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BOZHIKOVA, M. Vassil Kaznadjiev, Sofia, 1999, pp. 440.

Note: I express my special gratitude to:
- The  “Pro Helvetia” Swiss Foundation for Culture and to its representatives in Sofia and Zurich, owing to whose decisive and timely assistance the present monograph is published.

- The Center for Music and Dance with the Ministry of Culture whose officers were the first to support the publication of the book.

- Gega New LTD and personally to its Managing Director, Mrs. Juliana Marinova, for the fine gesture to the artist to whom the present publication is dedicated.

SUMMARY

This book is the first monographic publication about Vassil Kazandjiev (b. 1934), a composer and conductor with great contribution for the Bulgarian music, a prominent artist with an individual and characteristic stand, who has asserted his independence, uniqueness and freedom in the art of music.
From the very beginning he studied with the most outstanding Bulgarian creative figures, composer and conductor Konstantin Iliev, conductor Dobrin Petkov, composer Pancho Vladigerov (during the years of his study at the Academy of Music in Sofia, 1952-1957). He began his career as conductor at the Sofia National Opera (since 1957) where he covered both classical and modern repertoire. Since 1960 he also has worked as lecturer at the State Academy of Music and between 1962 and 1977 he directed the then newly established Sofia Chamber Orchestra renamed in 1972 as “Sofia Soloists”. Kazandjiev is to be credited for the style and prestige of the chamber formation. Together with the “Sofia Soloists” he toured extensively throughout Europe, in the USA and Japan, made numerous recordings for “Harmonia Mundi”, “Kibaton”, “Balkanton”, etc., premiered over 100 Bulgarian works, the greater part of which were commissioned by the ensemble. It was with the Soloists that he won the first prize at the International Festival of Chamber Orchestra in Bayreuth (1966) and the first prize at the Music Biennale in Zagreb (1967). Kazandjiev is also holder of numerous national distinctions for composition and conducting.
The monograph includes voluminous research material from Kazandjiev’s meetings in the 1988-99 period with composer Lazar Nikolov (b. 1922); violinist Prof. Boyan Lechev (b. 1928); pianist and composer Tryphon Silyanovsky (b. 1924); jazz-pianist and composer Miltcho Leviev (b. 1937); pianist Ivan Drenikov (b. 1945); violoncellist Prof. Ventseslav Nikolov (b.1945); conductor Prof. Ivan Bakalov; with pianist and organist Theo Moussev, with Rossen Milanov, conductor of the Chicago Youth Symphony and Pavel Balev, Kazandjiev’s students.
The work is structured on several layers: historical and theoretic material, Kazandjiev’s statements on specific issues, his colleagues’ opinion of his musical output. The analyses of the compositions in terms of aspect and detail depend on the character of each specific work.
The authors text and Kazandjiev’s statements go in parallel with the opinion of other musicians, the composers colleagues and friends, joining them on certain matters. Short fragments from them ate quoted.
 “Vassil Kazandjiev is one of the most pronounced composers I have had personal contact with. I place him among my most important teachers!
In this connection I shall not forget the following incident. In the 1960 he included in one of his concerts as guest conductor of the Sofia Philharmonic my "Little Suite for Orchestra". Before the rehearsals he came home to discuss some details. On noticing that in the transition from the third to the fourth movement there was some emptiness in the texture against the background of a horn passage he suggested a brilliant idea: to put at this place the main motive of the first movement in the bassoon part in a bitonal relation. To the present moment this has been my favorite place in the whole piece.
 Vasko is a rare combination of a serious person of great capacity and discipline, on the one hand, and phenomenal sense of humor, on the other hand. (Leviev 1998)

He has always been extremely precise. He chased and completed to the fullest extent his intentions. And with his intelligence and tenacity both as conductor and composer he worked out most precisely the details of a composition. And this is of great importance for me. Though only a detail, the detail is of great significance for the whole, which is but a collection of details. My works have been performed under the baton of many conductors, still I am most at ease when Vassil is conducting as, along with his other qualities, his life is very clear, very precise. To put it in a nutshell, Vassil is a vivid personality who has left and will continue to leave his trace in Bulgaria's art of composition and performing (Nikolov 1994).

In order to be an art, an art should possess motion, direction, trend; it should contrast and include all these within itself. This is what he was very successful in doing.
 Vasko is expressive. He is able to understand those situations, the late Romantic ones. (Silyanovski 1994)

I. SONORAL SYSTEM
Says Vassil Kazandjiev: “I do not work according a definite system. I wouldn't limit myself to a given doctrine or a modal system. Especially in the last 10-15 years. In no case do I aim at a specific tonal harmony. On principle, in all my periods I have acted intuitively and have used various devices, tonal included. According to the occasion and the situation.
I still consider that my most original work is "The Living Icons". It is the most independent, the least influenced, the purest in terms of style and ideas. My Third Symphony also contains a biographical moment, but it is related to the contrast of states which I have in my mind, in my psyche, rather than to my life in general. The movements of the symphony show the final points of these states: the first movement is dynamic, the second, static, the third is lively, with a tempestuous release of energy, it took me the longest to write. I think that the three of them, independent of each other both in terms of content and mood, characterize me as a personality.
When composing I have no specific idea about the intervals. I imagine the music as a spatial idea. I can imagine a subito p, sforzando or crescendo as an outburst of a super-nova star which shrinks after that but before turning into a black hole gradually begins emitting radiance... I have always imagined orchestral sonority as situated in space rather than in time. Like different planes or geometrical figures, which meet, clash, go astray and burst out.”

