Follow the conductor of the Fauxharmonic Orchestra in a behind-the-scenes look at preparing a performance of Beethoven’s 7th Symphony. … More
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The Fauxharmonic Orchestra has begun an ambitious project to perform all nine Beethoven symphonies live in concert.
Why Beethoven, and Why Live?
You may wonder whether we don’t already have enough recordings and performances of Beethoven’s symphonies. The Fifth Symphony alone is performed over 200 times each year. Why perform and record it again?
The answer is two-fold: First, there are good reasons why these works are continually “in play.” They are not masterful cultural treasures because they are so often played, rather they are so often played because they are treasures. Very simply: for many reasons we value hearing them.
Second, and another reason the Beethoven symphonies are so important, is that they offer an enormous opportunity to transport us to another plane of awareness … the fabled “Holy Grail” of musical performance: a transcendent, other-worldly experience. Will our performances bring forth this opportunity? Maybe not, but setting our sights so high — aiming for the pinnacle of symphonic expression with acknowledged masterworks of classical music — is the only way we can approach (and surely one day attain) that elusive experience using digital instruments.
If we succeed, we may help legitimize this new mode of expression on artistic terms (and not cynically as a mere cost-cutting tool). Indeed, we also hope to encourage composers to begin writing for the medium, and to further re-assert the role of symphonic expression in a lively, growing world of musical voices.
Digital maestros
Who are the great digital orchestra “conductors” of today? It may surprise you to find that they do not come from the circles of traditional orchestral conducting. In fact, many of the skills needed to succeed conducting a traditional orchestra are very different from those needed to conduct a digital orchestra. For example, it’s crucial for orchestra conductors to be able to describe sound evocatively for fellow musicians in a way that conveys an artistic vision. But that’s a useless skill when creating a digital orchestra performance. Likewise, knowing just how many cents to “de-tune” a decrescendo is something the conductor of a live orchestra would never dare bring up with musicians who would stare blankly (at best). But applying that knowledge could be the just key to getting the right denoument from a digital orchestra.
Despite these differences, of course, digital orchestra conductors must, like traditional orchestra conductors, be able to understand the artistic potential locked in musical notation, and how to realize that potential with the instruments at hand. They must have an ear for balance, phrasing, rhythm, drama, sound color, tempo and all the other musical elements — as well as a clear idea of exactly how those elements coalesce around an artistic vision.
The conductors on the Beethoven Symphony Project are the best digital orchestra performers in the world today. But don’t be surprised if you have never heard of them. This field is still very young, and considered largely a utilitarian “artisinal” occupation, not an artistic one. In other words, digital orchestra conductors are expected to be found working on film and TV scores, but not expected to be taken seriously as performers of the great classics of world culture.
We’re undertaking this project in part to change that. If we bring the digital orchestra out of the studio, where it is already accepted, and into the concert hall, with certain aspects of the music controlled in real-time, and with the natural acoustics of the hall adding the dimension of real space (and not digitally imposed “reverb”), we can turn digital music-making into a performing art.
Here are the musicians working on the project:
Paul Henry Smith — Music Director of The Fauxharmonic Orchestra
Listen:
Beethoven, Symphony No. 7, Allegretto
Beethoven, Symphony No. 8, Allegretto
Jay Bacal — Mr. Bacal began his musical life with piano lessons. His teacher imparted a refined sense of melody and balance that still resonates today throughout his virtuostic digital orchestral performances. Mr. Bacal spent more than twenty-five years as a creative director of animated cartoons and toy commercials.
Listen: Brahms, Symphony No. 3, Third movement
Andrew Blaney — Mr. Blaney’s compositions have been featured regularly on the BBC, including on documentaries such as A Picture of Britain and O.E.D., as part of the Imagine series, and the popular Top Gear. He has scored several film and television productions, including a critically acclaimed DVD set of the works of Dickens. Mr. Blaney’s scores have been heard in music festivals all over the world, from Munich to Chicago.
Listen: Debussy, Jeux de Vagues, from La Mer
William Kersten — Born in Reno, Nevada, William Kersten studied french horn and composition with John Lenz, performing professionally while composing for symphonic band, brass ensembles, chamber and orchestral groups. His compositions include symphonic music, the song-cycle “Earth and Paradise,” concert band and chamber works, and several film scores. He has recently been working in digital orchestral performance, and has completed a large scale recording of his “Romantic Symphony” and several commissioned performances of classical music for the Vienna Symphonic Library. Read more at www.WilliamKersten.com
Listen: Vaughan Williams, Symphony No. 2, 2nd Mvmt
Support the Project
We are fortunate to have the support of the Vienna Symphonic Library, whose founder and CEO, Herb Tucmandl, calls our project a “huge undertaking.”
