Chronometer tapes
Smelling of mouldy basement –
Very important
While Harrison Birtwistle's house in Mere was being sorted out after his passing last year, his son Silas called me: ‘I found some tapes in the basement. Are they important?’ Once I had discovered the images below (see Figures 1a, 1b) in my email I called him back: ‘Yes, they are important.’ For what Silas had stumbled across between damp papers and spiders’ webs were the original master tapes of Harrison Birtwistle's Chronometer (1971–72),Footnote 1 the ‘two asynchronous four-track tapes’ about which one has read in almost every catalogue of Birtwistle's work. Not only had these tapes been lost since their creation – only surfacing once in the 50-odd years of their existence (more on that below) – the idea had even been aired by Peter Zinovieff, who himself brilliantly realised the tapes and translated Birtwistle's composition into physical reality, that they had never existed.Footnote 2 Yet here they were.
Here is what is known for sure about these tapes:
1. They carry EMS labels (added later), and there is no doubt that they were made in Peter Zinovieff's studio in Deodar Road, Putney.
2. They are credited to ‘Composer: Birtwistle, Studio Realization: P[eter] Z[inovieff]’.
3. They have markers physically stuck to the tape every two minutes, presumably marking the two-minute envelopes described by Birtwistle in relation to his score of the work,Footnote 3 and which are noted on reel C1, suggesting that they were the tapes realised in the studio during the composition process.
4. Tape C1 is marked ‘Big Ben Master’ on the reel, in Harrison Birtwistle's handwriting (see Figure 2a).
5. Tape C2 carries the extra information ‘NEW’ on the box, and ‘THE NEW C2’ on the reel, in unidentified handwriting (see Figure 2b).
6. They contain the eight discrete tracks of Chronometer, of which they are the only source.
7. They contain several minutes more music than any other source.
8. Being the earliest tapes containing the complete composition itself, as distinct from tapes containing raw source material, they have far superior sound quality to any previously known source.
All in all, it can be said without reasonable doubt that these tapes – the ‘double-master’ as I shall call them – are the end result of the collaboration on Birtwistle's Chronometer and are the primary source for the completed work.
Chronometer was first performed at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 24 April 1972. On that occasion the piece was played from a 26-minute four-track mix-down, as detailed in the programme booklet.Footnote 4 This four-track source, labelled ‘Chronometer Final’, survives and formed the basis of the 2008 restoration of the piece (see below). It is located in the Peter Zinovieff collection currently housed at Surrey University.Footnote 5 The reason why this mix-down was used when the double-master was still easily available is unclear. It has been speculatedFootnote 6 that one of the two four-track machines listed in the inventory of EMS Studios was faulty, and thus could not be used in the concert. But how, then, was this known so far in advance as to allow mention in the programme?
The tape parts Zinovieff realised with Birtwistle often use deep bass, and thus have extensive low-frequency energy. And while Chanson de geste has only occasional low bass,Footnote 7 an excess of low-frequency energy and/or dynamic range had apparently caused problems in Alan Hacker's recording of Four Interludes for a Tragedy: the CD sleeve note describes how ‘when recording them for an LP, one of them had to be abandoned, because a backing-track frequency made the needle jump grooves on the vinyl’.Footnote 8 EMS's equipment was similarly challenged by the sound projection of Chronometer, both in its dynamic range and the sheer volume at its climaxes. It must have been clear to Zinovieff and his team that the equipment on hand was not up to the job of projecting Chronometer in the substantial and relatively dry acoustic of the Queen Elizabeth Hall, although there would probably have been no alternative at that time.Footnote 9 It therefore seems entirely understandable that they would simplify the situation by doing a mix-down, well in advance, as a ‘performance tape’. The double-master of Chronometer starts and ends with sections which have significant energy below 30 Hz. These passages were actively cut from all other sources, and in some sources low bass sounds were filtered out throughout the remaining duration of the piece, either during copying from the double-master or in mastering or restoration. This would have reduced considerably the strain on the equipment used for sound projection.Footnote 10 But, even then, Robin Wood (a member of the team at EMS at the time) recalled that the Lockwood studio monitors being used ‘really struggled to fill that […] space’.Footnote 11 Later Birtwistle would complain that the performance was simply ‘quiet, too quiet’.Footnote 12
The next advertised performance of Chronometer was of a revised version in a London Sinfonietta concert of ‘Birtwistle conducts Birtwistle’, scheduled to take place on 14 April 1973, again at the Queen Elizabeth Hall.Footnote 13 James Gardner's detective work has revealed that this concert did not take place, due to funding issues,Footnote 14 but this is no reason to think that a revision of Chronometer was not undertaken for the occasion. If we accept Zinovieff's assertion that the still extant four-track mix-down was used as a performance tape in the premiere, it would represent the only source for the unrevised version of Chronometer, albeit an incomplete one. The double-master could equally represent the revised version, marked as it is with ‘THE NEW C2’ on the second tape.Footnote 15 A comparison between the two could represent a comparison between unrevised and revised version, and would in any case be illuminating.