Kazandjiev’s sonoral system borrows forms from the precise serialization and the principle of uniqueness and distinctiveness of the structural units, on the one hand, and from the occasional search of equivalence in the tonal correlation, on the other hand.
The participation of tones has not only a phonic meaning but also determines, to some extent, the form and duration of the sonoral block (by including all the twelve tones or part of them). This principle of construction of the sonoral blocks is also repeated on a compositional level. His sonoral system can be compared to the principle of entropy and independence of the blocks. The principles of entropy and potential mobility (a possibility to re-plan the blocks, typical of the serial organization) are a characteristic feature of his style.
Kazandjiev’s sonoral technique (on textural and syntactical level, as  material) is considered according to the following parameters:
 1. Sound
 2. Horizontal and vertical complexes
 3. Texture
 4. Functionality and links.
Kazandjiev’s sonoral system is based on the following sound idiom:
1. The separate tone has a dual meaning. With its pitch position the tone functions in the modal complexes or in the filling of the pointillist field and the chromatic scale. In other cases, the tone has the meaning of a specific color, with a register, timbre, articulation, stroke, dynamics of its own - that is why complete tonal complexes are accepted with their phonic and sound semantic meaning, rather than with their interval structure. From them, we could mention the “bell sound” so frequently used by Kazandjiev, one of the sound symbols of which are the fourth and fifth chords (possibly with added tones).
2. “Organic colour”. This is the color incidental to each interval and chord combination.
3. Reversed idiom - in order to expand the range of sound units, the author utilizes different non idiomatic instrumental sounds parallel to the chromatic scale: by means of specific techniques of sound production, micro-chromaticism, non-specific registers, instrumental sounds.
4. The timbre imitations, adaptation of the instruments timbre and the manner of sound production to the desired sound effect, are also a non idiomatic device in the sonoral technique related to the specific characteristics of the instruments.
5. The “color of movement” is also a device for sound transformation. This is one of the devices Kazandjiev resorts to on very rare occasions only. This timbre allusion denotes a specific imagery; it is associated with the feeling of tragedy (used in separate episodes of “Apocalypse”, “The Living Icons”, as well as in the beginning of “Poco a poco”)
6. Synthetic color, macro tones, “timbre sound” are generalizing definitions of a sound unit which is a result of the fusion of all expressive parameters, characterized by compactness and textural volume. The sound and timbre homogeneity or heterogeneity can be completed by opposed alea and metrically organized layers (Second Symphony, 3rd movement).

Complexes
A. Horizontal structures
The working out of the horizontal structures, except for the cases when they do not determine the texture, takes them out of the context in which their sound content has a meaning. And still, in order to clarify their function in the sound block, their consideration on a morphological level is necessary. The sonoral material can be reduced to the following spatial forms (cf. Makligin 1985: 100):
ONE PART FORMS Point
    Dispersion
    Line
MANY PART FORMS Spot
    Stream
    Layer
Other criteria are introduced in the characterization of the forms: in terms of articulation, melody, intervals. After planning the specific material, its arrangement and the criteria for this are chosen according to the sound and forms which the material offers.
B. Vertical structures
The harmonic combinations in Kazandjiev’s music arise as a result of the following:
 1. Establishing a synchrony between the parts;
 2. Imitation of patterns, figures, timbres;
 3. Participation in a common sonorous space;
 4. Linear harmony;
 5. Unification on the basis of twelve-tone field of chord.
Functionality and links
The new functionality in Kazandjiev’s music shows definitely an opposing reconsideration of the main functions of the whole and the positioning of opposite functional accents towards the supposed classical forms of “stable” and “unstable”. The timbre and textural stasis which would suggest stability in a traditional composition in Kazandjiev’s sonoral system can express accumulated energy, stimulus for movement and, vice versa, the finale - in ‘free improvisation’ so characteristic of him, the last stage of aleatoric participation, of lack of synchrony, of definiteness, disagreement, “over ensemble dissonance” - performs the function of conclusion.
 In every composition of his Kazandjiev “encloses” specific sound space and demonstrates both being into it and mental and sound nullification of its boundaries. His leaving the limited space is stable and normative and the static's is unstable and requires overcoming.
 These functional relations are active in part of Kazandjiev’s works. On rare occasions (“Apocalypse”, Piano Quintet) the quiet cadences, also presented as a sort of half expressed statements on a different plane, have final function.
 In the conditions of the sonoral field even the consonance does not bear the feeling of functionality. The C-major triad in the climax of “Apocalypse” is perceived not as a “tonic solution” of the non tempered instability but rather as the lowest degree of tension; it is perceived with its colouristic value, rather than with its functional one.
 Functional differentiation of main and secondary, leading line and “bundle” or background, outlined timbre and uniform sound mass, etc., can arise on the textural level as well.
 In “Dialogues” the function of a theme is acquired by a specific motive which is not constant in sound content but is stable in its direction of movement.
 The role of a central element in the sonoral system is acquired by completely different forms in comparison with other systems. As in every sonoral composition the syntax has been individualized, the centering moment can be found even outside the sound system. With Kazandjiev it is born by an idea postulate for the organization of the material. The composer starts from a specific idea, maintained throughout the complete work, adapting the sound material according to the idea, e.g. illumination, impulse, bell chime, poco a poco, reflections, dialogues, cases in which the central element is a textural unit, a three-dimensional sign, a rhetoric figure.
 On a compositional level in Kazandjiev’s works there are active two hierarchical principles which observe a specific system of connection: it can be performed through addition or mutation. In the first case forms of static blocks of equal function are formed (“Impulses”, the second movement of the Wind Quintet, Second Symphony, etc.), creating “plane hierarchy” in which the organization of the whole “number of subsystems can be infinitely big” (Meyer 1967: 310). (It should be noted that the variations from the epochs of Baroque and early classicism as well as the rondo and the ritornello forms are based on hierarchy of this type; this is a fact bringing evidence to the closeness of the two epochs.) In the second case, modulating, continual and directed forms are formed gradually (e.g. “Apocalypse”, “Illuminations”, the first movement of Third Symphony, etc.) in which the tendency for differentiation is weaker and is achieved mainly through textural means, through elimination of caesuras concurrent in all parts (this type is defined by L. Meyer as an “intricate” or spiral like” hierarchy).

