White River Dream Song

Basic information

Composer Van Eycken, Stefan
Duration 10 min.
Year of composition 2001
First performance (year) 2001
First performance (venue)
First performance (performers) Champ d'Action
Submitter Champ d'Action
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor No
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Cello1
Flute 1
C bass
Clarinet 1
Contrabass
Musicians Instruments
Percussion 1
Marimba
Vibraphone (F3)
Cymbals
Wood Blocks
Other
Keyboard 1
Piano
Other plucked instruments 1
Guitar
Other instruments and playing techniques
The player of the contrabass clarinet plays also clarinet. The guitar is an electric guitar. The piano is used with electronics.
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

White River Dream Song (2001) is a sequence of five sonic "snapshots" from a larger (imaginary) continuum. Years after writing this piece, I came across a series of four, very small paintings by Pieter Breughel the Younger (who happened to be from the same region as me), exploring exactly the same idea. Must be something in the water.

Technical specs
Additional notes

Chamber Music No. 5 “The Four Seasons”

for clarinet, trombone, piano and strings

Basic information

Composer Lasoń, Aleksander
Duration 30 min.
Year of composition 1981
First performance (year) 1989
First performance (venue) Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań
First performance (performers) Encores Chamber Orchestra, Wojciech Michniewski - cond.
Submitter Orkiestra Muzyki Nowej
Publisher TONOS
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Violin5
Viola3
Cello2
Double-bass15-string
Clarinet 1
E-flat soprano
Trombone 1
Tenor
Musicians Instruments
Other instruments and playing techniques
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

The piece Chamber Music No. 5 'The Four Seasons' was written in 1981, on the initiative of Zygmunt Krauze, with a view of a first performance in Paris in January 1982. The plan did not materialize due to the imposition of martial law in Poland in December 1981. In 1981-84 I introduced minor alterations to the piece. It was premiered in its new shape after quite a while, on 1 April 1989, by the'Encores Chamber Orchestra under Wojciech Michniewski at the 'Poznań Spring' Festival. The work's individual sections (Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter) are in stark contrast to each other. They were written in the corresponding seasons of the year and are a reflection of my emotional and spiritual state rather than a musical illustration. The musical material was subjected here and there to a fairly strict treatment. By and large no rigours were applied in relation to metre or rhythm. This gives the performers a sense of freedom, which in effect should produce an expected consistency. The piece is dedicated to Krzysztof Droba. (the note by Aleksander Lasoń, from the 2002 'Warsaw Autumn' programme book)

Technical specs
Additional notes

Ventriloquium

Basic information

Composer Prins, Stefan
Duration 13 min.
Year of composition 2006
First performance (year) 2006
First performance (venue) Transitfestival, Leuven
First performance (performers) Champ d'Action & collectief reFLEXible
Submitter Champ d'Action
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) six instruments,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Cello1
Musicians Instruments
Percussion 1
Other plucked instruments 1
Guitar
Other instruments and playing techniques
Live-electronics and two improvising musicians (random instrument). The guitar is an electric guitar.
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

The title, Ventriloquium, refers to the following quotation by Jacques Derrida, which served as a conceptual starting point for the composition:

"It's not easy to improvise. It's the most difficult thing to do. Even when one improvises in front of a camera or a microphone one ventriloquizes or leaves another to speak in one's place the schemas and languages that are already there. There are already a great number of prescriptions that are prescribed in our memory and in our culture. All the names are already preprogrammed. It's already the names that inhibit our ability to ever really improvise. One can't say whatever one wants. One is obliged, more or less, to reproduce the stereotypical discourse. And so I believe in improvisation. And I fight for improvisation. But always with the belief that it's impossible. And there, where there is improvisation I am not able to see myself. I am blind to myself and it's what I will see, no I won't see it, it's for others to see. The one who is improvised here, no, I won't ever see him."
(Jacques Derrida, Screenplay and Essays on the Film Derrida by Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering Kofman, Routledge, New York 2005)

The subject of investigation in this composition is –as in Derrida’s text- the relation between “improvisation” and “text”. Related and investigated questions are: what is the rôle of “culture” as collective and individual memory in this relation? How is the individual related to the collective and how does “technology” change this relation. Does the “individual” exist uberhaupt, or is he only what higher structures dictate him to be.

