Koehne: Inflight Entertainment / Powerhouse / Elevator Music
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Graeme Koehne (b. 1956) Composing "Freestyle" Unchained Melody, Powerhouse, Elevator Music, Inflight Entertainment... just reading the titles, you would not...
Graeme Koehne (b. 1956)
Composing "Freestyle"
Unchained Melody, Powerhouse, Elevator Music,
Inflight Entertainment... just reading the titles, you
would not suspect that this is a recording of 'classical'
music at all. It is exactly the irony Graeme Koehne
intends, for while he deeply appreciates the history and
techniques of 'classical music', he laments the
separation and exclusion of influence between popular
entertainment and classical tradition which has
developed since the early twentieth century. Indeed,
there is a polemical intention behind the use of titles like
these, aimed at undermining the modernist stylistic
hegemony over contemporary classical music. With
their self-deprecating edge, the titles take little digs at
the pretensions of contemporary composition and of
classical music's institutions in general. They also
provide indicators to the sources of an almost buried
rival tradition of orchestral music in the twentieth
century. Contradicting the assumption that orchestral
music's twentieth century lineage has passed smoothly
from Schoenberg to Webern to Boulez, for example,
Koehne's titles reflect an interest in such examples of
low culture as 1950s pop tunes, cartoons and television,
lounge or easy-listening music and movie soundtracks.
In his music, these influences come together with the
techniques of the classical tradition on equal terms, so
that they might gain vitality from one another. His aim
is not a self-conscious polystylism: it is simply a natural
expression of musical personality, for all of these
elements have been present in Graeme Koehne's
musical upbringing.
Koehne declares as formative musical influences
the music of the Bugs Bunny Show, the whole gamut of
1960s American television and the James Bond movies,
and he rates their best composers as masters of
twentieth century music, Carl Stalling, Raymond Scott,
Henry Mancini and John Barry chief among them. In
his youth these influences were absorbed alongside his
passion for the great Romantic repertoire, Chopin and
Tchaikovsky being early musical enthusiasms. Later,
inspired by his principal composition teacher Richard
Meale, the imprint of Boulez and other composers of
the avant garde was profound. Subsequently he
extended his interests to the music of Ravel and the neoclassicists,
under the important influence of Virgil
Thomson, with whom he studied in New York. All this
illustrates just how uncharacteristic and novel an
individual's musical path can now be, particularly an
Australian musical upbringing. Indeed this is perhaps
the signal characteristic of 'Australian-ness'. Joyfully
lacking a dominant musical tradition, Australians are
free to explore everything that comes our way and to
synthesize our choices into a style of our own, freestyle,
just as the great Australian swimmers practise.
The fundamental musical language that Graeme
Koehne has developed is essentially neo-classical, in
that it employs traditional compositional techniques of
development and variation, and the endless expressive
potential of diatonic harmony, all cloaked in richly
imaginative orchestration. He places great emphasis on
this aspect of his work, in the hope that audiences will
appreciate the discipline, construction and
craftsmanship behind the infectious rhythms and tunes.
The four works recorded here cover a period of
more than ten years in the development of this musical
individualism. Unchained Melody (1990) grows
immediately out of Graeme Koehne's feeling that
contemporary music lacked the excitement and
enjoyability of pop music. He wanted to seek a way of
fixing the exuberance of this music to the symphony
orchestra. To prepare for it, he turned away from his
counterpoint and orchestration texts and studied instead
the specialist magazines of pop guitarists, drummers
and keyboard players, and adapted rhythmic and
melodic concepts gleaned from these sources to the
textures and capabilities of the symphony orchestra. For
this piece, he took the title from an old, and at the time
relatively obscure, 1950s pop song. He liked the song,
especially admiring its construction, without realising
that it had been penned by a composer of outstanding
classical credentials, Alex North, but mostly he liked
the association of 'letting go' which the title conveyed.
He felt he was discarding the weighty baggage of
contemporary ideology, and letting loose with the full
resources of his own compositional technique to create
a good time for the audience, and for the orchestra.