II. MODALITY
1. Modality - organization and stylization
The inclusion of modality as one of the earliest modal forms completes Kazandjiev’s compositional system. The existing link between the two types of organization does not originate only from their parallel or close historical direction but also from the functioning of the systems in Kazandjiev’s music through one another. The modes are treated as an element of the sonoral system and as a necessary color at a certain moment; they serve as an onomatopoeic device, as a means for the creation and imitation of a type of imagery (e.g. in the characteristic form of bell sonorities), for depicting a given historical epoch through a sound atmosphere or of genres and techniques of music making (e.g. reconstruction of the medieval or folk musical expression). Together with this the modal organization is presented in specific forms - poli-modality, modal variability, “mode without scale” (term of Alexiev, 1986), a whole tone trichord or tetrachord whose selection is grounded on the sonoral moment. Both methods in Kazandjiev’s system of composition are used as a means of stylistic presentation.
 The types of modal technique are in close connection and relation not only with the sonoral system but also with the twelve-tone technique: the modal changeability and poli-modality determine a common twelve tonal space.
 The modal organization in Kazandjiev’s music is an important component in his compositional system. It is directed to the recreation and stylization of the Bulgarian musical tradition, of folk and church Slavonic music, sound atmosphere, instrumental timbres, genres, melodic, intonation, form determining, etc. This is carried out in the following forms of the modal scale:
 1. THEME - IMAGE -repeated several times (like the theme from the first movement of “The Living Icons”).
 2. SCALE - designed for textural complementarily in a texture of melodies with a specific color, a component of an overall sound field (e.g. parts I - IV of “The Living Icons”), or scales constructing a complete twelve-tone field on the principle of complementing (3rd movement “C” of Second Quartet).
 3. MODE - which, together with its derivative variants, structures the overall texture of the work (the whole tone tetrachord from “Psalms and Rituals”).
 4. MODAL FORMULAE - free and independent of one another or from a common scale system which constantly metabolize (“Pictures from Bulgaria”, parts 1 and 4).
 The forms of modality determine its functions in Kazandjiev’s compositional system: colouristic (as an element of his sonoral technique), modal and form determining.
2. Sonoral function of the mode
 The mode with Kazandjiev is a kind of sonoral substance which can appear in three specific contents:
 a) with tones from the tempered scale;
 b) with the participation of micro-chromaticism;
 c) with the participation of ecmelics (“mode without scale”).
 The mode is “deindividualised” in the sonoral texture; it represents a line without an independent melodic and modal meaning, a part of a sonoral group, a kind of “modal imitation”. A specific type of sonority is stylized through a modally organized group: of a folk instrument, chime of bells, a song genre (e.g. No. 54 from part 1 of “The Living Icons”).
3. System determining modal function
 “Psalms and Rituals” are written in this modal technique in which the mode is the source of scale versions. The metabola is the main form for expansion of the modi. The total organization on modi has subjected to itself the initial sonoral block: it has been written in “mode without scale” consisting  of six sonoral articulation units, like models in an aleatorically organized texture. Both the horizontal and vertical modal organization of this ecmelic episode has been transferred to the whole work. Through mutations (the first stage and addition of subtonic tone) the whole tone tetrachord produces its variants - major, Eolian.
The following kinds of modal techniques are observed in Kazandjiev’s work: a) change of modal position;
 b) change of modes - gradual or abrupt
 c) polimodality.
4. Modal formula and form determining modal function
 The modal formula (a group of tones with a modal characteristics of their own, performing a structural role in the musical form, Koutev, 1988:121)  in Kazandjiev’s music is the main structural and textural element. A criterion for the prevailing of one of the functions is not only the tonal composition and the type of the formula, but mainly the sound effect again. Thus, different functions are attributed to the modal formula: of a basic material and sonorous background (as a complementary unit); in the first case the form consists of modal entities and in the second, of sonorous complexes. In the functional separation thus indicated, there lies the similarity and difference between the sonoral technique and the modal organization in folklore, between two improvisational types: the modal formula and the aleatoric model. If we also add the early folklore principles of intonation and the participation of non tonal material in them, then the formula technique will be accomplished not only with tonal material. One ecmelic configuration of  “mode without sound arrangement” could have the same function.
 In such a case we can accept as modal formulae both the aleatoro-sonoral models from the beginning of “Psalms and Rituals” and all similar sound figures (e.g. the models from “In modo schezoso”, “Illuminations”, “Apocalypse”, etc.).
 In the sonoral whole the modal formula does not keep its modal characteristic and is governed by the laws of sonoral harmony. With the modal and form determining significance of the modal formula the choice of intonations mainly due to the phonic effect is preserved. It is for this reason, on the one hand, and the lack of temperation, modal and structural mobility typical of Bulgarian music, on the other hand, that the tonal content of the modal formulae varies within its limits.
 Non-song elements, music-etymologically explained with earlier forms of music-making, have also influenced the content of the modal formulae. This explains the ecmelic deviation of tones, the inner changeability of the modal formula, their ending in the form of “shouting out”, ascending or descending glissando, the “circulation” in a small ambitus - reminiscent of the recitative forms, mixture of the tonal content of the modal formulae with the spoken nature - with touches, glissando, flageolets.

