The apparatus of modern percussion is boundless, with individual instruments derived from African, Arab, Turkish, East Asian, South East Asian, Central and South American cultures and only to a slight extent from European ones – a fact that has long been neglected in Western art music circles. For a long time, percussion’s presence in the orchestra was restricted to an accompaniment providing rhythm and emphasis. In chamber music it was entirely non-existent. Its unrivalled wealth of possibilities would only be discovered gradually and not before the 20th century. New modern visions of the aesthetics of sound involved more and more associative, noise-like, non-musical sounds, starting with the cow bells, whip and hammer in Gustav Mahler’s 6th Symphony (1904). How a sonic atmosphere can not only be communicated but envelop the listener entirely can also be experienced in Leoš Janáček’s final opera From the House of the Dead (1927/28). Straight from the overture Janáček uses the sounds of everyday tools such as chains, anvils, axes and saws to define the environment of the Siberian labour camp characterised by relentless hard physical work. In common with these tools, every new source of sound that was added to the orchestra, ended up in the percussion section. Here an interface developed between music and the everyday world, a completely heterogeneous organism that held every style of music and the entire world stored inside it. And the more attention percussion received, the faster both the instrument and the repertoire for it grew. Talk of the »century of percussion« is perfectly justified – and it is not yet finished.
The Hungarian composer Béla Bartók was one of the first who attempted to emancipate percussion in Western art music. In his Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion (1938) he places the percussion on an equal level with the piano by swapping their traditional roles: due to its hammer mechanism he treats the piano like a percussion instrument, while emphasising the melodic potential of the percussion with the aid of a xylophone and pedal drums. This makes the pianos and the percussion chamber music partners of equal standing, both providing melody, sound and rhythm.
Solo compositions took longer to arrive. In 1959, when the Darmstadt Summer Course for New Music planned to advertise an instrumental competition for percussion only to realise that there were no solo works available, Karlheinz Stockhausen promptly wrote his epoch-making Zyklus for a percussionist No. 9 – a title that can be understood both literally and visually: he grouped the instruments according to their materials – wood, skin, metal – and arranged for the instruments to be set up in a circle in order to facilitate seamless sonic transitions from one group to another. Zyklus immediately inspired a series of other composers to write pieces for solo percussion. Liberation from its accompanying role had been achieved!
Now percussion is more than simply emancipated. In addition to the fabulous virtuosity that has made jazz and rock greats like Billy Cobham legends on the drum kit or a musician such as Mohammad Reza Mortazavi a maestro of the Persian percussion instruments the tombak and the daf, this variable instrument offers sufficient stage potential for performances of a visual or choreographic nature (Marilyn Mazur, Camille Emaille et al.) – and sometimes even with a theatrical character, as it is typical of Ensemble This I Ensemble That, or as also happens in Georges Aperghis’s new music theatre piece Die Erdfabrik.