Nissman Barbara 2002 Bartok and the Piano A Performer s View Lanham Md Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4301 3 Schneider David E 2006 Bartok Hungary and the Renewal of Tradition Case Studies in the Intersection of Modernity and Nationality California Studies in 20th Century Music 5 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24503 7 Schneider David E 1995 Bartok and Stravinsky Respect Competition Influence and the Hungarian Reaction to Modernism in the 1920s In Bartok and his world edited by Peter Laki 172 202 Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00633 8 Somfai Laszlo 1993 The Piano Year of 1926 In The Bartok Companion edited by Malcolm Gillies 173 188 London Faber ISBN 0 571 15330 5 cloth ISBN 0 571 15331 3 pbk American printing Portland Oregon Amadeaus Press 1994 ISBN 0 931340 74 8 cloth ISBN 0 931340 75 6 pbk Somfai Laszlo 1996 Bela Bartok Composition Concepts and Autograph Sources Ernest Bloch Lectures in Music 9 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 08485 8 Stevens Halsey 1953 The Life and Music of Bela Bartok New York Oxford University Press Revised edition New York Oxford University Press 1964 Third edition prepared by Malcolm Gillies Oxford Clarendon Press New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816349 7 Viski Karoly 1932 Hungarian Peasant Customs Budapest George Vajna amp Co ASIN B002LY2XQM No ISBN Yeomans David 1988 Bartok for Piano A Survey of His Solo Literature Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 31006 7 Paperback reissue Bloomington Indiana University Press 2000 ISBN 0 253 21383 5External links editList of errata in the Boosey amp Hawkes edition PIB 130 Free recording of Out of Doors Movements 1 3 and Movements 4 5 by Neal O Doan in MP3 format An interactive score of Bartok s The Night s Music from the cycle Out of doors with Sir Andras Schiff Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Out of Doors Bartok amp oldid 1215458299, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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