III. DODECAPHONIC TECHNIQUE
1. Dodecaphonic reflections
Kazandjiev's music which completely lacks the "Webernesque" type of dodecaphonic and serial organization, uses the following two methods: of "stylistic quotation" and of selection of separate characteristics in the environment of another compositional technique. The introduction of twelve-tone and serial forms is carried out in a way which depends on a central criterion (and basic stylistic feature in his music), that of the sonoral effect. The non serial dodecaphonism is part of a broader sonoral specter, and hence it is treated as a timbre organization, as a means of creating a specific phonic effect, rather than as sound pitch (although it is not such on a morphological level). The participation of the twelve-tone scale in Kazandjiev's sonoral system has the following characteristics:
 1) out of the sequence he has chosen such a series which provides “radical irreversibility” and “total unpredictability”. The two principles of non repetition of a tone or a touch and their second arrangement have a co-ordinating function in the use of the twelve-tone scale. At the same time, the twelve-tone character as it is has no substantial significance, that is why the vertical and horizontal complexes may consist of 8 to 11 tones, i.e. incomplete fields and consonances;
 2) dodecaphonic technique, combined with ecmelic - in vertical or horizontal position;
 3) ‘alternated’ twelve-tone character with a relatively precisely or imprecisely marked micro-chromaticism.
 Parallel to that direct participation in Kazandjiev's sonoral system, dodecaphony is indirectly reflected in it by determining the inner structure of the form. Firstly, the sonoral blocks, vertically determined sound sections, possess the same degree of independence as the tones from the series, i.e. the sonoral composition can be interpreted as a series of macro units. Secondly, the shifting of the static elements of the sonoral block is similar to the various serial forms, i.e. shifting of textural layers, intra-sectional permutations. Thirdly, in a serial composition the separate parameters have "a life" of their own and thus are individually organized into series; and this is analogic to the combination of different in nature sounding units in the sonoral texture, in which each type of sound production can have an order of organization of its own. For example, the tonal sphere can have a principle of arrangement of its own and the ecmelism, intermingled with it, another one (as it is in Movement 1 of "Perspectives"). And fourthly, similar to the dodecaphonic form is the stage like construction of the sonoral composition with the only difference in the fact that the latter can demonstrate greater  fluency in sound and structure.
 Considering Kazandjiev's twelve-tone technique as an element of his sonoral system it becomes necessary for it to be artificially separated from the non tempered sounds and noises equal to it in the context.
 The only composition in which the twelve-tone technique is leading, rather than complementing the sonoral system and the scale of sonorities, is Sonata for Piano (1959). For it Kazandjiev has always used terms like “strict dodecaphony” or “strict serialism”. The defining term “strict”, however, can be considered true and appropriate only if it has been the result of comparison with other composition of Kazandjiev's, i.e. it is only indicative of a method and dependence on grammatical rules.
 2. Group composition
 Compared with some forms of dodecaphony, the group method is the closest to the twelve-tone fields but the specific type of relations between them gives us grounds to determine this method namely as a group method and the structural units, as groups. In the theoretical explanation of the method made by Stockhausen (Stockhausen 1963:218) the group may function as a structural unit not only of a tonal sequence but can also mark a rhythmical sequence or a sonoral field.
 After the relatively strict handling of the twelve tones - according to Kazandjiev’s words and demonstrated in his Piano Sonata - has found its continuation as a component in the sonoral system in a freer aspect, yet without a change in the method, the general definition as “group” will not contradict either the approach itself or the system in which it appears as a unit.
 3. “Sonoral twelve-tone character” (“tempered sonority”)
 To one extent or another, in all of Kazandjiev’s compositions without exception dodecaphony is an additional rather than a basic factor, complementing the sonoral system. That is why the extra contextual separation of tones from ecmelic aims at observing the treatment of the twelve-tone fields and groups in a wide range of sounds. The composer's First String Quartet is an example of this. In it the tempered scale is part of a far broader gradation (discernible by the ear or not) of sonorities which, like the dodecaphonic method, sticks to the principle of gradual enumeration and non repetition. Kazandjiev’s dodecaphonic organization has been reduced to the two main functions of the tonal harmony: sonoral and centering. In the first case the objective is to make a contrast to the ecmelic episodes with a tonally organized field in a specific register; in the second, the temperated scale with its contrasting sonority is a stabilizing factor in the system of sonoral articulation.
 3.1. “Circular field” and “sonant chromaticism”
 The principle of hemitonic has been observed as semi tonality without exceptions in some cases and as second in general, in others, and creates a phenomenon which can be defined as “circular field” or “circular chain of seconds”. The movement is carried out as a second enumeration in a chosen tonal field until the circle is closed. The distances between the tones are gradual (with some exceptions), without taking into consideration the difference in the registers.
 Kazandjiev does not require melodic, “linear’ expressiveness but rather aims at vivid sonority through “the organic coloring” of the second seventh and ninth intervals which are combined with the specific timbres from the non-traditional sound formation of the string instruments. What is meant by speaking about a total second character in a system non-functional for the interval is a sequence in degree of sonant characteristics, features close or remote to the sonant.
 The second part of the quartet has been written completely in such chromatic intervals (on the principle of hemitonic).
 3.2. Tonal segments and sonoral complexes
 In all cases Kazandjiev separates the dodecaphonic fields in segments consisting of two or three tones. This fact, taken separately from the remaining conditions of dodecaphonic realization, repeats the segmentation of the series in the new-Vienna and post-Webern serialism. Without making parallels with the strictness of the method with composers like Webern, Boulez, Stockhausen, Babitt, etc. the common moment in the separation of the twelve-tone scale is sought for. The two- or three-tone groups in Kazandjiev do not impose limitations like these of the segments in a serial composition.  In fact one can go further to compare the role of invariant for motive development with the growth of thematicism from a motive kernel (in Beethoven, for example). There is such grouping of tones in all of Kazandjiev’s works and in the considered First Concerto. It is only due to the “rule” of  linking of neighboring tones or semi-tones, i.e. the cohesion of seconds as a constantly acting principle. An interesting example of symmetry of two-tone and three-tone segments is the coda of the third movement of the Quartet: the symmetry is obtained between four twelve-tone strings in different meter. The viola and violoncello parts are reminiscent of the perfect forms of this technique in musical literature, in Webern of the polyphony of the rigid style.

