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Yale University Department of Music

To Cut the Gordian Knot: The Timbre System of Krzysztof Penderecki


Author(s): Danuta Mirka
Source: Journal of Music Theory, Vol. 45, No. 2 (Autumn, 2001), pp. 435-456
Published by: Duke University Press on behalf of the Yale University Department of
Music
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3653444
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TO CUT THE GORDIAN KNOT:

THE TIMBRE SYSTEM OF

KRZYSZTOF PENDERECKI'

Danuta Mirka

Timbre is certainly the most complex parameter of sound perception.


In contrast to pitch, loudness, and duration, each of which possesses a sin-
gle equivalent among the acoustic parameters of sound, timbre depends
on the interaction of several physical aspects of sound. These aspects
include overtones, wave forms, sound pressure, transients, as well as the
number and frequency of formants. Moreover, a sound's frequency and
intensity-parameters which relate basically to pitch and loudness-exert
an influence on the resulting timbre. The complexity of timbre is evident
when one attempts to depict it within a representational space: timbre can-
not be modeled within one-dimensional space, but only by means of
multi-dimensional scaling techniques (Spender 1980, 401). However, a
set that cannot be projected onto a one-dimensional line of real numbers
does not constitute an ordered set, and its elements are not comparable in
the mathematical sense. As a result, no clear relationship between partic-
ular timbres can be established, and hence no rational organization of the
perceptual parameter of timbre by means of any rigid system is possible
on the acoustic level. This may be why in the course of music history
timbre has usually been set aside as a secondary factor of musical form.
Even where it achieved a dominant position in the styles of individual
composers, as in the case of Debussy or in the Klangfarbenmelodie of

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Schoenberg, timbre was invariably organized in an intuitive manner. Nor
was the problem of timbre solved by serial composers. In spite of the
appearances of rationality, the serialization of timbre was essentially arbi-
trarily determined. Who, after all, will without qualification agree that the
relation between the timbres of violin and contrabass is the same as, say,
between the violin and oboe or trumpet con sordino? Assumptions of this
sort lie at the base of the timbre rows used in serial compositions. For the
young Penderecki, faced with the Gordian knot of timbre, nothing
remained to do but to cut it. He did so by transferring wholesale the prob-
lematic issue of timbre from the hopelessly muddled acoustic level onto
the motoric one: the level of sound generation.

I. Categories

Although the acoustic wave is a highly complex phenomenon, the


process of its generation can be presented simply as a collision of two
physical bodies, one being a sound source, the other being the body that
vibrates the sound source. It is likely that such a splendidly simplified
image of the sound-producing process was taken up by Penderecki from
the teaching of Mieczyslaw Drobner, the eminent Polish acoustician and
organologist. In 1958 Drobner moved from L6di to Krak6w to take the
post of lecturer at Paristwowa Wyzsza Szkola Muzyczna, the school
where Penderecki had recently finished his study in composition and was
employed as an assistant. Two years later, in 1960, the Krak6w publish-
ing house Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne (PWM) issued Drobner's
book Instrumentoznawstwo i akustyka, which remains the classical Pol-
ish handbook of both disciplines-organology and acoustics-named in
its title. In this book, Drobner termed the sound source a vibrator, and in
his subsequent publications introduced the complementary term, inciter,
for the body which agitates the vibrator. A combination of vibrator and
inciter is a sound generator. This formulation proposed by Drobner be-
came an ideal point of departure for the consistent and rational system of
timbre organization elaborated by Penderecki in the early 1960s, the
period of his output labeled in Polish musicology as sonoristic.2
At that time Penderecki understood timbre primarily as a function of
the materials-in the most common sense of the word-employed in any
individual process of sound generation. Therefore the timbral categories
in Penderecki's sonorism are based upon materials most commonly used
in the construction of the musical instruments and accessories of the tra-
ditional symphonic orchestra: metal, wood, leather, felt, and hair.3 These
materials can serve as both vibrators and inciters. Yet, while the role of
inciter can be played by any of the listed materials, the vibrator can be
only a metal, wooden, or leather body. In fact, almost anything can be
made to vibrate; thus, it is theoretically possible for felt and hair to act as