Of course, such a massive undertaking requires the help of a lot of people. We need and welcome all help, but are particularly interested in hearing from people with an expertise in live concert hall acoustical systems, gestural controllers, distributed or networked audio workstation setups, etc. If you’re interested, contact us. We’d like to hear from you.
Where can you hear the concerts?
Venues are still in the process of being finalized. Concerts are being arranged for 2008-2009 in Brooklyn, Boston and in the Washington, D.C., area, with dates in Seoul, Shanghai and Tokyo in 2009-2010.
To be notified of specific dates and locations, sign up for Beethoven Digital Symphonies updates.
If you are a presenter interested in booking these fascinating and unique performances, please contact us.


For the Fallen [8:29m]:
Wii Test 1 [4:09m]:
12 comments
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April 30, 2007 at 11:02 pm
Anonymous
interesting scary cool and puzzling
May 2, 2007 at 8:48 pm
brazilian contemporary classic music
Gabriel, Mikael, Haniel, Raphael, Camael , Tsadkiel, Tsaphkiel, Haziel, Metraton, good music makes the angels to vibrate in the sky, thanks.
May 7, 2007 at 10:12 am
David
Interesting…but you will never “conduct” an opera. Something only the really good live conductor’s can do anyway. For that reason, this is nothing more than a cute gimmick. The human voice is the original instrument and technology will never be able to capture the primal effect the bodily function of singing has on the human listener.
May 7, 2007 at 11:13 am
Paul Henry Smith
David,
The effect of the human voice singing really can’t be captured? Hmm. Nearly every recording sold includes people singing, while instrumental music still remains a tiny minority. People do seem to like it very much.
Maybe, though, you think all those recordings of singing are also just “cute gimmicks.”
But my work isn’t really about capturing the effect of music in recorded form. It’s about bringing new instruments to the live concert setting. Once we have that, musicians can work the real magic they’ve always been doing, no matter what technology they use to bring sound to life. So, I agree with you … musicians on stage, live … that’s where it’s at.
May 7, 2007 at 11:40 am
David
You completely missed my point. There isn’t a recording that exists that can match the pure visceral power of the live human voice. Although not to the audiophiles pleasing, a live recording in an appropriate acoustic is a far better record of vocalism than anything produced in a studio.
May 7, 2007 at 12:09 pm
Paul Henry Smith
David, Your point of view is just so exceedingly rare that I was reluctant to assume that’s what you meant. Most people actually accept recordings as “real” music and not cute gimmicks.
And, yes, I never will conduct an opera using digital singers. But this is a digital orchestra we’re talking about, not a digital chorus or opera company.
(Believe it or not, people ARE working on digital chorus and soloists.)
I would add that the “live recording in an appropriate acoustic” is played back in a completely different acoustic, out of the control of the performer. The crucial elements of loudness and timing that a performer modulates according to the acoustic space are simply cut out of the experience of listening to the recording.
That’s why I’m bringing the instruments out of the studio and into to the concert hall where the real magic can happen.
May 11, 2007 at 9:36 am
Bernhard
I think it’s realy a great thing and I hope it will be possible that friends of classical music which are not professionals musicians, but which perfectly have the feeling, will be in the position to conduct their own concert - as a vision. I am sure more people will have access to the wide variety of classical music and are getting educated to understand, which is now not the case because of lack of education tools. There are more people than the West-Europeans and there are more Lang Langs undiscovered which will make the world brighter and more human if their can express their hidden skills. The professional musician will enjoy more attention and respect when a wider group of people understand to benefit from classic music. Herbert v. Karajan did make the first step – this could be the second and larger one - and I hope the first concert happens in China - where everybody loves the golden concert hall in Vienna - the opening should be in the Shanghai of the Northeast - in Shenyang (birthplace of Ozawa and Lang Lang).
An foreign expert in China - grown up in Salzburg.
July 8, 2007 at 2:35 am
Anonymous
Hi Paul,
I came across your site purely by accident and was amazed at what you’ve accomplished so far. It’s super that you’re keeping our memories of great classical composers and their music, fresh. Congratulations on all your hard work.