And finally, one can summarize the forms of the twelve-tone technique in Kazandjiev's music. As a means of consecutive converting of space, as an ingredient component in the sonoral texture, the twelve-tone scale is organized in the following:
 1. The twelve-tone field, combining the three dimensions of the tonal transportation (horizontal, vertical, diametrical); it can be complete and incomplete (Quartet No. 2, 2nd movement; Sonata for Piano, Virtuoso Studies, 3rd movement) it is possible also to form parallel tonal fields ("Dialogues”, X).
 2. Twelve-tone aggregate, achieved through vertical combination of  several patterns (Quartet No. 1, 3rd movement - Coda, Quartet No. 2, E).
 3. Twelve-tone sequence with the function of sonoral line, rather than of melodic structure (variations for Orchestra, Sonata for Piano, Quartet No. 2, 4th movement).
 4. Alternative dodecaphony (expanded micro-chromaticism) - "The Living Icons", Crucifixion, No. 70, Quartet No. 2, 3rd movement - solo cello.
 5. Twelve-tone vertical - stable (Illuminations", O, No. 2), migrating ("Festive Music", end of Section 2 - ascending shift of several octaves).
 6. Tonal-sonoral aggregate (Piano Quintet, Nos. 28, 30, 31).
 The principles of serial organization find their place in Kazandjiev's technique without being connected/related to dodecaphony (in European tradition at the beginning of the 1950s existed the practice of relating the principles of serial composition to the interval system - micro intervals, irregular intervals, complex sounds; this is what Paul Griffiths wrote about the music of Boulez and Pousseur (Griffiths 1981:46).
 Examples of non tonal serialism with Kazandjiev are:
 - ecmelic sequences from the beginning of "Festive Music";
 - free principle of transportation of various interval groups (Sonata for Piano, 2nd movement);
- permutation of tones and groups ("Illuminations", "Poco a poco"), as well as of timbres (Symphony No. 2, 3rd movement).
 

FORMS
Interpreting Kazandjiev’s forms as a logic of development, as expressive devices, as organization on a factural, syntactic and compositional level one can define the generalizing category of “open forms”. Kazandjiev’s forms are not abstracted from the processes of the 20th century; doubtlessly,  they are a product of these trends, that is why their interpretation as such makes possible to explain them in a stylistic unity.
 Kazandjiev’s open system, which after the 1960s meant aleatoric treatment of all parameters, is inevitable and is a result of a characteristic of his musical perception - his thinking in terms of colors, in sonoral entities, spots, blocks, and “tuning” his expressive means in synchrony with the color nuances.
 Apart from the mobile forms - in “The Triumph of the Bells”, “In modo scherzoso”, “Complexi sonori”, which are open in a sense “less metaphorical and more concrete” (in Eco’s words about works of this kind, Eco 1979: 17) - polysemy and openness unequivocally exist both with respect to the forms structures and the compositional elements. In Kazandjiev the choice and positioning of the material are determined by the logic of open flow:
 1. As early as the level of the sound selection there is a clear-cut mark between tone and noise, between strictly determined and non determined sound matter, between fixed and free forms between single and complex sounds.
 2. Kazandjiev organizes the tone material in two ways - in specific tonal groups-modi and in twelve-tone groups and fields, i.e. in non-centred systems. Thus the existing separate units, outside the familiar principles of order are freely positioned in all spatial dimensions, without being limited by cause-result relations. The dynamic principle assists in “opening” the pitch space aiming at the establishment of a harmonic system which is neither strictly observed twelve-tone organization, nor strictly organized modal system. It all depends on the sonoral context.
 3. From the sounds which cannot be graded by stage there appear complex forms - sonoral, tonal, mixed, the difference among which exist due to the numerous possibilities for choosing and combining the elements.
 4. The freedom of structuring is achieved in the aleatoric technique. It provides a constant flexibility of the sound flow.
 5. Kazandjiev interprets individually the open form: he treats all his sound subjects as part of the whole eventful space from which he “draws” the necessary material and to which he comes back at a point. The “open” cadences and finales are indicative of this. The principle of mono dramaturgy determines the forms in Kazandjiev’s works, The forms are like vector constructs, synchronized in their direction, without reprise. The two main types of forms are developed as open structures: in the first case these are the dynamic crescendo forms and in the other case, forms on the principle of addition or, to put it in another way, these are the asymmetrical and endless forms.
 Influenced by the nature of the material, by the direction of the form to ascending contour are even the cases when Kazandjiev purposefully sticks to the dialectics of some traditional forms. The result is a dynamisation of the reverse and leading to symmetry classical logic, to “quasi” type forms, called so, as in some cases symbols, defined by the composer, create association for the type form (e.g. the sonata form in the 1st movement of Second Symphony or the rondo form in “Dialogues”.
 6. The stylistic closeness with the folk music making, with every traditional collective work - poli-variant and expressed in open constructions, does not contradict Kazandjiev’s system of expressive means and perhaps has, to some extent, influenced his choice (the language harmony, on its part, would adapt contrasting forms too).