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sound sources. But with these materials the vibration is so heavily damp-
ened that it does not persist long enough to be heard. In practice, then, at
least one of the two sound-generating bodies must be made of metal,
wood, or leather. For this reason, I will call these three materials primary
materials. In other words, metal, wood, and leather can interact with any
material, including themselves. On the other hand, neither of the two
remaining materials-hair and felt-ever collides either with itself or
with the other within Penderecki's system, but must always interact with
one of the materials that constitutes a potential sound source. A simple
matrix, shown in the following table (Figure 1), displays all possible
pairs of interacting materials.
Though inspired by Drobner's acoustics, Penderecki's system never-
theless goes one step further than Drobner. In Penderecki's timbre sys-
tem, it is of no importance whether metal, wood, and leather are rep-
resented by a vibrator or by an inciter, both colliding bodies being of
equal weight as primary materials. In this respect Penderecki-if he had
wanted-might have referred to the authority of the first father of physics,
Sir Isaac Newton: according to Newton's third rule of dynamics, if a
body A acts with some force on body B, body B acts with the same but
reciprocally directed force on body A. The same principle applies to bod-
ies acting on one another in the process of sound generation. Even if one
is accustomed to think that hitting a metal cymbal with a wooden stick
results only in the former emitting a sound, in reality what sounds is not
only the cymbal, but also the beater. One may generalize this conclusion
in the following way: if a given body can be a sound source-that is, if it
is made of one of the three materials capable of performing this function

vibrators
m w
inciters

m mm wm Im

w mw ww lw

1 ml wl 11

h mh wh lh
f mf wf If

Figure 1. Pairs of mater


of vibrators and inci

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1w i 0 ? o
.... f *
........ ..... .... ... 0 *
.... ..*. .. .. .... .... .

Figure 2. Pairs of materials after the redu

(m, w, 1)-then it becomes a sound source regardl


rubbed or plucked or itself hits, rubs or plucks. It
ial pairs "mw" and "wm," "ml" and "lm," as
repeated in the matrix above, may be reduced to s
of this reduction, twelve pairs of materials rema
pair indicates one type of sound generator, as we
characteristic of sounds generated by it.
As stated earlier, all the material categories ch
his timbre system occur among the traditional
symphonic orchestra. This does not by itself mea
phonic orchestra with its traditional set of instrum
ders the realization of that system practicable. O
to use the timbre system in concrete pieces, Pend
orchestral forces to serious changes. The timbr
an equal weighting of the three primary ma
leather-in performing the function of vibrators
predominates in the symphonic orchestra. One m
the number of stringed instruments (which consti
ventional orchestra) augmented by an assortmen
tams, vibraphones and celestas, to the much sm
branes of drums and timpani, and the almost in
rattles and wood blocks, to convince oneself of t
is there a greater diversity of metallic objects t
metallic objects also predominate in terms of s
this unequal proportion, it was necessary to enlar
the two remaining material categories: leather a
Beside adding a whole arsenal of percussive ins
tles (raganella), claves, guiro, xylorimba, wood b
and drums (casse di legno)-to augment the repr
bodies, the composer also employed several elem
ments (sound board, fingerboard, bridge, tailpie
more, Penderecki used non-musical equipment t

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stage, but that hitherto had never been exploited for sound production:
chairs and stands, which at the beginning of the 1960s were almost always
made of wood. To play on these new sound sources, the sticks and nuts
of bows were employed. Incidentally, it is worth noting that the selection
of new wooden accessories betokens a very pragmatic attitude of the com-
poser. Avoiding the cost that would inevitably result from inventing and
producing fanciful percussive tools, he managed to radically increase
the number of wooden bodies by using objects near at hand. Moreover,
these objects allowed him to diversify the timbre within the group of
stringed instruments, enabling him to employ this group separately. In-
deed, from among the pieces based on the timbre system, as many as
four-Threnody-To the Victims of Hiroshima, String Quartet No. 1,
Polymorphia, and Canon-are designed for strings alone.
Leather, as the third of the primary material categories, is supple-
mented first of all by instruments of non-European origin. Congos and
bongos stem from South-American popular music, while tom-toms
reached Poland along with jazz, about which the young Penderecki was
truly enthusiastic.4 Oftentimes the composer bids instrumentalists to play
these instruments with bare hands, which considerably enlarges the rep-
resentation of that material category (skin being understood as analogous
to leather). Hands and fingers serve also to play stringed instruments:
apart from the well-known pizzicato effect, the composer instructs play-
ers to rub, tap, or strike on sound boards and strings with the palm of the
hand or the fingertips.5
The invention of new instruments and accessories does not exhaust
the changes entailed by the timbre system. Apart from balancing the pri-
mary materials, it was necessary to obtain the appropriate combina-
tions-classes of sound generators-that could embrace all the classes
of timbres determined by the pairs of materials. And even a rich repre-
sentation of a given material did not by itself guarantee the existence
of all its possible combinations with other material categories. In this
respect the case of metal is exemplary. Whereas its combinations with
hair (mh) and felt (mf) existed among the traditional techniques of play-
ing orchestral instruments-the former as the arco playing of strings, the
latter as the striking of gongs, tam tams, or cymbals by soft, felt sticks-
sound generator consisting of two metal bodies hardly ever occurred.
Their only representative within a symphonic orchestra was a triangle hit
with a metal rod. The generator class "mm" thus had to be created by
combining several traditional metal accessories to form hitherto non-
existent pairs of vibrators and inciters. As a result of one such combina-
tion, an astounding sound generator arose: piano strings rubbed by a
cymbal. Another, no less surprising combination of a metal inciter with a
metal vibrator was achieved by agitating piano strings with a triangle rod,
the latter disconnected from its original instrument. A true revolution

