Ben Johnston: Ponder Nothing
Liner Notes   Cat. No. 80432     Release Date: 1993-01-01

Music Amici

Ben Johnston's (b 1926) music shows the confluence of several traditions of music-making that have flourished within the United States. In the 1950s his output was characterized by the neoclassicism of his teacher Darius Milhaud. In the 1960s he explored serial techniques and, at the end of the decade, indeterminacy. From 1960 onward the overriding technical preoccupation of his music has been its use of just intonation, the tuning system of the music of ancient cultures as well as that of many living traditions worldwide. The six works represented on this disc span Johnston's journey through atonality, neoclassicism, serial technique, and finally, his pioneering use of just intonation.

Septet (1956-58) for woodwind quintet with cello and contrabass, marks the height of Johnston's early neoclassic period. Debts to Stravinsky-—recurring structural figures, ostinatos that repeat pitches in unpredictable rhythms-are obvious. The more direct influence of Johnston's first important teacher, Darius Milhaud, is apparent in the bitonal textures.

In his 1955 Three Chinese Lyrics, scored for soprano and two violins, Johnston has set three poems by the Chinese T'ang dynasty poet Li Po (701-762) in translations by Ezra Pound (his early mentor Harry Partch already had set seventeen of the poems; Johnston set the remaining three).

Commissioned by choreographer Merce Cunningham, Gambit (1959) is scored for twelve instruments and consists of six movements, three of which-Interlude 1, Prelude 2, and Interlude 2-use twelve-tone rows. Gambit, a mixed-genre work, precipitated the crucial decision of Johnston's career, his switch to extended "just intonation."

For most composers, just intonation implies tonality, but Johnston is unique for his works that fuse pure tuning with the twelve-tone system, including Five Fragments (1960). Fragments 1, 2, 3, and 5 modulate systematically from one twelve-tone row to another and, here and in general, Johnston's early just intonation counterpoint moves carefully among consonant intervals.

A much later work, Trio for clarinet, violin, and cello (1982), is a gem of Johnston's mature style, rhythmically engaging and harmonically subtle. Phrases return, sometimes with altered continuations, or transposed to different pitch levels, or using an undertone scale rather than an overtone scale. As a result, and typical of Johnston's late work, the Trio's lithe counterpoint falls sweetly on the ear; the complexity is below the surface.

Ponder Nothing (1989), is a set of solo clarinet variations on the traditional French hymn "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence." If the hymn gives voice to Johnston's Catholicism, the title, taken from the hymn's third line-"Ponder nothing earthly minded"-refers to his interest in the no-mind meditation of Zen.

Music Amici

Ben Johnston: Ponder Nothing

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CD-R+ titles come in a jewel case with print booklet.                         Liner Notes
A *.pdf of the notes may also be accessed here free of charge.

Track Listing

Septet: Movement 1
Ben Johnston
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Septet: Movement 2
Ben Johnston
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Septet: Movement 3
Ben Johnston
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Three Chinese Lyrics: The Jewel Stairs' Grievance
Ben Johnston
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Three Chinese Lyrics: Taking Leave of a Friend
Ben Johnston
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Three Chinese Lyrics: Lament of The Frontier Guard
Ben Johnston
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Gambit: Prelude 1
Ben Johnston
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Gambit: Interlude 1
Ben Johnston
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Gambit: Postlude 1
Ben Johnston
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Gambit: Prelude 2
Ben Johnston
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Gambit: Interlude 2
Ben Johnston
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Gambit: Postlude 2
Ben Johnston
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Five Fragments: Interior
Ben Johnston
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Five Fragments: The Life in Us
Ben Johnston
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Five Fragments: Simplify
Ben Johnston
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Five Fragments: Time
Ben Johnston
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Five Fragments: More Day
Ben Johnston
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Trio
Ben Johnston
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Ponder Nothing
Ben Johnston
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