The question about the form, about the architectonic of the work is for me of utmost importance. You cannot give a recipe for that; every composer constructs his/her music in a unique manner. I regard the form as a process: it can not be static or represent and abstraction. In fact, it is a development. In my music its determining is parallel to the idea about sonority. And the idea of the sound picture is connected with the movement, the development.
 Still, I have an initial idea as to what the work as a whole would look like: as a moos, as a sound picture, as movement and development of the music. I cannot speak of dramaturgy in the truest sense, as it offers an action of a certain type with an inner interaction. In my music it is a different principle - of comparing the episodes instead of counterpoising them.
Some external conditions or instructions do far not guide the perfection of the form. It can be frightfully non proportional, “crooked”, and still it can convey precisely the required expressiveness. This is valid not only of the second half of the 20th century. As early as in Mozart all constructions are asymmetrical
 Similar constructions are not rare for the first half of the 20th century as well. The music of Shostakovich is utterly asymmetrical, yet is seems that it has been constructed  “in the German manner” and is classically harmonious.
The modern composer is faced by an ocean of different means and techniques and has to find the true path. And the true part is sincerity. This is the feeling the modern composer senses as true and that has to be reincarnated in sounds and notes. Still I think that it is high time we stop experimenting as everything has already been discovered; and at a moment we should start writing music for the people as it is meant for them, not for the Martians. In this respect the example set by the masterpieces is the most instructive. If we can get closer to Vivaldi's simplicity and clarity, for example, or to the masterful creations of the pre classics or of Mozart and Haydn, that would be the best. I do not think that it was easy for them to fulfill the three functions. Quite the contrary, this is even more difficult as these three functions restrict the author's mind and imagination. But in one case or another, these are achievements at which each creative artist should aim. “ (Kazandjiev)

 The forms in Kazandjiev’s works can be grouped in the following manner with the basis of the pyramid being the traditional types:
 - moment forms
 - mobile forms
 - sonoral forms by the methods of stratification and polarization
 - forms created by analogy of the traditional types (called renewed traditional forms).

1. MOMENT FORMS
All works by Kazandjiev directly or indirectly, on a syntactic or compositional level, acquire the specific features of this form. It characterizes not only the compositions which, similar to pointillism in the sound-pitch organization with its separate points, contrasting and unlinked in space, consist of the alternation of equal sound complexes. Aphoristically said, paraphrasing an idea of Cage regarding the behavior of sounds, “the sound moments live within and for themselves”. Such moment forms “of a pure kind” (as clearly articulated sections) are the Wind Quintet, 1st movement, the First String Quartet, 2nd movement, Symphony of Timbres, “Impulses”, “Strophes”, “Episodes”, “Illuminations”.
 Even in the “non-moment” architectonic of the form one can discover traces of the moment form with respect to the sound uniformity of the music flow. In these cases (represented by “Poco a poco”, Piano Quintet, “Apocalypse”, “Reflections”, “Silhouettes”, Sonata for Violoncello, etc.) it is a method of organization of the music material on the syntactic level while on the compositional level, in conformity with the distribution and relation of the moments, there appears another form: two-part, pyramid like, moving in crescendo, sonata, rondo. This fact bears witness to the fact that complete equality, static of the movements and full discontinuity are not possible to exist. The moment form is exhausted on the image structural level as an organization of the musical flow in the form of “non-linear progression” (term of Kramer, Kramer 1978:189).
 Generally speaking, the total participation of the moment-form in Kazandjiev’s works has two spheres of action: as form and as method. The titles of the compositions give the beat orientation; they create associations with the form built of fragments.

According to the differentiation of moments and moment-groups in "Poco a poco" there form a moment-form on a syntactic level and two-section form, on compositional level. The form of the work is organically fused with the instrumental composition, with the idea and the model. This "two section moment form" consists of a phase of rhythmical moments and a phase of sonorous moments: the one is built by the percussion instruments with varied rhythmical effects and clear-cut articulation, the other, by the sound, the technical and timbre resources of the organ which influence the fusion, the integrity of the block, or the perfect continuum. The specific characteristic of the instrumental composition influences the form (as dia-synchronic congruence and unity). And this proves the already pointed out link of the timbre with the construction in this type of form-moments.
 The "poco a poco" principle is represented in the wave-dynamic construction (sonoral accumulation in the first stage and rhythmical accellerando in the second stage) like a transition of the static of the sonoral spot in dynamics of the rhythmical acceleration. Even the distribution in moment-groups takes place on the basis of the sonoral accumulation or rhythmical acceleration of fragments of similar outline. "Poco a poco" is also present in the very idea for drawing the rhythmical out of the sonoral, of the movement out of the outline. The arrangement of the moments according this criterion creates and ascending "chromaticism of sonoral and rhythmical intensities in a range from the single sound to the tone cloud, to the vertical and diagonal clusters.

