
No. 1-5
Soloists
Great Philharmonic
Orchestra
Great Archaic Orchestra
Great Percussion
Orchestra
Electronic Instruments
Peter
Huebner
Symphonies of the Great Stream
label:
Archaic
total playing time: : 5h 3554
![]() Richard Wagner To
begin with, I wish to say that inspiration is a very evasive, a most illusive
subject, which is not easily defined and about which we know very little.
Few indeed there be who know how to tap the source whence it flows, and
this undoubtedly is the reason why there has been so little written about
it.
I am convinced that there are universal currents of Divine Thought vibrating the ether everywhere and that anyone who can feel those vibrations is inspired, provided he is conscious of the process and possesses the knowledge and skill to present them in a convincing manner, be he composer, architect, painter, sculptor, or inventor. While working on my scores, I have had many wonderful and exhilarating experiences in that invisi- ble realm, which I can define to some extent at least. I believe first of all, that it is this universal vibrating energy that binds the soul of man to the Almighty Central Power from which emanates the life principle to which we all owe our existence. This energy links us to the Supreme Force of the universe, of which we are all a part. If it were not so, we could not bring our- selves into communication with it. The one who can do this is inspired. Wagner |
THE
COMPOSER TO HIS HYMNS & SYMPHONIES OF THE GREAT STREAM |
![]() The Rhine Daugthers When
I commenced work on Rheingold in 1853, I was lying in bed. I felt suddenly
as if I were immersed in a flood of flowing water. I imagined myself lying
at the bottom of the Rhine. I could certainly feel and hear the moving,
surging water sweeping over me.
I
have very definite impressions while in that trance-like condition, which
is the prerequisite of all true creative effort. I feel that I am one with
this vibrating Force, that it is Omniscient, and that I can draw upon it
to an extent that is limited only by my own capacity do so. Wagner |
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CLASSIC-Life: Herr Huebner, what can you tell us about the symphonies and hymns of the Great
Stream? PETER HUEBNER: The Great Stream is the archaic synonym for the Course of the Soul. This course which according to the statements of the great wise people happens in very great intervals, is the basis of everything that occurs all around as part of evolution: the development of the individual, the development of whole nations, the development of entire galaxies, indeed, the development of entire universes. Everything external has its inner being. The external is loud, the inner being quiet, the innermost is inaudible, but extremely powerful like the soul, and, if necessary, omnipotent, like the Great Soul. I have tried to present and clarify these conditions as archaically and musically as possible. The person who listens to the tones, is ruled in his thinking by the tones up to the knowledge of the great tonal connections in space and time. And the person who in all this action seeks stillness, at the same time making less and less effort and relaxing more and more, and in the end only simply listens without any inner resistance and analytical show of strength, might advance to that stillness of archaic harmony, which rules the development of the sound in this piece of work. In this cosmic stillness of his consciousness and/or thinking, he might even advance to the fields of his own soul, and perhaps glance briefly into the world of the Great Soul beyond space and time, where everything streams as from a boundless golden source, and enlivens the cosmic stillness of consciousness: animates it. This person has experienced the Great Stream. |
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| CLASSICAL MUSIC GROUP |
| p r e s e n t s |
| PETER
HUEBNER GERMANYS NEW CLASSICAL COMPOSER |