Luis Damiani (violin) performed my piece “A rare form of kleptomania” for violin and computer.
A recording of the work here:
Terminus Ensemble of Contemporary Music was founded in 2011 to promote new classical music by composers based in Atlanta, Georgia. Terminus was the original name of Atlanta – it was the end of the line for the Western & Atlantic Railroad. But Terminus does not literally mean “the end.” Rather, it means “boundary.” Our ensemble focuses on music made by natives and residents of Atlanta, but we also seek to explore the boundaries of art music.
ALVIN LUCIER Orchestra Works. Diamonds for 1, 2 or 3 Orchestras. Slices. Exploration of the house • Christian Arming, Petr Kotik, Zsolt Nagy (cn); Charles Curtis (vlc); Demarre McGill (fl); Andrea Overturf (ob); Anthony Burr (cl); Valentin Martchev (bsn); Benjamin Jaber (hn); John Wilds (trp); Kyle Covington (trb); Jonathan Piper (tb); Jeff Thayer (vln); Jisun Yang (vln); Che-Yen Chen (vla); Yao Zhao (vlc); Jeremy Kurtz-Harris (db) ; Janácek Philharmonic Orchestra • New World Records 80755-2 (76:04)
Alvin Lucier’s music arises my most primitive curiosities. When I listen to his work, all the technicalities seem not to be relevant anymore, I only want to know how those sounds have been built, how the composer fabricated all the forms, sounds and textures. I experience a sort of sensorial challenge: is Lucier’s work meant to be touched or seen?
In Diamonds for 1, 2 or 3 Orchestras (1999) Lucier becomes a painter. Using the orchestra as his palette, the composer creates sonic shapes that move in space. Unisons, glissandi, and a split ensemble are some of the orchestrational resources that trigger the listener’s imagination. It is clear that the work is about the aural representation of diamond shapes, but the connections between sound and shape could remain hidden to the inattentive ear. The trajectories, forms, and colors of the aural bodies challenge our basic act of listening raising another fundamental question: do we really listen to this work or we look at it?
The middle track of the disc, Slices for cello and orchestra (2007), is anything but a traditional cello concerto. In fact, the cellist is more of a magician with a four-stringed wand than a soloist. The 53-note cluster (probably coming from the syntonic temperament) that reigns throughout the work covers the whole playing range of the solo instrument and is orchestrated in a way that every note is assigned to a different instrument of the ensemble. The compositional process is simple: with each note that the cello plays, an instrument of the orchestra (the one that plays that same note) becomes silent. Essentially, the music goes from cluster to silence and from silence to cluster. The process is clearly revealed but yet magical. This procedure repeats—not identically—for seven times until the work ends in silence.
In Exploration of the House (2005) Lucier revisits the feedback paradigm of I am sitting in a room in which he explored the resonances of the enclosed spaces. However, the sound source of the work is not the composers’ voice, but a selection of seventeen short fragments from Beethoven’s The Consecration of the House overture performed by the Janácek Philharmonic. Far from being self referential, the piece proposes a multi-layered homage: it celebrates Beethoven and Haydn’s meta personalities that slowly evaporate in front of a static orchestra. Interestingly, the climax arrives with utmost subtlety, in the very moment when the orchestral excerpts become unintelligible and the resonances of the concert hall take over.
Lucier’s Orchestra Works is not a regular album. With only three tracks, the CD unfolds the inner ear, constantly challenging the most primary act of listening. The sounds offered are not just for aural intake, they can be touched and seen.
Close your eyes and enjoy a world of multicolored tangible sonorities.
An excerpt of a 35′ performance by Domino kwartet from last May. The show presented an uninterrupted set of new works intertwined with segments of free improvisation. All original compositions. For more videos, visit or subscribe to the channel here:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnZuj3JFYMuGCXE7_wVD-_w
or visit the kwartet’s site:
Click on the image to get access to the full pdf version of the Album.
or visit this link:
http://www.musicalis.es/?product=album-xxv-aniversario-de-musica-y-educacion
Dr. James Paul Sain Professor & FEMS Director
Andrew Babcock, Garrett Hecker & Rob Seaback Graduate Assistants
PROGRAM
Friday, 31 October 2014 – 7:30pm • MUB 101
Aeromancer Peter Van Zandt Lane
Peter Van Zandt Lane, bassoon
Amicus Garrett Hecker
Hydromancer Peter Van Zandt Lane
Peter Van Zandt Lane, bassoon
Jostled Michael Polo
La jungla Jorge Variego
Anacoustic Zones Ronald Keith Parks & Seth Rouser
catena Rob Seaback
On September 13th the internationally renown Excelsior! Trio performed my work “The end Unplugged” as part of the concerts at Concordia College.
More information: facebook.com/concordiaevents
New music featured in the next Society of Composers Inc. CD “Pendulum” released by PARMA Records. Click on the image to get to more information about the album, the featured artists and the scores.
More information about the Parma Music Festival:
Portsmouth Herald
http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20140807-ENTERTAIN-408070301
Manchester Union-Leader
http://www.unionleader.com/article/20140807/NEWHAMPSHIRE0105/140809261
Lawrence Eagle-Tribune
http://www.eagletribune.com/lifestyle/x1927896792/Music-Music-Music?zc_p=0
Arts Fuse