The whereabouts of the double-master after April 1973 are unclear, although it can be presumed that for some of that time it was in the hands of EMS/Peter Zinovieff. It was eventually passed to John Whiting, by persons unknown,Footnote 16 in order that he could make a new stereo mix-down for broadcast by the BBC, initially in the 20 October 1982 edition of Music in Our Time.Footnote 17 Whiting then took the opportunity afforded by an invitation from the London Sinfonietta to present it live, in all eight tracks for the first and only time, at the church of St John's Smith Square, London, on 14 February 1985.Footnote 18 With the caution of a seasoned professional he played it from a safety copy made in the studio at City University, London.Footnote 19 After the concert both the double-master and the safety copies remained in near-ideal storage at Whiting's studio, a situation which lasted almost two decades and undoubtedly enhanced their chances of survival.Footnote 20
The tapes reappeared (in a plastic bag) on 9 January 2013, at Kings Place, London. I was there to give an all-Birtwistle concert, followed by an interview with the composer, and John Whiting attended the concert in order to catch Harry and return the tapes. Thus I witnessed serendipitously the tapes being passed to Harry's team, one of whom remarked that Chronometer had already been restored, referring to the 2008 restoration by Abbey Road (see below). The assumption was that the tapes in the plastic bag were either the same or inferior to the four-track mix-down. No-one looked hard enough to dispel this assumption and so the tapes in the bag were relegated to Harry's cellar.
That 2008 restoration of Chronometer, made from what Peter Zinovieff identified as the four-track tape from which the premiere was played, owed its existence to the energies of Lieven Bertels, who describes the sequence of events thus:
When I wanted to program Sir Harrison Birtwistle's only strictly electronic work Chronometer at a concert in 2006, I discovered that much to my surprise, his publisher could not tell me where the tape could be obtained. Despite being clearly listed in his official catalogue, the work itself, which as one of the first major quadraphonic or ‘surround’ electronic pieces in the UK had a unique status in British music history, seemed lost, less than 35 years after its première.
Luckily enough, the composer remembered that some years ago music programmer and composer John Woolrich had undertaken a quest for Chronometer and had indeed discovered a stereo version of the piece which was played in a Birtwistle concert at London's Almeida Theatre in 2000. I made contact with Peter Zinovieff, the ‘animateur’ of Chronometer and the founder of the EMS studio where the piece was realized… The latter confirmed that he had entrusted what remained of his EMS tape library to electronic music artist Peter Kember… Zinovieff identifiedFootnote 21 one 4-channel ½” master tape labelled ‘Chronometer Finale’ [sic] as the ‘final’ quadraphonic mix played at the public première of Chronometer at a Queen Elizabeth Hall concert on 24 April 1972. It was this tape that was subsequently transferred into the digital domain and carefully restored by mastering and restoration specialist Simon Gibson at the EMI Abbey Road studios, London, in April 2008.Footnote 22
This restoration was published the same year on a DualDisc, with a four-channel version on one side of the disc and a stereo version on the other. Until now this has been the only practical way of hearing Chronometer in surround sound.Footnote 23 The comparison between this restored version and the rediscovered double-master is, however, dizzying for many reasons. First, the original arrangement of the material over eight tracks multiplies the spatialisation content of the piece and presents its counterpoint in all its original refinement and transparency. Second, the sound quality is dramatically better. The double-master has less of the distortion at climaxes which mars the 2008 restoration, and the levels of hiss are also much lower with a consequent increase in transparency.Footnote 24 Third, and most dramatically, there is about three minutes more music on the newly discovered double-master than on any other source: it lasts about 28 minutes, rather than 25 minutes,Footnote 25 with about one extra minute at the start and about two at the end. The extra time at the end is filled with a powerful but quiet heartbeat,Footnote 26 which is first detectable under the cacophony of clocks in the final minutes of the piece and continues when all else has stopped, always at a low dynamic level and presumably to be faded out slowly.
