I once emailed Finnissy asking about what a pianist should do when attempting to learn and perform his impossible pieces. Here's his response:
That response is certainly useful to have and will presumably now save Thal the bother of contacting the composer to ask him questions about how he wants and/or expects his piano music to be performed; thank you for posting this.
Michael wrote
I have to admit that I don't write for people who do music 'because it's their job', and who just want a 'quiet life' without disturbing their feelings or imagination or taxing their brain. The universe I experience is just not like that. The ex-Poet Laureate, in answer to the statement that 'people didn't read poetry because it was too difficult to understand' said 'then deal with it' rather than offering to somehow 'soften the blow' or otherwise dumb-down. I don't think Art should be innocuous and passive. Inevitably this view gets me into all sorts of trouble!There are those who would appear to have a problem with this kind of attitude, yet is is no different to Beethoven's in principle (remember his "puny violin" remark?); the reason that some people take exception to it is that they consider it to be an expression of arrogance on the part of the composer, yet of course this is not the case. Birtwistle and Carter before him and Sorabji before him likewise made comments in their various ways about not considering their audiences when writing - meaning not deliberately trying to "give them what they want" (which in reality means what others have tried to persuade them to want); that stance, however, is by no means the same thing as writing "against" one's potential or actual audience - all it signifies is that one simply cannot tell how anyone's going to respond to performance of one's music until it's performed and they do respond. Michael is therefore quite simply and directly reflecting this position, associating himself with it and confirming it as the only credible and viable one for a creative artist to adopt.
The characteristics (familiar or otherwise) of one's musical language make no difference here; let's not forget, for example, that Berg once wrote an essay entitled
Why is Schönberg's music so hard to understand? - yet the work he chose to illustrate it was the elder composer's String Quartet No. 1 which, its immense and elaborate complexity notwithstanding, is in D minor!
Audiences have a right not to be written down to.
Best,
Alistair