These questions are investigated by placing a trio performing mainly notated music against a purely improvising duo and by creating different types of contexts (“higher structures”), wherein the individual (i.e. the improvising musicians) is functioning according to the “rules” of the structures. In the first part, for example, the two improvising musicians, have to “integrate” as much as possible into the ensemble-texture. In the second part, this ensemble-texture starts to differentiate and splits into different directions, the improvisers start to exhibit “individual” behavior and are asked to “destabilize” the written-out structure.

At the end of this second part, the two improvisers continue alone, and establish a new group-paradigm, which grew out of the previous parts. At its turn, the trio (vc, gtr, perc) starts to destabilize this new structure in the next part, using pre-composed text-fragments, combined with free improvisation. Different kinds of “alliances” are created, and investigate how precomposed text/pre-established structures influence the “free” improvisations. In the fifth and final part, a new structure is being build up gradually, while “residuals” of the previous structures serve as a starting point for the “background-improvisations” of both the trio and the duo.

These improvisations are thinned out bit by bit, until a clearly new structure is being created in which the two improvisers should integrate again. It will be clear by now, that this composition is not at all a kind of “double concerto” for improvising duo with trio and live-electronics. All instruments are treated as equals, only the way of communication between the instruments differs (and changes during the piece), and it is exactly on this domain that the main “investigation” is being done. The way the composer creates structures and information, is being confronted with/enriched by the way this information is elaborated during the improvisations.

The concept of the “Ventriloquism” is, on another level, elaborated in the spatialisation of the compostion as well. Each instrument is amplified (strongly), and the amplified sound is being sent to a fixed speaker for every instrument, standing at the opposite side of the stage. The instrumentalists control the amount of amplification in these speakers through their volume pedal. In the beginning of the composition, the relation between instrument and speaker is 1/1. From section B onwards, the live-electronics start to “distort” this 1/1-image, with granular processes which are unleashed on the live sounds.

This composition, premiered by Champ d’Action and collectief reFLEXible on 27/10/2007 at “STUK” in Leuven during the Transit Festival, was commissioned by Festival van Vlaanderen.

Technical specs

Coming soon...

Additional notes

Low

Basic information

Composer Verstockt, Serge
Duration 20 min.
Year of composition 2003
First performance (year) 2003
First performance (venue) Music@venture
First performance (performers) Champ d'Action
Submitter Champ d'Action
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Cello1
Double-bass14-string
Flute 1
C
Clarinet 1
E-flat soprano
Trombone 1
Tenor
Tuba 1
Musicians Instruments
Percussion 2
Glockenspiel
Vibraphone (C3)
Timpani
Cymbals
Keyboard 2
Piano
Other plucked instruments 1
Guitar
Other instruments and playing techniques
The clarinetplayer plays also bass clarinet and contrabass clarinet in the second part. The fluteplayer plays also bass flute in the second part. The recorderplayer plays also bass recorder in the second part.
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

(This Dutch text will be translated soon)
Low is een stuk voor ensemble en elektronica. Door een speciaal ontworpen computersysteem worden klanken in tijd en ruimte getransformeerd zodat, via verschillende luidsprekers die rondom het publiek staan opgesteld,een nieuwe tijd-ruimte-ervaring wordt geconstrueerd. Verplaatsingen in ruimte en tijd vormen een wezenlijk onderdeel van het compositieproces. Het akoestische fenomeen van verschiltonen vormt de harmonische basis van LOW. Twee gelijktijdig klinkende tonen genereren een nieuwe toon, die de verschilfrequentie is van de eerste twee. Niet zozeer de wereld van de boventonen, maar die van de ondertonen vormt het harmonische fundament van LOW. De verschiltonen lijken zich af te spelen binnen het hoofd van de luisteraar - in "ear-localisation" - om dieper af te zakken naar een haast lijfelijke gewaarwording.

Technical specs

coming soon...

