Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Asyla

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Catalogue
  
Op. 17

Composed
  
1997 (1997)

Genre
  
Orchestral music

Publisher
  
Faber Music

Period
  
Contemporary classical music

Performed
  
1 October 1997 (1997-10-01): Symphony Hall, Birmingham

Asyla, Op. 17, is an orchestral composition by the British composer Thomas Adès. It was finished in 1997 and has been performed widely, especially by the British conductor Simon Rattle. It has been described as a symphony, the third movement being its unacknowledged scherzo.

Contents

Composition

The title of the composition is the Latin plural form of asylum, which here means both sanctuary and madhouse. It was commissioned by the John Feeney Charitable Trust and was premiered by the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Simon Rattle, in Birmingham's Symphony Hall in October 1997. This composition is best known for its third movement, which features techno-like traits. Adès himself narrated the compositional process as follows:

So I bought some techno music and listened to it, just quietly, to get the structure rather than blast my head off. I realised that, in techno, you have to repeat things 32 or 64 times. So I tried to orchestrate it one night in my living room, repeating all these figures over and over, on this massive score paper, 30 staves to a page. At 3am, I went to bed and, as I sat there, realised my heart had stopped beating. I thought, 'Christ, I'm having a heart attack'. I rang the hospital and then they sent an ambulance. My heart gradually started again, but very shallowly. The ambulance took me to the Royal Free, where I waited for two hours among other Saturday night casualties. And finally a doctor saw me and said, 'You hyperventilated'. I thought, 'Thank God. It's not my heart, it's just my brain...'

Asyla received critical praise and won a Royal Philharmonic Society Music Award in 1997, and the Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition in 2000. It was eventually published by Faber Music in 2000.

Analysis

This composition has four movements and takes 22 to 25 minutes to perform. The movement list is as follows:

  • I.
  • II.
  • III. Ecstasio
  • IV.
  • It is scored for a very large orchestra, which, in addition to the most common instruments, should also include two pianos (a grand piano and an upright piano tuned one quarter tone lower), six percussionists playing a large range of instruments, and a celesta.

    The piece starts with an untitled movement with cowbells and the flat piano, which is immediately followed by the horns and the high-pitched sound of the strings. The general atmosphere of the movement becomes much more agitated when the rest of the orchestra joins in progressively. The second movement begins abruptly and suddenly changes to a soft melody played by the bass oboe. Then the strings take over with a style which has been classified by some critics as Wagnerian. The sound starts to dissipate towards the end of the movement, fading out using the highest and lowest registers simultaneously.

    The third movement tries to resemble "the atmosphere of a massive nightclub with people dancing and taking drugs". It has a steady rhythm which has been compared to Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. The music here is much more insistent than in the previous movements and is much more vivid and lively. After reaching a climax echoed by the strings, the fourth movement becomes calmer at the beginning, and suddenly turns violent when a tutti chord initiated by the horns bursts towards the end of the piece. Asyla ends in a quiet but trembling manner.

    References

    Asyla Wikipedia