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Newsletter 1/2003

New Sheet Music
by Wim van Dullemen

Feelings and thoughts evoked by Schott’s publication of Volume III of the Gurdjieff-De Hartmann music for the piano

This article consists of what I can remember of my own feelings and thoughts evoked in me by the recent publication of this album of sheet music. Actually, those feelings and thoughts came to me while driving from Amsterdam to Berlin.

Looking at the new blue album, lying next to me on the passenger seat, I felt glad. I knew I was just one of the many, many musicians who had eagerly looked forward to this new album. And its long delay, the intended release was scheduled in 1998, was at once forgotten! ‘Look what happened’ I said to myself joyfully, ‘the most important music publishing house in the world has added these compositions to its list of published music, a list that includes the collected works of Mozart, Beethoven and Wagner! Who would have believed this at the time I started playing this music. But really, this is the place where those composers belong.’ And I felt proud, driving my car through deserted streets in the darkness of the early morning. A quick glance through its contents had already assured me that the quality of this new album was of the same high level as the previous ones. The inspired work of the preparing committee, guided by Thomas Daly, guarantees that even the most minute details have been taken care of and that the final printed version is the result of studying and comparing all existing sources.

‘This book is a real treasure’ it resounded in me, while steering my car from the streets of the town onto the large highway heading east. At this time of the morning, only the heavy sounds of an occasional truck could be heard. ‘I would not know any other twentieth-century compositions for piano with the same depth, the same powerful capacity to create silence in me, trust, and above all the longing to become myself.’ And that is what I need, because again and again I am swept out of myself, losing the thread of my own existence.

’No other composer? Now wait a minute... What about Bartok, his songs of mourning?’ When driving on a lonely highway, it is easy to talk aloud by yourself without anybody thinking that you are crazy. ‘Well ok..... that is high quality too’ I argued with myself, ‘and he even used the same harmonisations as De Hartmann, but somehow or other it is more musical, while the Gurdjieff/De Hartmann music seems to be not only music, something seems to be added’. An old memory came up. A pupil of Gurdjieff once explained to me, while we were sitting somewhere in the Swiss Alps: ‘Gurdjieff was not a musician, but he knew music, he knew it from the inside’. For me, that is as far as words can go, describing Gurdjieff’s and De Hartmann’s music. By association, Bartok’s name called up another image in my memory. I heard my piano teacher, long ago, playing a fast dance from the Microcosmos collection. I just stood and listened. It was one of those moments in which Time seems to hold its breath. My teacher was a friend of Bartok and the music touched me to the very bone. The car’s speed swept an endless row of black trees on the side of the road through an unusually large yellow moon, hollowed out by the shadow of the earth.


A necessary project: a reliable catalogue of the Gurdjieff/De Hartmann music

Passing the border, I noticed a car of the German Highway Patrol checking every car entering Germany. They did not bother to pay attention to me. Why do I have to feel guilty when I see police? Stupid feelings, always repeat themselves without any reason, and they quite obviously have done so ever since childhood! Now some hundred more kilometres to go before I reach my favourite stop, a little wayside restaurant serving excellent cappuccino 24 hours a day. Just thinking about that coffee keeps me on the road for a while!

‘Yes, back to business, where were we, what can I add to my article’ I thought. ‘Should I discuss my hobbyhorse: The Missing Catalogue?’ The talking in myself continued: ‘Who the hell cares anyway, isn‘t this catalogue thing becoming an obsession? Well, the hell it isn’t!’ The internal discussion was becoming quite heated. ‘Isn’t it idiotic enough already that the world had to wait 75 years before this music became available for everybody? And isn‘t it equally absurd that even now an overview of all the musical works of Gurdjieff and De Hartmann still doesn‘t exist?‘

I remembered my earlier attempts, now obsolete, of compiling a catalogue of this music myself, because nobody else did it. Frustrating work, because only bits and pieces of information were available and the outlines of this musical oeuvre became visible only very slowly. The title chaos, for instance, still continues. Even in these hymns now published, and them forming the simplest part in this respect, there are many examples. The title Essene Hymn caught my attention. What piece could that be? Ah...that piece was recorded in the well-known 23 Pieces for Piano, but in that selection it is called Hymn for Christmas, while in the equally well-known Triangle CDs, De Hartmann plays an Essene Hymn as well, but that again is another piece, a third one, which will be published in the last Volume by Schott where it is called Hymn from a Great Temple number 10. If you cannot follow all this, you are forgiven.

Fact remains that a clear and concise overview of these important musical works is needed.
’Couldn‘t the Schott editions themselves function as an overview?’, I heard myself ask. And I did not have to wait long for my answer: ‘Of course not, first of all the Schott editions will not represent the total body of works by Gurdjieff and De Hartmann written for piano. They will be far from complete. Not only is the music for the Movements left out, a number of other pieces is also not included, for reasons that I do not know.’

’Let’s calculate: the three albums now published by Schott have a total of 164 compositions, while the copyright list made for Janus in 1950 lists no fewer than 237 pieces already, and that does not even include very many of the Movements compositions. The fourth, and last, Schott Volume will contain 22 pieces (The Hymns of a Great Temple series, The Struggle of the Magicians Fragments and some more, like the Initiation of a Priestess ). A substantial part of the oeuvre, in fact some thirty percent, will not be published by Schott at all. So how could the Schott albums function as a catalogue? And this is not to mention the ‘title chaos‘. Somebody should make a good list, providing all titles and dates as well.