Additional notes

Drie

Basic information

Composer Verstockt, Serge
Duration 30 min.
Year of composition 2008
First performance (year) 2008
First performance (venue) Music@venture, Antwerpen
First performance (performers) Champ d'Action
Submitter Champ d'Action
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Cello1
Double-bass14-string
Clarinet 2
E-flat soprano
E-flat soprano
Trombone 1
Alto
Musicians Instruments
Percussion 4
Glockenspiel
Bass Drum
Cymbals
Other
Keyboard 1
Synthesizer
Other plucked instruments 1
Guitar
Other instruments and playing techniques
Electronics. The two clarinetplayers also play organ and beatbox. The synthesiserplayer also plays toypiano. The double-bassplayer also plays cymbals. The guitar is an (wild) electric guitar.
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

(This Dutch text will be translated soon)

Serge Verstockt schreef DRIE om de relatie tussen de intrinsieke klankmogelijkheden van akoestische instrumenten, percussie en elektronica uit te werken: waar vinden ze elkaar en waar zijn ze elkaars tegengestelde; waarom is een pure sinustoon moeilijk of niet te lokaliseren terwijl een droog tikje van een woodbloc perfect lokaliseerbaar blijkt?

Dit is het uitgangspunt van de compositie DRIE die –zoals de titel verraadt - opgebouwd is uit drie delen. Elk deel bestaat uit verschillende muzikale processen waarin de intensiteit per deel (alsook over de delen heen) wordt opgevoerd.
In het eerste deel bevinden de muzikanten zich rondom het publiek in een verduisterde zaal. Vanuit volledige stilte worden met behulp van verschillende soorten shakers (van luciferdoosjes over eitjes naar belletjes tot maracas) op zeer subtiele wijze verschillende bewegende klankwolken opgezet. De ruimtelijke akoestische processen (waves, doorgeven van pulses,…) worden door aangestreken lucifers van op het podium gedirigeerd. Deze fase, met een sterk ceremonieel karakter, wordt bijna onmerkbaar overgenomen door de versterkte shakers van twee muzikanten op het podium. Deze muzikanten zijn omringd door vier microfoons. Elke microfoon is verbonden met één van de vier boxen die in elke hoek van de concertzaal staan opgesteld. Op die manier kunnen zij van op het podium het geluid van bijvoorbeeld één maracas door de concertruimte laten bewegen. Dit principe wordt overigens later in het stuk herhaaldelijk gebruikt door de klarinetten en de trombone. Het aandeel van versterkte klanken neemt langzaam maar zeker de bovenhand.
Het tweede deel wordt ingezet door de pianist die clusters speelt op vier versterkte toypiano’s waarvan het geluid telkens vanuit een andere hoek in de zaal wordt geprojecteerd. De vier percussionisten, die in het tweede deel vooral klokkenspel spelen, zetten vanuit driedubbele piano een ritmische drive in die gedurende de rest van het stuk bijna niet meer zal wegvallen. De cello, contrabas, trombone en de twee klarinetten (pivoterend tussen de vier reeds aangehaalde micro’s) bouwen vanuit trage, stijgende melodieën langzaam maar zeker een geluidsmuur op.
Aan het begin van deel drie wordt door de vier basdrums een nieuw proces ingezet. Met behulp van vier verschillende pulse-schema’s, die unisono of gecombineerd worden gespeeld, leidt Verstockt ons naar iets wat heel sterk aan drum and base doet denken en uitmondt in pure noice. De regelmatige drive van de percussie wordt uiteindelijk verstoord door een tweede ritmische laag: beatboxes waarin eighties-ritmes werden geprogrammeerd. Toetsen van oude elektrische orgels worden door de klarinetist en trombonist met tape dichtgeplakt (de dichtgeplakte tonen blijven op die manier constant hoorbaar) en wilde, zwaar overstuurde elektrische gitaarklanken worden van achteraan de zaal ingestuurd.
In de laatste fase van DRIE horen we enkel een klankwolk van vier aftandse elektrische orgels met “dichtgeplakte tonen” die tussen het publiek staan opgesteld.

DRIE is in zijn jonge bestaansgeschiedenis al verschillende malen van gedaante veranderd. Zo duurt het stuk in zijn laatste gedaante beduidend langer en werd bijvoorbeeld gaandeweg een contrabaspartij toegevoegd. Verstockt laat in deze compositie ook veel ruimte voor improvisatie van de uitvoerders. Zo refereert hij bijvoorbeeld in de partituur van het laatste deel regelmatig naar bestaande muziekstijlen (walz, bossa nova, rock, disco,…) die door de muzikanten moeten worden geïnterpreteerd.

DRIE: Een fysieke ervaring. Een organisch proces van processen. Alsof ze er altijd zijn geweest, wetende dat je ze zo nooit meer terug zal zien.

Technical specs

Coming soon...