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resulted, however, from the practice-derived from jazz-of playing
with metal brushes on suspended cymbals. These same brushes were also
employed by Penderecki to play gongs, tam tams, and tubular bells, and
even to play the strings of harps and pianos. With the aim of enlarging the
number of generators of the "mm" class, Penderecki introduced a type-
writer, creating a sensation during the first performances of the Fluores-
cences. As this quasi-musical metal instrument demonstrates, making up
a representation of an earlier nonexistent class of sound generators could
incidentally lead to an expansion of the set of orchestral instruments with
new accessories. Mostly, such cases issued from practical considerations,
as when the interaction of a certain form of inciter and a certain form of
vibrator could have been obtained on traditional instruments, but would
have damaged them in the process. In the class of generators under con-
sideration, rubbing two metal bodies against one another would scratch
their surfaces. Therefore, instead of costly percussive instruments, Pen-
derecki simply used a piece of iron rubbed with a file or sawed with a
hand saw. A saw can also serve to saw wood, in this way creating an addi-
tional generator of the "mw" class, but this entails the use of a disposable
piece of wood.
Although Penderecki took into account such practical matters when
inventing his new sound generators, orchestral musicians often disagreed
with the composer as to what was or what was not harmful for their instru-
ments. Characteristic is the technique of playing strings that originally
called for the instrumentalist to tap the sound board with the nut (+)-an
interaction of two wooden bodies (ww)-which Penderecki did not intend
to be harmful. However, the performers thought the technique would dam-
age the varnish covering their instruments (Erhardt 1975, 36). The com-
poser yielded and specified that the sound board could also be tapped with
fingertips. Therefore, in the scores of the earliest pieces based on the
timbre system-Threnody (published in 1961), Dimensions of Time and
Silence and Fluorescences (printed in 1962), as well as the String Quar-
tet No. 1 (issued for the first time in 1963)-this effect is described as
"tapping the body of the instrument with the nut or finger-tips." Evidently,
musicians preferred the latter possibility, and thus in Polymorphia (issued
at the end of 1963), and Canon (whose score was published as late as
1974), "tapping the sound board with fingertips" constitutes the sole way
of performing this effect indicated by the composer. As a result of this
compromise between the composer and the performers, a generator was
included among the class "ww" of sound generators which in reality did
not at all belong to it.
In light of the above discussion, it is clear that the notion of a musical
instrument is useless-not to mention anachronistic-in Penderecki's
pieces based on the timbre system. Because most of the instruments-
except for some simple percussive tools-consist of a number of con-

