Although I did not plan for it, this year I've played more 20th C. music than in the past and learned a lot. Here's more...
@PeterA told me about a recent concert he went to hearing violinist Joshua Brown. Nice to be in an area where that sort of event just happens. Also on his program was a performance of ... uh oh ... Bartók's
Music for Strings Percussion & Celesta. I don't know this music but I looked in my stacks and there it was. George Solti and the London Symphony b/w Bartók
's The Miraculous Mandarin.
View attachment 163137
Decca SXL 6111 - recorded in 1963 and released in 1964.
Of course it's different. Changing rhythms and time signatures are hallmarks of B's style along with unresolving memes that go nowhere while celebrating sound but not so much melody and completion. It's Bartók and in its own way it is kinda cool, kinda beatnik and very percussive. Percussion instruments are his thing. The Celesta (also known as a bell-piano) is a percussion instrument with a keyboard and hammers that strike metal plates, not strings. Its tone can be rich, even golden.and often subdued. None of that is the Bartók way.
The home video recordings below are for the two interior movements out of a total of four.
Here is the
Allegro
And the
Adagio