”I am not aiming at general dramaturgy, this is my objective - the lack of dramaturgy. The episodes are to be independently constructed, each of them should be followed by a new one, differently constructed. What is interesting, according to me, is their comparison. There should be logic in the linking of the constructs. I am not looking for an extensive development. Only “Apocalypse” has been conceived as a uniform structure. The work is like a permanent crescendo, a condensation of sound, inner motion. With the others this occurs very rarely.
 Undoubtedly, I am interested in the flow of time, yet I think that the juxtaposing rather than the counterpoising is what matters more for me. It is like the Mozart’s principle. It can also lead to development, not in the familiar dramatic way but rather in a more static, more sublime, emotional, sentimental approach. Not through a dramatic clash but rather through juxtaposing different states”.
2. MOBILE FORMS
 Three of Kazandjiev’s works - “The Triumph of the Bells”, “In modo scherzoso” for wind quintet and “Complexi sonori” for string orchestra are written as mobile forms. In the three works the degree of “non-definedness” of the form and the unexpectedness of the sound material is different. It is dependent on the author's text liberated to a different extent and on the composition of performers.
 If on the basis of practice we try to find a gradation of the factors "composed - improvised - sound result", these three works by Kazandjiev will be placed differently. Konrad Boehmer's five variants can be used for orientation (Boehmer 1966:128).
 Kazandjiev's compositions of aleatoric form can be related to the last three stages.
 In "The Triumph of the Bells" the mobile form is restricted within its end points while the arrangement of models in the set frame is free. The tonal composition, touch, tempo, dynamics and imagery order are determined to a considerable degree while the aleatoric moments are limited; they refer to the approximate number of repetitions of the melodic figures, to the clusters within a given volume and register, to the rhythmical accelerandos and diminuendos and to the caesuras.
 "Complexi sonori" belongs to the following stage although only five out of the total twenty-five models are undetermined in terms of sound-pitch. With the freedom of choice given to every performer the ensemble result makes the piece unique in sounding. When the form is too far away from the author's text and the author's requirements are simply its construction material, Earl Brown uses the term "conceptual mobility". With it the form can be very unsimilar to the original and may lead to another individual and original composition.
 With some reservation "In modo scherzoso" falls in the last group as it can include and far more abstract musical propositions as, for example Stockhausen's compositions the main condition in which is the "impetuous, instinctive performance". In Kazandjiev's work six out of the total thirty models are with a specific pitch. The remaining models contain approximate instructions for the register, the rhythm and dynamic while all the other parameters are left to the performers' judgment. As in the other works, the author has not limited either the form or the duration so that they can be freely chosen.

3. SONORAL COMPOSITIONS
STRATIFIIED AND INTERPOLATED FORMS
 Two factors act on the composition of the form in the sonoral compositions to which the greater part of Kazandjiev's works belong, especially in the period from the beginning of the 60s to his latest work "Mirages" (1997): the quality of the sound material and the distribution of the timbre structural units in space and time. While the moment forms and the mobile forms include constructions which underline the isolation and the poli-functionality of the sonoral moments ignoring the links and the cause-result relations as preliminarily invented, in the other works of this or other manner of construction or organization of the material in time there act specific segmenting and uniting factors. For the mobile and moment forms there exist criteria with respect to the sounding material and the harmonic system organizing it: the sonoral technique is not a condition for them, they can also be written as non sonoral. That is why prototypes of the moment forms can be discovered with Debussy, Stravinsky, Webern, and with Boulez and Stockhausen one can find prototypes of the mobile forms written in serial technique.
 Stockhausen's classification of forms in which they figure under the term "statistical", i. e. collective, complex, quantitatively organized forms and method (Stockhausen 1963:198) gives us ground to differentiate a category of sonoral compositions for some of Kazandjiev's works. It is not impossible, however, some works to combine the form defining principles of the sonoral compositions which are determined by the concepts of stratification and interpolation, fragmentation, separation, independence of structures or with the principles of mobility. In the sonoral compositions the main form defining factor is the timbre-sound change: the formation of sonoral entities, their combination and juxtaposition, the changes and the sonoral flows from which the form acquires its individual, non typical "diagram".
 The “moving” of the material determining the specific kind of the sonoral compositions is carried out through the two structural approaches - stratification and interpolation. These are the markings for the forms layers (the type of crescendo constructions) and forms with sudden changes which still preserve the initial idea in them suggested by Mary Wennerstron about the 20th century music (Wennerstrom 1975:47). The indicated principles of arrangement can bring contradictory results: from the known types to such which are not associated with the traditional models.
 Kazandjiev’s forms prove to be dependent on the compositional technique, on whether the dodecaphonic or modal techniques influences the sonoral organization. Kazandjiev’s compositional methods which bring different
formal result become of general value for his overall work: they lead to the crescendo constructions which are characteristic of him or to constant division into sections as a result of the change of the sonoral material. That is why, accepting the constant functioning of both principles, separately or in combination, the forms can be grouped in the following manner:
crescendo   two stage   three stage
Second Quartet, 2nd mov. “Poco a poco”   “Apocalypse”
First Quartet, 1st mov. Piano Quintet   “Festive Music”
“Silhouettes”   Second Quartet, 1st mov. “Reflections”
“Reflections”   “Silhouettes”   “Catharsis”
“Illuminations”
Second Symphony, 1st mov.
“Poco a poco”
 What is essential for the concrete composer's decision are the starting idea and the dramaturgic solution.
 The crescendo forms which in reality are reminiscent of the familiar linguistic stylistic figure can be determined in a similar manner as “climax process” or “climax form”. The way of achieving it is individual, yet there exist two main methods: the first is when a “harmony” grows into another with a gradual transition to a new sonoral field and a prevailing method of stratification (in “Apocalypse”, “The Living Icons”, etc.) and the second, when the two methods act in parallel, in dynamic development and the climax process of static sonoral sections (“in “Poco a poco”, “Illuminations”).
 The “climax process” influences the smallest figures, as it is in “Illuminations” for example, as a result of the uniform organizing idea defined by the author as “striving for the space”. The specific musical symbol of the fireworks, on its behalf, brings us back to an earlier practice of the composer's in which the linear movements have been loaded with specific semantics. This gives us some grounds to compare the “illumination” with its similar rhetorical figure “anabasis” which is everywhere: from the structure of the motive to the structure of the complete form. This manner of deriving the structure of the sound texture and of the form from the idea of ascending motions also close to the way in which the material is drawn from the invariant form in the serial compositions. The unity achieved through the figure of the “firework” (in “Illuminations”) or of the “impulse” (in “impulses” on all levels) - textural, syntactic and compositional, gives us ground to present this form also as “integral variant form” (term of Chigareva 1973:54).