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stituent parts, with each part able to interact with a number of inciters,
every instrument becomes the basis for several different sound genera-
tors, which, in addition, may represent different classes. This has an
obvious effect on the grouping of instruments, that is, on the orchestra-
tion. In contradistinction to traditional orchestration, in which every in-
strument is ascribed a certain timbral quality, here one and the same
instrument can be used in a number of different ways and cooperate with
several different classes of sound generators in different musical con-
texts--depending on which of its elements is employed as a sound source.
This issue has in the past been touched upon by musical critics who
applied the term "percussive effects" to some playing techniques on
stringed instruments.6 But this term is unsatisfactory. For, if the classifi-
cation of instruments depends on their vibrators-and this is actually the
basic criterion from Sachs and Hornbostel up to Drobner-then a violin
tapped on with the nut of a bow or with the fingertips does not so much
produce a percussive effect, but rather it becomes a percussive instrument:
a wooden idiophone in this instance. Similarly, a wind instrument that is
not blown but tapped with stops or pistons is not an aerophone but a metal
idiophone. This last "percussive effect" occurs in Fluorescences as a rep-
resentative of class "mm," and it is the only instance of winds in Pen-
derecki's pieces based on the timbre system. Parenthetically, the absence
of aerophones from other Penderecki scores written in the early 1960s
also results from the system. Since its underlying material categories are
all solid bodies, blown air-the proper vibrator of wind instruments-
constitutes no category in the framework of this system. From here it fol-
lows that sounds emitted by the traditionally played woodwinds and brass
have-from the viewpoint of Penderecki's timbre system-a neutral,
"transparent" value. That they occur in Fluorescences is most likely due
to the circumstances of its commissioning. The piece was commissioned
by the Sinfonie-Orchester des Stidwestfunks, Baden-Baden. If Pende-
recki had used the wind section exclusively for snapping stops and pis-
tons, he would have exposed himself to the commissioner's displeasure
while the musical critics would-in the best case-have suspected him
of a very peculiar sense of humor.
Penderecki's invention of new sound generators-and thereby new
timbres-was thus not a manifestation of extravagance by the composer.
It was not intended merely to shock the audience, nor did it spring from
an exuberant image of sound. Conversely, the new timbres were not-at
least originally-to serve some vague "new expression."7 If Penderecki
introduced in his pieces new quasi-musical instruments, unusual combi-
nations of traditional musical accessories, or any previously unknown
techniques of sound articulation, he did so in terms of his system. With-
out them, the system would remain merely an intellectual construct de-
void of any possible musical realization. Seen from this angle, the orches-

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trations, and instrumental techniques Penderecki employed in the early
1960s depart from traditional ones in the same way as the timbre system
based on the material categories metal-wood-leather departs from the tra-
ditional partition of the orchestra into strings, winds and percussion. At
this point, one must also reject the suggestions formulated by some crit-
ics who claimed that, in Penderecki's early output, the "new" effects are
opposed to the "old," traditional ones. Such an opposition finds justifica-
tion neither in the timbral organization of concrete pieces nor in the com-
ments of the composer himself. On the contrary, Penderecki's statements
make it clear that the "history" of a given generator was entirely inessen-
tial.8 In the framework of his timbre system, both traditional and non-tra-
ditional sound generators are equivalent representatives of classes fixed
by material pairs. As in the case of the periodic table of Mendeleev, where
classification according to the atomic mass disclosed places for new, not
yet discovered elements, Penderecki's system revealed new niches which
could be filled with distinctive timbres. Thus, the system helped stimu-
late his discoveries.

II. Morphology

Let us turn from the problems of the practical realization of the tim-
bre system to the main subject of this article, a reconstruction of the sys-
tem itself. As explained earlier, the material pairs shown in Figure 2 fix
classes of timbres represented by individual generators and-what for
Penderecki is one and the same thing-by the individual sounds they
generate. But individual sounds are secondary in Penderecki's music. In
his pieces based on the timbre system the elementary unit is a set of
sounds, which I will call a segment. Sound phenomena contained in one
timbral segment can be identical or different, in the sense that they are
generated by collisions of bodies representing identical or different pairs
of materials. If all sounds are produced in the same way, that is, through
interactions of the same two materials, then the timbre of a segment will
be covered by only one material pair. Yet such "monochromatic" seg-
ments occur comparatively rarely. Much more frequent are segments
whose component sounds belong to several different classes. How can
their overall, resultant timbres be determined?
The initial analytical procedure in such cases is an enumeration of all
the material pairs producing the sounds of these segments. At this stage
of the description of a single segment, a given material can occur several
times as a component of different pairs. This is so because bodies repre-
senting one material category can interact with bodies made of either the
same or different materials, in this way producing sound phenomena that
differ in timbre. From this it follows that different materials may vary as
to the number of occurrences in a segment description. Of course, the

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mt
w *i o *

- ~?~~~~~~~-~-r- - - ----- --- . ................. ..........-----?--- -- -------

him
. . . . . .

.. . .

Fig

com
que
seg
how
leat
just
The
a "common denominator search." This search is easiest and most obvious
when all pairs belonging to a given segment form different conjunctions
with one primary material. The latter, which occurs in all pairs and in this
way forms their "common denominator," is the main material for the seg-
ment. Such a segment thus has only one main material (Figure 3). If no
single primary material constitutes a common denominator of all the
pairs within a segment, one has to search for the common denominator
of the greatest number of pairs within this segment, and then for the com-
mon denominator of the remaining pairs. If such a denominator as a pri-
mary material does exist, the segment has two main materials, and the
search procedure ends (Figure 4). However, if a common denominator
still cannot be found within the group of remaining pairs, one has to
repeat the procedure: first find the common denominator of the greatest
number of pairs, and then the common denominator of the last remaining
group. In such a case, the segment has three main materials (metal, wood

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.... .m ........ ................. ... ......... ..
w

S.......................
Sf i
S............. ....

