Piano solo

Kompositie I, II, III en IV

Pages from Kompositie I, II, III en IV

Program note :

Amidst the turmoil of the war Kompositie I was created from a strong susceptibility to the structural format of stage I and under the influence of a conversation with the poet Jaap van Domselaer (1923-1944) and the composer Nico Schuyt. This conversation was focussed on mystical suggestion and on the philosophy of the composition in Proeven van Stijlkunst (1916) by the composer Jacob van Domselaer (1890-1960).

Without having heard the composition and due to the fact that the composer himself considered this piece as belonging to his own past, we were fully aware of its spiritual element. We supported our susceptibility by reading Het Journaal van de Nieuwe Kring (1916-1917) in which Van Domselaer, when speaking about the real division of the vertical and the horizontal dimensions in this piece, says: ‘If the real division is discovered in this way, purely active harmony will entirely be the cause. The melody, purely passive, will entirely be the result (…). If the real division is discovered in this way, the deepest elements of the concept of rhythm, the rhythm of all rhythms, will come to the surface. It will come to life in the multitude of rhythms and by the pulse beat of the vertical in the horizontal element.’
This meant that the vertical does not take part in the general progress. It just reworks the progress. It meant that where the vertical element is veiled, rhythm will be highlighted. It meant the pulse of silence, eternity and conquering rhythm regarding measures of time division. It mainly meant to us ‘our’ susceptibility to the suggestive higher reality, that eternity and the specific sentiment of a centre focussed relation structure. The sentiment of the renunciation of the world in optima forma.

Even more consistently than the pieces of Van Domselaer, who is said to have been the model for this phenomenon, Kompositie I takes place in an extension of tones and in more or less complex chords (verticality). The movement of these complex chords, the ‘going on’ (horizontality), is determined by the ‘standing’ under full control. Although the tonal element is veiled by chromatic discolouring as a result of the piling of tones, the centre focussed, functional structure of the tonality cannot be denied.

Only the limits between major and minor fade. In the works of Mondriaan, whose philosophy shows similarity in places, the concept of the tight straight line and the complete balance of the vertical and the horizontal, led to the concept of the mutual relations in the field of social justice. This concept, founded in the present and arising from a relations structure focussed on the object, had certain consequences regarding the attitude to life and was not going to be changed.

With us the rhythm of alternating measures of time in strict proportions was mainly literature, a profound externality. The thought of the proportion of the vertical and the horizontal had been weakened by the tonal conditioning and the centre focussed relation structure. Without real grounding in the present, in liberated creativity, the experiment would and could not have any consequences.

 

SIMEON TEN HOLT