Additional notes

Tetrapophonic

Basic information

Composer Milaković, Boško
Duration 16 min.
Year of composition 2005
First performance (year) 2005
First performance (venue) Orpheus Festival
First performance (performers) Melos Ethos Ensemble, Marián Lejava (conductor)
Submitter Melos Ethos Ensemble
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Violin2
Cello1
Flute 1
C
Bassoon 1
Bassoon
Horn (F) 1
Musicians Instruments
Keyboard 1
Piano
Other instruments and playing techniques
Accordion
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

Some years ago I asked myself, whether it was possible to compose a piece built only on 4 different pitches, a piece, in which the listener would hear not only four pitches, but also sound and silence in perfect harmony, music, in which technique wolud become secondary to an invisible mass filled with spirituality. It is challenge: the composer has to work very strict rules and, at the same time, to operate in a very limited musical space. When the piece is performed at a concert, nobody needs to know what is going on. Only theinvisible mass stays... Boško Milaković

Technical specs
Additional notes

Ask the Mirror

Basic information

Composer Borzík, Lukáš
Duration 19 min.
Year of composition 2006
First performance (year) 2006
First performance (venue) 1st A. Moyzes International Competition for Composers - Concert of Awarded Works
First performance (performers) Melos Ethos Ensemble, Zsolt Nagy (conductor)
Submitter Melos Ethos Ensemble
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Violin2
Viola1
Cello1
Double-bass14-string
Flute 1
C
Oboe 1
Oboe
Clarinet 2
B-flat
Bass
Bassoon 1
Bassoon
Saxophone 1
Bass
Horn (F) 1
Trumpet 1
B-flat
Trombone 1
Bass
Musicians Instruments
Percussion 2
Vibraphone (F3)
Vibraphone (C3)
Keyboard 1
Piano
Other instruments and playing techniques
accordion
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

With composition Ask the Mirror Lukáš
Borzík won the 1st Alexander Moyzes International Competition for Composers (1st
Prize
and The
highest ranking work of a Slovak composer
), announced by the Music Centre Slovakia within the
framework of the 2006 Year of Slovak Music. At this anonymous competition took part 34 adepts from 11 countries of the
European Union and received scores were judged by an international jury
(Germany, United Kingdom, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovak Republic; chairman Wolfgang Rihm).

Technical specs
Additional notes

The Wrath Sessions

Basic information

Composer Lejava, Marián
Duration 8 min.
Year of composition 2008
First performance (year) 2008
First performance (venue) Bratislava
First performance (performers)
Submitter Melos Ethos Ensemble
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Violin1
Viola1
Cello1
Flute 1
C
Clarinet 2
B-flat
Bass
Musicians Instruments
Percussion 1
Other
Keyboard 2
Piano
Accordion
Other instruments and playing techniques
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

In 2005 I wrote the first part of a solo cello piece for Jozef Lupták entitled Capriccio. He premiered it in Germany and it still waits to be completed and performed at home. It is not the first instance of a "work in progress" but the first instance of a "seminal idea". For some time, I have been developing a single "idea" in several pieces. At the beginnig of 2007 I wrote a piece for four cellos, the recording and the performance of which came to nothing due to "technical" difficulties. The piece´s title is The Roar and it strictly develops the material of Capriccio. The atmosphere has changed, though. After works focused on night music (Notturni 1-6-) and after related "quite" pieces I turned to opposite expression. Later (in Summer 2007) I wrote Wrath I for chamber ensemble and the piece (at last) was performed: only in Ostrava, and that is a shame, but the result was for me a pleasant surprise.

This time, I wrote a kind of Wrath II - 9 sections/"encounters" (manifestations, variations, forms...as you like it) of "wrath" for a group of nine players: three trios - winds (flute/piccolo, clarinet in B flat/E flat, bass clarinet/clarinet), strings (violin, viola, cello) and accordion, piano, cimbalom - a hybrid wind-percussion "piano". Numbers 1-3 make up the first section, No. 4 is an intermezzo, Nos. 5 and 6 represent a complex two part structure with "superinstruments" (each part is made of four instruments), No. 7 is the apogee of the two-part structure in the form of a viola solo. No. 8 is in fact Wrath II, and No. 9 is a coda.