1....

if?

h?

Figure 4. Seg

and leather), th
the richest, tho
Needless to say,
occur in a segm
no more mater
stage of the ab
pen that two or
same number o
trarily and the
not affect the
same irrespectiv
It is, however, p
lytical procedu
this is the case,
ing sound gener
ically by only o
dure for the ma
situation arises w
plication of the
grouping with h
mary material,
more complicat
sists of two dif

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als can constitute a sound source, they are of equal value in determining
the timbre of a segment, irrespective of which one excites (inciter) and
which one is excited (vibrator) in a given process of sound generation.
Hence, if a segment containing such a pair is considered as an isolated
unit, or if in the given musical context it is separated by a general pause
from the preceding and following segments, both primary materials of
the pair would have to be interpreted as its main materials. Yet this almost
never happens in Penderecki's sonoristic pieces. Every segment usually
constitutes a link in a chain whose perception is subject to the Gestalt law
of good continuation (Koffka 1935; for good continuation in music see
Meyer 1956, 83-127). As applied to syntactical units of Penderecki's
timbre system, this law means that, in terms of the anticipation of future
events, the listener tends to perceive, or "continue," the main material of
a preceding segment in the following segments as long as it is possible to
do so. On the other hand, orientation toward past events allows reinter-
pretation of the preceding segment, such that the listener discerns in it the
origins of the timbre quality that is only established as a main material in
the current segment. Thus in an uncertain situation, such as that which
arises in the case of one-pair segments, there is a tendency to perceive a
segment's timbre under the influence of adjacent segments and, conse-
quently, to prefer as the main material the one that predominates in the
preceding and/or following segment (Figures 6a and 6b). Thus both pri-
mary materials of a single pair appear to be evenly balanced as main

-????--- ?I---?-- ??---------- ... .

': 1 i . . . . . . . . . . ... . .. . . .. . . . ............


m

hi-- -- - - - -- - 4 . . . . . . .! . . . . . . ... . .... . . ... . . .

.............................

Figure 5. Segment with three main materials

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(a>;?????????? ???--?--------------------- --?

w w

S- -

(b) m.
w

I I

Figure 6. One-pair segment with one main material. This material


can be metal (a) or wood (b), depending on the context of
adjacent segments

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materials only if they are equally marked as main in the adjacent seg-
ments (Figure 7a), or if neither of them occurs among main materials of
either the preceding or the following segment (Figure 7b).
In light of the above remarks it seems clear that the complete defini-
tion of a timbre segment, as an elementary syntactical unit of Pen-
derecki's timbre system, requires both the specification of all materials
involved in the generation of its component sounds, and the identification
of those which function as main materials. According to these stipula-
tions, any two timbre segments are different if they vary in either or both
of those two constitutive aspects. Conversely, if no difference in either
respect occurs, they then form the same segment in two different realiza-
tions. It is noteworthy that, as with the above-discussed examples, seg-
ments consisting of the same set of pairs, and hence identical as to their
preliminary material description, can appear to be different in the sense
just stated when put into different musical contexts, because of differ-
ences in their main materials. On the other hand, segments consisting of
different sets of material pairs may appear to be two realizations of the
same timbre segment, if the sums of all their material categories and of
the main materials are identical. For the timbre segment as an abstract
syntactical unit, differences in its concrete realization are insignificant so
long as all the materials, including the main materials, remain the same
across various realizations.