Vaguely remembering that our Movements Foundation has the work on such a projects, for both music and Movements, as one of its aims, I quickly dismiss any future possibility of that dreadful and frustrating work, and take the turn to the wayside side restaurant. I earned that good cappuccino at last, and quickly decide for the compromise that for the time being the Schott albums should function as a sort of catalogue, something being better than nothing.


It is obligatory for anybody trying to play this sheet music to hear and study Thomas de Hartmann playing his own compositions?

‘Coffee Machine temporarily out of order’ was written in big letters all over the machine, and another handwriting informs me that: ‘don’t think we will make coffee for you any other way!!’ My inner world loses its coherence ‘temporarily’ and I have to drive on, without coffee. I forget my martyrdom, as well as my inner slave who keeps mumbling ‘coffee please, coffee please’ when I see the sun rising above the horizon, in all its splendour. More and more trucks have joined me now, together we are climbing uphill into the Wiesen Hills and Mountains. I cannot think of any music now, I am afraid of icy roads on this altitude and listen as well as I can to the sounds of the tyres on the road to detect ice. I want to arrive home safe and sound and remember that in life, nothing is predictable, I too can have an accident, and many people do.

Leaving the hills behind me, my article comes back fortissimo. ‘I have to stress how important it is for anybody interested in playing this music to hear De Hartmann play himself. I really don’t think that studying the sheet music is enough, you have to hear De Hartmann’s own interpretations’. Many pianist have played the hymns in this new volume, but De Hartmann’s own playing is by far the best reference. Like a compass, that shows how to direct our efforts. Fortunately the 3-CD set, originally from Triangle, with recordings of De Hartmann playing can be bought from our own website.

And there is another reason for studying his playing. He does not stick to the written music, he demonstrates an inner freedom, a tendency towards creation and improvisation. The committee that prepared the album recognises this and, at the end, three transcriptions of these freely played hymns, as a contrast with the original sheet music are provided. But many, many more could be given. I have understood that an enormous number of recordings of De Hartmann playing this music exists, and I really hope that more selections will be made available to the general public. I think that this is a necessity for the pianists aspiring to play these works.

Arriving in former Eastern Germany, I have some 200 more kilometres to go, almost no cities, just snow-covered trees, silence. I think about the following problem:

A difficult one: if De Hartmann plays with full inspiration and yet ignores or changes his own sheet music, what should have preference: his own interpretation or the sheet music in the album?

An example: Easter Hymn, the second system has a sudden change at the end from ff to pp. I have two recordings of De Hartmann playing this piece. In the first, he plays exactly what is on the sheet music. But in the second, he just pounds out the pp-section with triple Forte! Why?? Did he not see the pp-sign the first time? Was he carried away by his own music? To me the fff sounds much more convincing.

Now if I am performing this piece, what am I going to do? The most acceptable guideline seems to be that De Hartmann is more a composer than a performer. While playing a piece, he was listening to his most inner responses. His musical sensitivities and intuitions mixed with his memories of the actual structure of the piece, which he was thus recreating. No doubt, the music evoked in him emotional and conscious memories of Gurdjieff, and those who have read his autobiography, as well as the unpublished autobiography of his wife (What for? ) know how significant and crucial these were to him.

Another example: The hymn of 14 February 1926. Clear differences with the recording on the Triangle CDs, but to me these are improvements, and any performance of 'just' the sheet music would sound dull in comparison. I will certainly take the recorded version if I would play this piece.

Why? Because I think, it is just because of those contradictions that we come closer to the mystery of this music. We can hear and follow De Hartmann’s musical sensitivities and how these translate into immediate musical responses. In fact, we advance more towards the creative process, or better said, the MYSTERY of the creation of this music. To a certain extent, I am convinced that even we, when we play this album, should be on the same line as De Hartmann.. We too have to listen to the flow of our musical associations, rather than just look at the sheet music. De Hartmann himself convinces us. What he seems to tell us is: ‘listen inwardly, feel the music, and only then: play!’


Gurdjieff’s music is an organic part of his whole teaching: oral teaching, books, music and movements

While driving that endless road to the east , the low winter sun now right in front of me and blinding me all the time, a funny thought came to me: ‘Can an atheist sing a Gregorian song convincingly?’

Let me explain this weird question: Gurdjieff’s music was composed for people who worked. This means for those who practised his teaching. It is not different now. This music resounds in our inner life, and yes, I do think that you have to try to live Gurdjieff‘s Work to fully understand this music.

Because his music was in integral part of his teaching, my last point, and probably most serious criticism on this last Schott Volume, is that the link between Gurdjieff‘s books and music seems to be lost.


In Gurdjieff‘s music, his ideas are realised emotionally while in his books they are realised intellectually. They were meant to be complementary

Several authentic sources confirm the above statement (Zigrosser, Orage, Bennett ).
Gurdjieff thought that his books could be understood better if the emotions were tuned into them. For that reason, he composed music to be played before and after reading of his books. It is such a pity that we know so little about the possible connections between certain compositions and chapters from Gurdjieff’s books.

Our own experiments combining music with reading gave excellent results. We can recommend this procedure to every serious student of All and Everything.

Then, my car entered Berlin. From one second to the other, you exchange a large highway for an old beautiful lane, full with trees. The Berlin trees always welcome me after my long drive, they make me feel good.


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