Best regards,
Shez
July 23, 2007 at 9:45 pm
Anonymous
Hi, I think, that the idea is really great. I do classic recordings since almost three years, using applications like Finale, Miroslav Philharmonik, Logic and so on, and the results, as my listeners say, are quite audible and come quite close to a “true” orchestra. The great advantage of recording with virtual instruments is, that ambitious musicians, like me, get the chance to experiment and work with an “orchestra”, which they normally are not able to afford, just because of the costs or of the lacking of 50, 60 or more musicians. I would even say, that Bach, Beethoven or many others, if they lived today, would too take the chance to produce their compositions on a Mac to hear how it would sound and then perform it (even with a virtual orchestra). And, as Paul Henry said, if you are not a good musician, the “virtual” music would always sound artificial or, in Paul Henry’s words a non-violinist trying to play a Stradivari or a non-pianist playing on a Bechstein. Just a last remark: I’m not afraid, that “true” musicians will die out. If ever possible I go to “real” concerts (heard Lang-Lang about 2 or 3 weeks ago, here in Bad-Kissingen[Germany]), and I’m sure many other “virtual” musicians do so too. I think it’s just like the thing between TV and cinemas. 10 or 15 years ago, a lot of people talked about the end of the movie-industrie and of cinemas. Well, since then, it came, that we have bigger, and more cinemas than ever and millions of people running to see the new “you know who” movie. Give a chance to everyone to do something new and let’s just wait, what will happen.
Greets from Germany.
July 29, 2007 at 6:32 pm
Martin
Greetings from yet another brazilian composer.
I also bumped across the site by accident, and I found the whole idea quite attractive. It has the same bizarre kind of beauty as the LOGOS foundation in Belgium (which manages to be even more absurd - I hope you understand that, coming from me, “absurd” is actually a compliment).
I must say, however, that despite what Spiegel Online said, the difference is perceivable indeed. Personally I’ve always been very enthusiastic about the use of technology in music, but I also never thought highly of its use in attempts to imitate “real life” sounds - an obvious idea which sprang up from the very beginning and eventually led to things like those terrible “synth strings” that the 80’s were so fond of. On the other hand, I always found the degree of precision and control offered by electronic tools very suitable to create sounds and music that CANNOT be reproduced acoustically or by human performers. To me, in this sense, the first great digital orchestra conductor was, undisputably, Frank Zappa (too bad he couldn’t live up to this point). I suppose you are already familiar with his work with the Synclavier, if not I strongly suggest checking his last and highest achievement in digital orchestra conducting, “Civilization Phaze III”.
Anyway, seeing how much work and artistic vision you guys put into the whole project, I would never dare to dismiss it as mere “cute gimmicks” or whatever. Considering that today’s instruments, orchestras and concert halls are indeed lightyears apart from those in the 18th century - and that the further we try, the farther we are from knowing what these actually sounded like - I don’t see why this can’t be seen as a new and legitimate form of interpreting and performing music. It’s still far from being perfect, though; the best recording I heard on your site (I must admit I haven’t heard all of them though) was that of Debussy’s “Jeux de Vagues”, but of course I still prefer Boulez’s. I should add only that I’d set as a much higher goal (and an even greater challenge) to do the same with Mahler’s 9 Symphonies - plus, of course, the Adagio from the 10th. I hope to hear that within, maybe, the next couple of years!
Anyway, congratulations to everyone involved in the project, your whole conception is thrilling and very promising. I totally agree with the anonymous fellow above, and I’ll be sure to compose something for the Fauxharmonic myself, as soon as I can afford it. Something that “real life” orchestras probably won’t be able to play anyway.
All the best,
Martin
(PS: Maybe you could consider Zappa’s symphonic and chamber works later - especially those which never had a decent and well-rehearsed premiere).
July 29, 2007 at 6:44 pm
Martin
Oh, I must also suggest listening in headphones to Zappa’s “London Symphony Orchestra” album, conducted by Kent Nagano - the first digital multitrack recording of a (real) symphony orchestra, ever. Each group of instruments was recorded into a separate track (I think he used 40 mic’s or so) and all of the ambience (which also varies according to each section of the music) was added digitally. The sound is amazing, when you listen to it in headphones it’s almost like sitting in the middle of the orchestra (though unfortunately the performance itself still sounds somewhat under-rehearsed)…
March 31, 2008 at 12:46 pm
Mark Goretsky
Dear Paul, with no hesitation, I prefer your performance of the Beethoven’s, Op. 59, Finale to that of the Prazak Quartet. Unlike Prazak, your quartet remains clean no matter what the sound level or how many musical lines are played together.
Best wishes,
Mark