III. Syntax

The timbre system based on material categories rules not only the
inventory of the elementary units (segments) that determine the mor-
phology of timbre in Penderecki's early output, but also its syntax, that is,
the succession of segments over the course of a piece. In its essence, this
course is formed by a play of timbral oppositions between metal, wood
and leather as primary materials. First, material categories singled out in
a given piece as opposing timbral qualities may be contrasted by way of
a direct juxtaposition of segments whose main materials constitute poles
of opposition. For instance, a segment whose main material is wood may
come directly after a segment exhibiting a metallic timbre. In such a case,
a presentation of a timbral opposition will happen. Secondly, an opposi-
tion may be submitted to mediation, that is, a soft, gradual change form-
ing a transition from one timbral extreme to the other. Segments of op-
posing main timbres are in this case separated by one or more segments
whose main material is either: (1) neutral in relation to the opposition,
standing outside the material opposition operative in a piece (leather in
the case given); (2) a sum of the opposing materials; or (3) a sum of all
three primary materials. Other types of transition result from varying
temporal relations between segments. Segments need not form a simple

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(a)
m
w

1I
ff
(b) hh
w

,ii ...

ww

fl. ....
ff

Figure 7. One-pair segment with two main materials, metal and wood,
in two different contexts such that these materials are contained (a) or
are not contained (b) among main materials of the adjacent segments

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succession; they may also overlap or penetrate one another. Interpenetra-
tion of segments happens when a segment gradually decays and the sub-
sequent segment increases in loudness until it completely dominates the
sound field. This may be achieved by dynamics or orchestration: by
gradually lessening the number of sound events belonging to a segment
and adding events belonging to the following one. Interpenetration is
thus a "soft" overlapping of segments. Still more subtle timbral transi-
tions are possible. It must be kept in mind that the sound color of a seg-
ment is determined not exclusively by main materials, but bears the
stamp of all the material categories participating in the sound generation
processes. Thus, before a given material is established as having the sta-
tus of a main material, it may already occur among the material cate-
gories of the preceding segment. In turn, a material which ceases to func-
tion as a main material may be preserved in later segments, to recall the
previously dominant timbre. Such procedures result, respectively, in
anticipation or continuation of a main material, and are important for the
smoothness of a succession in terms of the law of good continuation.
The very presentation of a main material may be more or less sugges-
tive. Obviously, the main material will appear with the greatest force and
brightness if it constitutes the only material of a given timbre segment, as
in the case of a sound generator constituting a reduplication of the same
material (for example, "mm" represented by gongs, cymbals, and piano
strings played with wire brushes). On the other hand, the introduction of
other materials, which combine with the main material category, will
result at the same time in a dimming of the latter's characteristic timbre.
Of course, both "dimming" and "brightening" of the main timbre can pro-
ceed either gradually as a succession of slight changes or abruptly by
juxtaposition of contrasting segments. It is noteworthy that the afore-
mentioned possibilities of timbre modulation, though conditioned by the
timbre system, are not rigorously governed by it. Rather, they are subject
to free choices made by the composer and express his strategy-some
times tending to sharp, contrasting juxtapositions, at others to soft tran-
sitions and nuances. It is in the realm of strategy, not of system, that one
can explain the disparity between the Dimensions of Time and Silence,
operating with a pastel palette of color nuances and penetrations, and
the glaring Fluorescences. The very choice of a material opposition for a
given piece, which marks the poles of its timbral spectrum, is also a mat-
ter of compositional strategy.
As an illustration of the above discussion, let us consider Polymor-
phia, the most outstanding of Penderecki's early pieces.9 This composi-
tion of classical proportions is based on an opposition marked by the
material categories of metal and wood. The analysis of the timbral course
traced by Polymorphia is summed up in the diagram shown in Figure 8.

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U 2~(3~Y(3) (3 403 C4

i (3) I
i2 w
3 4 4 I
(1
he
,. n ii e
|(2(~3)~U (
W

Figure 8. The timbr

Felt is not included in


which is written exclus

1-24 (mh): traditional


22 continued by vio
22-32 (mw, ml): strik
dita between bridge
32-37 (ml): pizzicato i
remaining instrumen
38-40 (wm, wl): string
ing technique combin
incited at the same t
strings (wm);
39-42 (wm, wl, ww): p
tinued in contrabass
by taps on the sound
stand with the bow o
42-45 (ml, ww, wm):

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tapped with the bow or the chair with the nut, legno battuto play
between bridge and tailpiece, and strings pizzicato;
44-67 (mh): return to the typical arco articulation. Apart from the
traditional way of playing strings before the bridge, in rehearsal
numbers 63-64 the strings are bowed between bridge and tail-
piece (which represents the same material pair), and the bridge
and tailpiece are bowed as well, the latter treated by Penderecki
as a substitute for the former technique in the low register of cel-
los and contrabasses.