Marián Lejava

 

Technical specs
Additional notes

Tumbling Alice

for 12 musicians

Basic information

Composer Bartosch, Thomas
Duration 9 min.
Year of composition 2007
First performance (year) 2008
First performance (venue) Arnold Schönberg Center, Wien
First performance (performers) Ensemble Reconsil, Bojidara Kouzmanova (violin), Kaori Nishii (piano), Roland Freisitzer (cond)
Submitter ensemble reconsil
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor Obligatory
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Violin2
Viola1
Cello2
Flute 1
C
Piccolo
Oboe 1
Oboe
Clarinet 2
B-flat
Bass
Trumpet 1
B-flat
Trombone 1
Tenor
Musicians Instruments
Keyboard 1
Piano
Other instruments and playing techniques
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

 

„Tumbling Alice“ is the second part of 3 pieces with
different instrumentations.

It is dedicated to people who find the power to break
out of fixed patterns, surmount repetition in their lives, to get more of
energy and dynamic.

This music contains all these things:

Repetition of small simple patterns in a fixed
metrum, short motives with the roots in rockmusic (Vcl) and big band music
(Chick Corea „Falling Alice“  - piano
part), movements which are played first in a steady tempo, but later tumbling,
realized with the technics of a composed accellerando or rallentando.

The fast base tempo runs through like the time in our
lives also does, spending the piece a kind of strong energy from the beginning
until the end.

The listerners focus leaves the fixed metrum to
concentrate at the phrase itself, which has its own autonomous move, arranged
over 2 or 3 other phrases which appear at the same time, small forms will be
produced by this phrases – not fixed in measures - and undulation will be also
made with dynamic.

On the one side it is a kind of minimal music with
strong power of dramaturgy, but the intention is rockmusic, the „processing
eruption“, always directed forwards.

For the musicians it means perfect rhythm feeling (a
lot of rehearsals), the purpose is a „groovy tumbling“, in addition expression
and emotion, surprising the listener to develop energy.

Technical specs
Additional notes

Nightsongs

Basic information

Composer Sweeney, William
Duration 15 min.
Year of composition 2006
First performance (year) 2006
First performance (venue) Greyfriars Kirk, Edinburgh
First performance (performers) Hebrides Ensemble (Yann Ghiro Bass-cl, David Alberman Vln, Cathie marwood Vla, William Conway Cello, Simon Smith Pno)
Submitter Hebrides Ensemble
Publisher
Type
Thematic tags
Conductor No
Soloist(s) ,

Instruments

Musicians 1st player 2nd player
Violin1
Viola1
Cello1
Clarinet 1
Bass
Musicians Instruments
Keyboard 1
Piano
Other instruments and playing techniques
Equipment
Sound electronics
Visuals

Notes

Programme notes

NIGHT-SONGS

 

I remember when I
realised that I had heard the blues.  It
wasn’t the pop 45s of the time, or the skiffled attempts at Leadbelly that were
a brief fashion statement.  Not even the
first British takes on Chuck Berry, although the standardised, slightly
sanitised, readings of Robert Johnson made some impact (even at second hand –
some others had heard one of the rare pressings, or more likely, knew someone
else who really had).   I was allowed up
late to see a programme on BBC: it was a folk-music
show, so that was acceptable – Pete Seeger was a household icon.  The introducer, Long John Baldry I think,
announced Sonny Boy Williamson, and
this impossibly aged (looking) and no doubt very wise, very black man walked
through the tables of the studio-simulated folk-club.  He took off his bowler hat and laid down his umbrella (both
bought for this European tour so that he wouldn’t stand out from the British
crowd).  Then he reached into his
businessman’s briefcase, produced a battered old mouth-organ, and then he said,
confidentially“The
Sky’..s…. is Cryin’!”

So that was the blues.

This piece isn’t a Blues, but it couldn’t have happened to
me without them.  Some things are
blues-like – the melody and the harmony circle around each other, each in its own
sphere, but some things are not – gatherings of grace-notes, more bagpiper than
mouth-harpist, harmonies more Left Bank than Mississippi Delta, and some
rhythmic passages which arose from the same roots, but took a different
trade-route.  In any case, the Blues isn’t a form, it’s a place you go
to so that you can leave again a little refreshed; not always stronger, but at
least unweakened.

 

Bill Sweeney

March, 2006

 

 

Technical specs
Additional notes

Night-Songs was commissioned by the Edinburgh Contemporary Arts Trust, for performance by Hebrides Ensemble, and with financial subsidy from the Scottish Arts Council.