I like to think of the Chord Catalogue
as a sort of natural phenomenonæsomething which has always
been present in the ordinary musical scale, and which I simply
observed, rather than invented. It is not so much a composition
as simply a list.
Tom Johnson , 1985
Extreme and, one would think, extremely simple.
A lesser man would have arranged those 8178 chords in some symphonically
meaningful, or else quasi-random order, but Johnson proceeded
methodically up the chromatic scale from two notes at a time,
three, four, so on to 13. Before each section he would disconcertingly
inform us, "the 715 four-note chords... the 1287 five-note
chords..." His modest promise that we would "get the
idea of the piece" within a few minutes wasn't really true.
Two-note chords were predictably dull, three-note ones little
better.But four notes began to sound almost like functional tonality
in this denuded context: five sounded noticeagbly lusher, and
reminded one of the era in which harmony was enriched by ninth
chords and similar possibilities. By the time we reached 10-note
chords, the information overload was such that differences were
hardly perceptible, a situation reminiscent of serial music. Far
from being heavy-handed minimalism, the Chord Catalogue was
a pointed lesson in musi!c history and the relativity of perception.
Kyle Gann, Village Voice (April 14, 1987)

|
| 2. Los 286 acordes de tres notas |
| 3. Los 715 acordes de cuatro notas |
| 4. Los 1287 acordes de cinco notas |
| 5. Los 1716 acordes de seis notas |
| 6. Los 1716 acordes de siete notas |
| 7. Los 1287 acordes de ocho notas |
| 8. Los 715 acordes de nueve notas |
| 9. Los 286 acordes de diez notas |
| 10. Los 78 acordes de once notas |
| 11. Los 13 acordes de doce notas |
| 12. El acorde de trece notas |
Another transcendental experience was Tom
Johnson's Chord Catalogue, which included all the 8178
chords possible in the octave c - c1, from the two-note chords
to the complete cluster. Johnson, who required only one hour for
this, is the only pianist who can make his way through the dizzying
multiplicity of colors present in the equal-tempered scale. Resonances
in the space, and excitations in the ears, caused sheer psychedelic
perceptions, that well surpassed the simple combinations game.
Matthias Entress, Berliner Morgenpost. Nov. 24, 1998