-  Informations générales
    - 
      
        
          
            Date de composition :
          
          
          1979
            
              
 
- Durée : 32 mn
- Éditeur : Boosey & Hawkes
- 
       Livret (détail, auteur) :
       Michael Bakunin et Arthur Arnould 
 
- 
      
        
          
            Date de composition :
          
          
          1979
            
              
- Genre
   - Musique vocale et instrument(s) [1 voix soliste et ensemble de plus de 25 instruments]
 
- soliste : 2 barytons solo [aigus]
- 8 cors, 3 trompettes, trombone, 2 percussionnistes, 2 harpes, cymbalum, basse électrique, 2 pianos, 4 altos, 4 violoncelles, 2 contrebasses
Information sur la création
- 
        
          
            Date :
            
              17 juin 1979
            
            
            
          
          
 Lieu :Pays-Bas, Amsterdam 
 Interprètes :Louis Landuyt et Leiuwe Visser : ténors, Netherlands Wind Ensemble, direction : Lucas Vis. 
Note de programme
Mausoleum is a homage to the great Russian revolutionary thinker  Mikhail Bakunin (1814 – 1876), leader of revolutions, founder of secret  revolutionary societies, opponent of Marx, philosopher and anarchist, a  man ‘to whom no statue has been erected or ever shall be’, as Hans  Magnus Enzensberger observes in his moving poem ‘M. A. B.’ from  ‘Mausoleum’.  
The Bakunin quotations I have used in this piece more or less  set out the basic tenets of anarchism and, by the same token, express my  political credo. Towards the end, the text is taken from A. Arnould (in  Russian like the rest), a Swiss journalist, who knew Bakunin towards  the end of his life: "I loved Bakunin; I loved him as he was: forceful  an inconscient" etc. 
Musically, Mausoleum is based on a strong principle:  the entire work depends on just one interval, the major second. All the  harmonies, most of them four-part, are built up of a constellation of  two major seconds. All the melodies likewise hinge on a major second and  whenever there is an additional note, it is a minor second above. 
The tempo of the piece also conforms to this bipartite concept:  the contradistinction of slow-fast in the breadth – the first half is  fast, the second slow – as well as in the particulars – the contrast  between the first and the second bars for instance. 
Rhythmically, bipartition has been used in yet another way:  extensive use is made of the technique of hoquet, i.e. the melody is  divided per tone or per chord over (generally equal) groups of  instruments.  
The work is scored for a large heterogeneous ensemble in which eight horns have a pivotal function. 
In preparing the texts I received a great deal of help from  Arthur Lehning, and from Bella Bekker who advised me on the phonetic  notation of the Russian.
Louis Andriessen.
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