Unchained Melody was a great success with both
parties, if not with critics. Koehne immediately
conceived the idea of completing a trilogy of short
orchestral pieces exploring aspects of the musical
language he began to conceive as the 'vernacular',
echoing the architectural philosophy that he was
studying in the work of Demetri Porphyrios, Quinlan
Terry and Leon Krier.
Koehne's next work in the trilogy, first performed
by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra in 1993, would
move further away from contemporary compositional
models, this time germinating from a Rumba rhythm, as
he has long been a fan of the early Latin band-leader,
Xavier Cugat. The title, Powerhouse, was chosen in
homage to Raymond Scott, the uniquely humorous and
inventive composer featured in many Bugs Bunny
soundtracks. Though there is little trace of Scott's actual
music about the piece, Koehne speaks of aiming to
capture a spirit of bright humour and rapidly varying
character for which Scott provides a model.
The final piece of the orchestral trilogy, Elevator
Music (1997), grew from Graeme Koehne's admiration
for the music of John Barry, Henry Mancini and Les
Baxter. Here the textures are darker, more dramatic, the
rhythmic power intensified, undercutting the
deprecatory 'elevator music' tag. In citing the
inspiration of the three popular orchestral composers,
Koehne was drawn by their interest, during the 1950s,
in 'The Beat', a feeling for driving rhythm responding
to rock'n'roll. John Barry, with his group the John
Barry Seven, developed, Koehne observes, 'a uniquely
exciting form of instrumental music which
accommodated The Beat's powerful influence... As in
the previous pieces of my "trilogy", beyond the basic
rhythmic drive I haven't used any of these composers'
actual material. I've made some observations about the
ways they "use" an orchestra, and launched my piece
off on its own tangent. The basic material of Elevator
Music is a twelve-tone row, consisting of two
interlocking hexachords. I haven't used any of the
conventional twelve-tone methods of developing this
material, though. That's where Baxter, Mancini and
Barry come in... which introduces a possibility I wish
Schoenberg had thought of - one day while playing
tennis with Gershwin, perhaps.'
The productive association between Graeme
Koehne, the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, its Chief
Conductor Edo de Waart and Artistic Administrator
Timothy Calnin during the course of the 1990s
culminated in the concerto for amplified oboe and
orchestra, Inflight Entertainment (1999). The piece
belies all expectations of this form, or its title. It is a
concerto of symphonic proportions, a showpiece for
orchestra as well as the brilliant soloist for whom it was
written, Diana Doherty. Graeme Koehne's programme
note for the work explains his unconventional approach:
'The oboe, by virtue of a classical association with
the music-making of shepherds, more often than not
finds itself occupying green and pleasant pastoral
landscapes. In this concerto, I've taken the oboe away
from this traditional scenery into some landscapes in
which the instrument might seem strange and alien. It's
as if the shepherd had a secret life of adventure and
travel... The landscapes are those conjured up by
various genres of the popular cinema, places which
excite our imagination and our memories. The title
Inflight Entertainment aims to imply an association
with movies and the "shepherd's" adventures into
strange lands.
"Entertainment" is also one of my favourite words.
I particularly like to use it to see the shocking effect it
has on many of my composer colleagues and newspaper
critics. I've often heard it said that "entertainment" is
not a value that a contemporary composer should
consider, but I think that music which does not set out to
entertain often ends up being boring. To entertain
means to excite the senses and the imagination and it
certainly does not preclude the possibility of a more
"intellectual" engagement with musical materials.
In the oboe concerto, I'm aiming to bring the kind
of imaginative excitement I get from the music I hear in
the cinema or on soundtracks into the Concert Hall.'
James Koehne
(James Koehne is brother of Graeme Koehne and
Artistic Administrator of the Adelaide Symphony
Orchestra)
Elevator Music (more info)
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Elevator Music - 8:02
In-Flight Entertainment (more info)
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Agent Provocateur - 13:27
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Horse Opera - 10:20
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Beat Girl - 4:45
Unchained Melody (more info)
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Unchained Melody - 10:11
Powerhouse (more info)
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Powerhouse - 10:54