
various artists compilation - Sonorous Explorations
LUCIA DLUGOSZEWSKI - TENDER THEATRE FLIGHT NAGEIRE (1978)
Gerard Schwarz, Edward Carroll, Norman Smith - trumpets
Robert Routch - horn
David Langlitz - tenor trombone
David Taylor - bass trombone
Lucia Dlugoszewski - percussion
Gerard Schwarz - conductor
From the liner notes written by Dlugoszewski:
The first concern of all music in one way or another is to shatter the indifference of hearing, the callousness of sensibility, to create that moment of solution we call poetry, our rigidity dissolved when we occur reborn - in a sense, hearing for the first time. TENDER THEATRE FLIGHT NAGEIRE is actually a series of musical rituals involved somehow with the poetic roots of erotic experience. Its nakedness of spirit requires a special courage all its own, the courage of vulnerability in terms of letting out feeling, something perilously real with a fierce fragile ambience of elegance, sensitivity, and that radiance of the highest energy release in the mind we call passion. Rituals of sound involving both immediacy and Amor combine to create the musical structure.
The four words TENDER, THEATRE, FLIGHT, NAGEIRE are poetrically chosen to identify structural principles that embody the reality of this music.
TENDER: the 'imprint' of Amor, investigating possibilities of almost bottomless sensitivity, this strange proportion of the mind, a seductive loosening, so to speak.
THEATRE: immediacy in space and time, seeing the sound created as well as hearing it, feeling the sound travel strangely in space.
FLIGHT: the generic translation of 'fugue,' that element of aesthetic elusiveness that we associate with elegance, shedding the gross, heavy, oppressive in favor of the subtle, light and free. The principle of FLIGHT, musically, is a kind of perilous hanging by the ears, where everything is like a hanging bridge, vulnerable, dangerous, tender, unsupported; naked.
NAGEIRE is an oriental aesthetic principle of nondevelopment, of non-linear or 'leap' progression. It uses constant and extreme surprise. The literal translation is 'flung into.' NAGEIRE embodies the oriental aesthetic delight in the courage of the delicacy of daring constructions. It is a kinesthetically inspired system of leaping into unknown material - a braving of the known, a distance-reckless freedom of absolute movement - leaping for the flexibility of the mind.
C. CURTIS-SMITH - UNISONICS (1976)
Trent Kynaston - alto saxophone
C. Curtis-Smith - piano
From the liner notes written by Smith:
In UNISONICS, I have attempted to merge the sounds of the two instruments as one, largely through the use of unisons or the heterophonic ornamentation of a single melodic line. The concept of 'unison' in this work refers to more than the duplication of pitch; through the use of extended techniques for both instruments, the attack and timbral characteristics of the two instruments are brought closer together. Except for the fourth movement, the piano is limited throughout to the tessitura of the saxophone.
The piece is in five movements, the first and last of which are in the form of a prelude and postlude based on similar material. (The postlude is essentially a slow transformation of the more brilliant prelude.) The second movement introduces multiphonics in the saxophone (20 different ones are used during the course of the piece), and cyclical breathing. The bowing of the piano strings, using specially designed bows, is used in this movement as well as in the fourth movement. Since 1972, when I first originated the technique of bowing the piano strings, I have used this method of sound production in a variety of pieces, including FIVE SONOROUS INVENTIONS (CRI 346) and RHAPSODIES (CRI 345).
The third movement is heterophonically the most complex of the five, with the two instruments beginning in unison, and gradually diverging as the movement progresses.
The fourth movement features some extreme altissimo writing for the saxophone (a total of five different octaves of B-flat are notated!), as well as various multiphonics, counterbalanced by more extensive bowing of the piano strings. This time, however, the bowing involves only the strings in the lowest octave, the resulting high pitches being partials, sometimes as high as the 64th.
None of the piano sounds are electronically manipulated or amplified in any way. UNISONICS was written for Trent Kynaston.
C. CURTIS-SMITH - MUSIC FOR HANDBELLS (1976-7)
Handbell Choir
C.Curtis-Smith - conductor
From the liner notes written by Smith:
MUSIC FOR HANDBELLS was written in 1976-77 for a three-octave (37 pitches) set of handbells. Each of the ten handbell players is responsible for either three or four bells.
I have departed from traditional handbell notation (which resembles piano music) and have written the ten parts on as many staves, thus achieving a greater accuracy of notation, especially in terms of the duration or damping of each bell.
Each of the ten parts is assigned one or two dyads, which are, of course, combined with other dyads. These dyads are constructed around the pitch center C, with G (sometimes G major) a strong supproting sonority. The separate dyads are thought of as progressing independently with occasional collisions in musical space to form what are sometimes very consonant vertical entities. (C major, E flat major, etc.)
Since handbells produce tones of such extraordinary duration, every pitch can be thought of as forming and maintaining a separate level throughout the piece. Melodies then become an intricate series of staggered repeated notes, sometimes widely spaced, but nonetheless ultimately simply repeated notes, which by their immediate juxtaposition in musical space happen to form melodies, lines, and harmonies. Thus, the opening of the piece, the germ of this concept, is quite simply, three levels of repeated notes. After that, the complexity of the repetitions increases rapidly.
The piece is traditionally notated in terms of pitch and duration, with nothing left to chance, with the exception of three rather short sections: the opening passage, the static C-major-ish section about halfway through, and the loudest passage near the end where the bells enter in stretto one by one.
Tracklisting:
SIDE 1
1. Lucia Dlugoszewski - Tender Theatre Flight Nageire {22:03}
SIDE 2
1. C. Curtis-Smith - Unisonics {16:22}
2. C. Curtis-Smith - Music for Handbells {8:32}
(1) or (1)
I couldn't extract the first half, though it's not a problem because I was really only interested in the second half anyway.
ReplyDeleteThe first half or part 1 works. If anyone is having problems, try again, but go to a different file host just in case.
ReplyDelete