Observe that in the course of Polymorphia segments usually overlap. The


simple succession of consecutive timbre segments happens just once: in
rehearsal number 38, when the pizzicato play gives way to percussive
effects. At this moment the opposition between metal and wood-the
polar timbres of the piece-is presented. The same opposition is featured
in other early pieces written for strings alone. (Leather only occurs as a
pole of a material opposition in orchestral works including a large per-
cussion section. Here, in Polymorphia, it never plays the role of a main
material. Apparently, in the framework of a string orchestra the composer
could not completely balance all the individual material categories.)
Mediation of the marked opposition is carried out in the course of return-
ing to the initial timbre through the joint occurrence of wood and metal
as the main materials of the same segment (42-45). In this way the tim-
bral course of the Polymorphia assumes a three-part, ABA form.

The timbre system, whose rules are presented briefly in this article,
governs the organization of sound color in eight pieces of Krzysztof Pen-
derecki: Anaklasis for 42 strings and percussion (1959-60), Threnody-
To the Victims of Hiroshima for 52 strings (1960), String Quartet No. 1
(1960), Dimensions of Time and Silence for mixed choir, strings and per-
cussion (1960-61), Fonogrammi for flute and chamber orchestra (1961),
Polymorphia for 48 strings (1961), Fluorescences for orchestra (1962),
and Canon for string orchestra and tape (1962). It was thus employed by
Penderecki for just three years: from 1960 until 1962. Beginning with the
St. Luke's Passion (1963-66), and in later works, the composer abandoned
this system-most likely for rather prosaic reasons. Since Anaklasis,
Dimensions and Fluorescences all required large groups of percussion-
including several instruments rare within the orchestra, but indispensable
for articulating the basic material categories-they were prohibitively
expensive and at times logistically impractical to perform. In turn, atyp-
ical techniques of playing instruments frightened conventional perform-

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ers, which very often led to sharp conflicts, protests, or even mutinies of
orchestras. One needs only to mention the famous scandal during the Fif-
teenth Music Festival in Venice, when-in spite of Bruno Maderna's per-
suasion-the renowned orchestra RAI-Radiotelevisione Italiano refused
to play Threnody. Such events created a climate unsympathetic to Pen-
derecki's early scores and discouraged frequent performance. Renuncia-
tion of the timbre system, though resulting in the loss of a strict control
over sound color, solved all these problems and provided the composer
easier access to the musical market.
With Penderecki's abandonment of the timbre system, the properly
sonoristic period of his output ends and a late sonorism begins. In the lat-
ter period-in addition to a number of famous instrumental scores such
as De natura sonoris I (1966) and De natura sonoris H (1970), Sonata
for cello and orchestra (1964), Capriccio for oboe and strings (1965),
Partita for harpsichord and chamber ensemble (1971-72) or the First
Symphony (1972-73)--Penderecki also composed operas, oratorios, and
other works destined for large vocal-instrumental forces: The Devils of
Loudun (1968-69), Dies Irae (1967), the diptych Utrenia consisting of
The Entombment of Christ (1969-70) and The Resurrection (1970-71),
Cosmogony (1970), Canticum canticorum (1970-73), and Magnifi-
cat (1973-74). The renunciation of the timbre system led to a revaluation
of orchestration and instrumental techniques. The composition charac-
teristic of a traditional symphonic orchestra is restored, with its predom-
inant string section plus a competing group of winds. The sudden pro-
motion of wind instruments, hardly utilized in the preceding period but
once again taking over the role of the second most important orchestral
section, is evidenced by the score of De natura sonoris II, in which a
leading role is performed by the brass. In turn, the percussion, exploited
so extensively from Anaklasis until Fluorescences, now recedes into the
background; even if still given important tasks in individual pieces, it is
employed more sparingly than before. The composer's recourse to atyp-
ical sound articulation is also much more sparing.
Despite all these differences, the pieces belonging to the period of late
sonorism are closely connected with the earlier sonoristic output thanks
to another, more basic system, which constitutes the other part of Pender-
ecki's compositional technique conceived at the beginning of the 1960s.
That system, complementary to the timbre system, concerns the organi-
zation of the three remaining parameters of sound perception-pitch,
loudness, and time-which in turn governs the other characteristic of seg-
ments-their texture-and results in a number of effects typical for Pen-
derecki, especially clusters and glissandi. The basic system, which is a
topic of another study (Mirka 2000),1o turns out to be more persistent
in Penderecki's output: it makes for the stylistic unity of the sonoristic
period before and after the Passion, and its abandonment-in the Awak-

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ening of Jacob (1974)--definitively closes the whole period. True, in his
post-sonoristic output Penderecki does not completely renounce the con-
quests of sonorism. But even though one occasionally finds glissandi and
non-traditional playing techniques in his later scores, they occur sepa-
rately from their original basis: not as an indispensable means for the
realization of systemic assumptions, but rather as interesting sound
effects once invented and, though still remaining at the composer's dis-
posal, already relating to a different musical world.