The opening two minutes are also quite different. What one previously knew as the start of the piece – the ticking of Big Ben, slowed down – appears at the two-minute point in the double-master, marking the second ‘envelope’; the opening consists almost entirely of sub-bass, from which the ticking of the previously known opening emerges. I hear it as an ‘inverse Orfeo’, starting as it does with nebulous and almost infinitely low and dark sounds, the direct opposite of the bright and energetic brass of the Toccata that opens Monteverdi's L'Orfeo.Footnote 27 Later this was a typical opening for Birtwistle, used in many of his orchestral works, especially the trilogy of works concerned with ‘time and geology’Footnote 28 (the contemporaneous Triumph of Time (1971–72), Earth Dances (1985–86) and Deep Time (2016)).
Initially I found it difficult not to hear the retrieved top and tail of Chronometer as new, due to imprinting on the LP, but despite having now overcome that, the two-minute point after the inverse Orfeo still acts as the beginning in earnest of the drama. At the other extremity we have the (probably) real heartbeat which ends the piece, already heard throughout by Michael Hall as the result of the transformation of clocks:
[N]o clockwork mechanism, no tick, is absolutely regular (at least to the perceiver) and when Birtwistle exaggerates the irregularities they become more and more like heartbeats. After a while, the throb of Big Ben turns into that other definition of pulse: rhythmical contraction and expansion of an artery. The effect is like the throb in the ear heard in bed at night.Footnote 29
Cross hears heartbeats alsoFootnote 30 but it is Robert Adlington who takes Michael Hall's ball and runs with it:
The transformation [from mechanism to heartbeat], though, is not complete: the clock sound remains identifiable. In emphasising the proximity of clock and heartbeat, Chronometer identifies the most pervasive way in which society projects measurable clock time as ‘natural’ – namely by reference to pulse.Footnote 31
After a brief tussle with Hegel, he continues:
From an Adornian perspective, Chronometer hovers dangerously on the precipice of total submission to the rationalised time of industrial society.Footnote 32
The newly rediscovered heartbeat ending seems to have been almost predicted by these three commentators. What was ‘not complete’ is now complete; what ‘hovers dangerously on the precipice’ now makes clear the primacy, in this moment at least, of the human pulse. It brings closure musically through the looping back to the rhythm of the ticking clockFootnote 33 and psychologically by returning us to reality: the dream-drama of clashing clock-times gives way to the experienced time of our own bodies.
A final comment: almost from the beginning Chronometer has been described as a work for two asynchronous tapes. The programme for the first performance does not contain this description, but Birtwistle later commented that Zinovieff ‘had two four-tracks and randomly played them against each other. They weren't synchronised… But we accepted that, that it would have that element in it which was random.’Footnote 34
Now that we have the double-master the idea of two tapes full of music being started in some capriciously asynchronous manner can be discounted. Tape 1 begins with a whole two minutes of silence, measured out as 45.6 metresFootnote 35 of expensive blank magnetic tape, a very clear indication that both tapes were meant to be started together, with the required time difference achieved by the measured blank tape. That hardly counts as ‘randomly played… against each other’; instead it was an attempt at synchronicity that was nevertheless somewhat rough and ready. (This begs the further question: what magnitude of effect would inaccurate splicing have on the relationship between the two tapes? Again, a little arithmetic suggests that, with an accuracy of about a third of a centimetre in splicing, and a tape speed of 38 cm/s, this yields an accuracy of 10 ms.Footnote 36 Asynchronicity is unlikely to have been significantly exacerbated by poor editing.)
Writing about the music of Chronometer was, until now, severely hindered by the disappearance of the original double-master. Tom Hall bemoans that for ‘a piece which according to Cross has a “clear structure”,Footnote 37 it is notable that no commentator has attempted to provide a more detailed account of how the work is structured’.Footnote 38 Tom Hall nobly makes just such an attempt, but clearly demonstrates the well-known difficulties inherent in analysing scoreless musical ‘works’ by presenting only an overview of a half-hour sonogram that tells us little, informed by modest input from Birtwistle and Zinovieff.Footnote 39
Now that we have all eight tracks again, we can hear the complete work in its original format, full of detail and texture, and we are also able to study it in many different ways. The composer John Aulich has been able to sketch a possible visual representation of the piece, along the lines of Rainer Wehinger's listening score for Ligeti's Artikulation,Footnote 40 and this may well open the doors to future commentators. Figure 3 and Example 1 show the eight-track waveform of the double-master and its representation in score (from 16:00 – corresponding to about 14:00 on Electronic Calendar, 14:08 on the SAM DualDisc and 14:20 on the Decca LP).
Finally, the best news of all is that the double-master (and several other EMS Studios tapesFootnote 41) are in the hands of Andreas K. Meyer of Meyer Media, New York.Footnote 42 He and his team have copied them at the highest possible resolution and are undertaking the further restoration, in collaboration with myself and others. Later this year an eight-track performance file based on the double-master will be available from the publisher.