The Royan Festival of 1974 saw the premiere of Cassandra's Dream Song, the first of several pieces for solo flute, as well as Missa Brevis, written for 12 singers. In 1975, performances of his work for large ensemble Transit and Time and Motion Study III were given; the former piece being awarded a Koussevitzky Prize, the latter performed at the Donaueschingen festival. In many of these events he was paired with fellow British composer, Michael Finnissy, with whom he became friends during his student days.[7] In 1984 he was given the title Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.[5]
In 2012 he was awarded an honorary DMus from Goldsmiths, University of London.
In December 2018 he received an honorary degree from the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire for his contribution to contemporary classical music.[10]
Style and technique
Ferneyhough's initial forays into composition were met with little sympathy in England. His submission of Coloratura to the Society for the Promotion of New Music in 1966 was returned, with a suggestion that the oboe part should be scored for clarinet. Whilst Ferneyhough did find it hard, one source of support came from Hans Swarsenski who saw the same thing happen to Cornelius Cardew; Cardew enjoyed a prestigious continental reputation, but a poor one in his homeland. Swarsenski said of Ferneyhough: 'I've taken on an English composer who is I think is enormously talented. If this doesn't work, this is the last time'. Ferneyhough continued to struggle, but the aforementioned Royan festival marked a breakthrough for Ferneyhough's career.[11]
From here, Ferneyhough became closely associated with the so-called New Complexity school of composition (indeed, he is often referred to as the "Father of New Complexity"), characterized by its extension of the modernist tendency towards formalization (particularly as in integral serialism).[3][4] Ferneyhough's actual compositional approach, however, rejects serialism and other "generative" methods of composing; he prefers instead to use systems only to create material and formal constraints, while their realisation appears to be more spontaneous.[6]
Ferneyhough has been interested in challenging listeners’ ways of absorbing musical information flow, prompting new kinds of temporal awareness by being presented with musical materials (events, objects, gestures, rhythms, textures) that contain their own sufficient complexity:
The more the internal integrity of a musical event suggests its autonomy, the less the capacity of the "time arrow" to traverse it with impunity; it is "bent" by the contact. By the same token, however, the impact of the time vector "damages" the event-object, thus forcing it to reveal its own generative history, the texturation of its successivity: its perceptual potential has been redefined by the collision. As the piece progresses we are continually stumbling across further stages in this catastrophic obstacle race. The energy accumulation and expenditure across and between these confrontational moments is perceived as a form of internalized metronome, and in fact it is a version of this procedure which most clearly fuels the expressive world of Mnemosyne: the retardational and catastrophic timeline modifiers are employed equally to focus temporal awareness through the lens of material.[12]
His opera, Shadowtime, with a libretto by Charles Bernstein, and based on the life of the German philosopher Walter Benjamin, was premiered in Munich on 25 May 2004, and recorded in 2005 for CD release in 2006. As is usual for Ferneyhough's works, the opera received mixed reviews.[13][14][15]
Selected works
Works for string quartet
First String Quartet (1963)
Sonatas for String Quartet (1967)
Second String Quartet (1980)
Adagissimo (1983)
Third String Quartet (1987)
Fourth String Quartet (1989–90)
Fifth String Quartet (2006)
Dum transisset I–IV for string quartet (2007)
Exordium for string quartet (2008)
Sixth String Quartet (2010)
Silentium (2014)
Selected solo works
Sieben Sterne for organ (1970)
Cassandra's Dream Song for flute (1970–71)
Time and Motion Study I for bass clarinet (1971–77)
Time and Motion Study II for singing cellist and live electronics (1973–76)
Bone Alphabet for percussion (1991) (score sample)
Unsichtbare Farben for violin (1999) (score sample)
Opus Contra Naturam, for Solo Piano (2000)
no time (at all) for two guitars (2004), five pieces
Sisyphus Redux for alto flute (2009)
Quirl for solo piano (2011–13), part of Nicolas Hodges' Studies Project
For non-orchestral ensemble
Prometheus for wind sextet (1967)
Transit for solo voices and ensemble (1972–75)
Time and Motion Study III for sixteen solo voices (3S, Mez, 4A, 4T, 2Bar, 2B), percussion and electronics (1974)
Carceri d'Invenzione I for fl, ob, 2cl, bn, hn, tpt, trb, euphonium, 1perc, pf, 2vn, va, vc, db [1121, 1111.2111] (1982) (analysis, score sample) (inspired by the "Carceri d'Invenzione" by Giambattista Piranesi)
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Ferneyhough has been called "the most controversial composer of his generation".[17] "In the same year [1974], the performance of several of his works at the Royan Festival established Ferneyhough as one of the most brilliant and controversial figures of a new generation of composers".[18] "Brian Ferneyhough may well be one of the most important composers to emerge from the latter half of this century. Simultaneously famous and infamous, he is a controversial figure of world renown, bent on making the most out of music."[19]The Guardian's Tom Service called La Terre est un Homme "one of the most significant achievements in late 20th-century orchestral writing", and also recommended the Carceri d'Invenzione pieces, Lemma-Icon-Epigram, Terrain, and the string quartets.[20]
Bibliography
Ferneyhough, Brian. Brian Ferneyhough by Brian Ferneyhough. Paris: L'Age d'homme OCLC21274317 (French)
^Andrew Clements, "Friday Review: Opera of the Phantom: Brian Ferneyhough Is the Last Composer You'd Expect to Produce a Stage Work, but the Life—and death, and afterlife—of the Philosopher Walter Benjamin Inspired Him to Write an Opera Like No Other", The Guardian (8 July 2005):11.
Duncan, Stuart. "Re-complexifying the Function(s) of Notation in the Music of Brian Ferneyhough and the 'New Complexity'". Perspectives of New Music 48, no. 1 (Winter 2010): 136–172.
Pace, Ian (January 1998). "Review: [untitled]". Tempo. New Series (203): 45–48, 50–52. JSTOR946283. Reviewed works: Brian Ferneyhough – Collected Writings, edited by James Boros and Richard Toop. Ferneyhough: String Quartet No. 4; Kurze Schatten II; Trittico per G. S.; Terrain, Arditti Quartet with Brenda Mitchell (sop); Magnus Andersson (gtr); Stefano Scodanibbio (db); Irvine Arditti (vln) with ASKO Ensemble, c. Jonathan Nott. Disques Montaigne MO 7 82029. Ferneyhough: Prometheus; La Chute D'Icare; On Stellar Magnitudes; Superscriptio; Carceri d'Invezione III. Luisa Castellani (voice); Félix Renggli (fl); Ernesto Molinari (cl); Ensemble Contrechamps, c. Giorgio Bernasconi, Zsolt Nagy, Emilio Pomarico. ACCORD 205772.
Rosser, Peter. "Brian Ferneyhough and the 'Avant-Garde Experience': Benjaminian Tropes in Funérailles". Perspectives of New Music 48, no. 2 (Summer 2010):114–151.
Tadday, Ulrich (ed.). "Brian Ferneyhough". Munich: Edition Text+Kritik in Richard Boorberg Verlag, 2008. (in German)
Tadday, Ulrich (2008). "Brian Ferneyhough". Musik-Konzepte. Neue Folge (in German) (140). München: Edition Text + Kritik. ISBN978-3-88377-918-8.
Toop, Richard. "Brian Ferneyhough's Lemma-Icon-Epigram". Perspectives of New Music 28, no. 2 (Summer, 1990): 52–100.
Toop, Richard. "'Prima le Parole...' (On the Sketches for Ferneyhough's Carceri d'invenzione I–III)". Perspectives of New Music 32, no. 1 (Winter, 1994): 154–175.