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NOTES

1. To clarify the theoretical claims of my article, it may be necessary to emphasize


that, rather than offering one of several possible hypothetical theories about the
timbral organization of Penderecki's works from 1960-62, it provides a recon-
struction of the compositional system he employed. The full system, presented
broadly in my doctoral dissertation (Mirka 1997), consists of two halves called
respectively the basic system and the timbre system. Having elaborated upon my
reconstruction, I consulted with Penderecki in April 1995, who confirmed via per-
sonal communication that it corresponds with the procedures he actually used in
the process of composition.
2. The first to use this term was J6zef M. Chominiski. He later gave a broad theoret-
ical description of what he called the "sonoristic regulation of musical form,"
which he extended onto any sort of contemporary music containing non-tradi-
tional means of sound production (Chomitiski and Wilkowska-Chominiska 1983,
126-153). More specifically, the noun "sonorism" and the adjective "sonoristic"
are used in Polish musicological writings for the avant-garde sound-mass music
of the 1960s that was composed by Penderecki, as well as Wojciech Kilar, Hen-
ryk Mikolaj G6recki, Witold Szalonek and others.
3. As is well known, in the construction of contemporary instruments natural mate-
rials have frequently been replaced by synthetic substances, especially in the case
of percussion instruments. But this process of technological progress was not as
advanced in the early 1960s. It is irrelevant for Penderecki's timbre system as long
as the synthetic materials preserve the acoustical properties of natural materials.
4. Hardly anyone remembers that the Polish premiere of Anaklasis took place during
"Jazz Jamboree," the most important Polish festival of jazz music organized in
Warsaw to this day. Penderecki's interest in jazz is evinced also by Actions for
free-jazz orchestra, composed a few years later (1971).
5. The effects meant here include striking the strings with the palm of the hand sul
tasto, tapping the sound board with the fingertips, rubbing the sound board with
the open hand, and tapping the strings between bridge and tailpiece with the fin-
gers (con dita).
6. This term was used for the first time by Marian Wallek-Walewski in his article "W
kregu poszukiwani materialowych. Krzysztof Penderecki" (1960). This article was
intended as the introduction to a study, Partytura wsp6iczesna (A Contemporary
Score), that he was to write together with Krzysztof Penderecki-a study which
never appeared. Tadeusz Zieliniski writes extensively about many such "percussive
effects" in his articles of the 1960s (Zieliniski 1961, 1962, 1964, 1966, 1968).
7. Incidentally, it is worth stressing that Penderecki--contrary to his most fervent
apologists-was and still remains skeptical about the expressive capacities of
music. In a TV interview with Alicja Resich-Modliliska, 1995, the composer said:
"Music cannot express anything. Of course, one can give some dedication or title,
but that is it. Music is abstract and ideal, it boils down to structures and forms."
8. Very characteristic in this respect is the composer's utterance during the interview
given to Tadeusz A. Zieliniski, first published in Swedish magazine Nutida Musik,
then reprinted in the Polish Ruch Muzyczny. Challenged about his innovative ways
of treating traditional musical instruments, he responded: "Thus you also yield to

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illusion...; you pay attention only to new elements, although in my pieces-
besides new articulatory means-there are also several older ones" (Zieliniski 1963,
8). He explained the relation of the new sound effects to traditional timbres in the
following way: "Occasional non-instrumental noises only supplement the orches-
tral timbre as coloristic retouching and are adjusted to that orchestral timbre." In
the course of a discussion closing the seminar on his output, organized in 1975 in
Krak6w, the composer stated the same idea even more laconically: "For me, there
has never existed any difference between noise and a sound [of definite pitch]"
([Discussion] 1976: 46). These two notions were used-imprecisely-at the time
as synonyms of sounds produced in a new and traditional way, respectively.
9. In my dissertation (Mirka 1997) the reader will find further analyses of full com-
positions using the terms presented in this article: Anaklasis (186-188), Dimen-
sions of Time and Silence (205-208), String Quartet No. 1 (226-228), Fluores-
cences (256-259), Canon (269-270).
10. For a detailed discussion of both the basic system and the timbre system, see Mirka
1997. Penderecki's use of the basic system in St. Luke's Passion, as well as its sym-
bolic and expressive significance in that composition, is discussed in Mirka 2002.

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