4. RENEWED TRADITIONAL FORMS
What causes the deviations from the typical forms with Kazandjiev is, before all, the treatment of the reprise. The deviations in the segment of the form is a natural consequence of the contradiction between the two trends - stabilizing and dynamizing, attacking mainly the final sections. The very principle of repetition and reprise is universal (Nazaikinsky presents it in a generalized form as “principle of preservation”, Nazaikinsky 1982:251) and is active on whatever level and in whatever form. That is why the reprise forms can be extremely expanded and transformed: from the “sound scale reprise” and “idea fixe” to the hyperbolized reprise” with Webern.

 The forms of traditional origin, met in Kazandjiev’s music require three kinds of reprise: reprise of the three-part form, sonata reprise and reprise refrain. The works written respectively in three-part, sonata and rondo forms show a very different treatment of the reprise with every kind and in every composition. We define the kinds of reprise in the following manner:
A-B-A  - synthetic reprise (Second Quartet, 3rd movement, Capriccio)
SONATA FORM  - anti reprise (Second Symphony, 1st movement)
   - dynamized - open (Third Symphony, 1st movement)
   - “replacing reprise” (Sonata for Violoncello, 1st movement)

RONDO - register-articulation (“Dialogues” for flute and harp)
  - “refrain-intervention”, “migrating refrain”
                       (Third Symphony, 3rd movement)
  - “rondo without reprise” (Second Symphony, 3rd movement)
Each of these types has been explained in detail.

5. BALANCE AND PROPORTIONS
Kazandjiev is firm about two things: firstly, he rejects the deliberate “computation” in his work and secondly, he admits that the proportions and the subordination's are the ones which mark the distinction between the genuine and the trivial. Therefore, there exist criteria for that, there exist symbols of perfection. By no means does Kazandjiev deny the significance of the “number”; he even confirms its interference as a guarantee for perfection. What he rejects is the “computation” as an artificial and senseless act.
 The opinion of another of his contemporaries, Edison Denisov, that in pointillism the sound is even more “calculated” and that every living music is based on an absolute, excellent inner calculation (Denisov 1993:123) does not contradict either Kazandjiev’s words or his work.

To discuss "the number" as a parameter in Kazandjiev's music is possible only in the sense Stravinsky puts in it - as an expression of relations. In Fibonaci's sense, the number proportions reflecting these proportions are closer to Bartok's approach towards them rather than to the extreme rationalism and number dependence on the series with other composers.
 With Kazandjiev the relations in this string are in interval, rhythmical structures with respect to the overall form.
 An example which can best illustrate the pitch structure as expressed predominantly with tonal relations in Fibonaci's values are the Variations for String Orchestra. From three intervals, numerically presented with three of Fibonaci's numbers - tone, semi-tone and a small third, 1-2-3 respectively, Kazandjiev has achieved different scales - from a trichord to nine-, even ten-tone scales.
 Uniform with respect to this belonging to the numerical values is the interval structure of the Variations: it consists mainly of the 1-2-3-5-8-13 intervals. There exists a literal similarity between the initial six intervals of the theme and one of the models from the introduction (in the double basses). An exception of the Fibonaci's values are the three intervals - 4, 9, 11.
 Most consistently in Kazandjiev's works acts this characteristic of the series which determines the point of the golden section. It is observed in two types, "positive" and "negative", are ratios 3:2 and 2:3, respectively. The exact accentuation of the golden section in one way or another is separation of the form which does not prevent the climax to be reached in another moment of the whole. The primary or secondary separations lay the boundary between the form's stages; they underline a given contrasting episode (in the continual forms) or the moment of pre climax whose role for the preparation of the main climax and for the whole is substantial.  In the clearly expressed two stage forms, like "Poco a poco" and Piano Quintet, the boundary between the stages is in absolutely precise proportions of an inverted golden section in "Poco a poco", i.e. 2:3 ration, and of positive one, in the Piano Quintet, 3:2. In "Poco a poco", despite the general caesura separating the sonoral from the rhythmical stage in a ratio 2:3, the point of the golden section is also marked in the climax of local increment before the preparation of the main culmination general for the form. The moment indicted by the point of golden section represents a pre climax which grows in a repeated rhythmical increment.
 In the end parts of Third Symphony the point of golden section is represented in a different manner. In the first movement Kazandjiev positions the point of golden section where it usually was to be found in the classical sonata forms, in the predicate to the reprise. And in the third part the more expressed is the backward point of the golden section which introduces the only authentic folk quotation.
 In the prevailing part of Kazandjiev's forms the line of development is ascending, i.e. culmination of the form in the very finale, as an open, progressing, growing form. Still, regardless of the inner outline of the form there also exists and inner process of exact proportional division at the point of golden section, realized in a different manner - through a caesura, through an ascending or descending pre culmination, through the introduction of contrasting material or texture. Moreover, even in the cases of aleatoric of the form (with the multiform forms), of aleatoric of the texture (with the variable forms), in the forms constructed of uniform timbre blocks and with the "moment forms" the whole is balanced in exact proportions. Even such "non compound" form as the form in "Complexi sonori" (with aleatoric of the texture and the form) the version Kazandjiev proposes as an example of performer's composing of the work is also with two climaxes - one of the "development" in the end of the form and one of the "proportions and balance" in the second half.
 In all these examples it is impossible to speak about accidents or a schematic approach, untypical of Kazandjiev's music. We interpret it rather as a demonstration of insight, intuition, artistic imitation of the organic symmetries, as a precise artistic instinct.
 
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