Celebrations Recording Release

I’m happy to share the news of the release of a CD recording of my work, Celebrations, for 18-string kayagŭm, on Jung Gil Seon’s Gayageum Creative Works Series VII: “Sanjo & Sanjo.”  This work was premiered at the National Gugak Center, Korea’s national center for traditional performing arts in Seoul, by Jung Gil Seon in 2013.  The CD also includes works by Donald Reid Womack, Thomas Osborne, and Sunghwan Yang.

Celebrations explores the many means of the title, from its association with jubilant festivities to its solemn religious connotation.  The music alternates between an energetic, syncopated opening and a series of contrasting passages, which are variously quirky, mysterious, and dance-like.  Gradually the opening material is transformed and recast, and the work ends in a warm, melodic, romantic landscape, quite different from where it began.

Celebrations is part of a series of works for Korean traditional instruments alone or in combination with western instruments or electronics, which I have composed over the last five years.  In writing for kayagŭm, the traditional Korean zither, I wanted to showcase the instrument’s tender, earthy color and its ability to weep, to question, and to speak through nuanced bending of pitch.  In addition, by tuning the top five strings a half step higher, I was able to expand the instrument’s harmonic possibilities, exploring its traditional pentatonic tuning, alongside polytonal and Romantic-era harmony.

Listen to a recording of Celebrations here.

Sandburg at Oberlin

I’ve updated the events page to include the premiere of my complete Sandburg Songs, which will take place Wednesday, May 4 at 8pm at Warner Concert Hall at Oberlin Conservatory.  The performance by Oberlin Contemporary Music Ensemble and a soprano TBA will be led by Tim Weiss.  (Tim will also lead the Italian premiere of the complete Sandburg Songs this July with Tony Arnold and Eastman BroadBand at the soundSCAPE Festival in Italy, where I will teach.)

Also on the program will be works by Christopher Stark, Christopher Dietz, and Thea Musgrave.

Very excited to hear this program at Oberlin this spring!

Lynn Blakeslee (1940-2015)

Although I was a composition major as an Eastman undergraduate, I have often joked that I was “yelled at” just as much as the other violinists.  The woman doing that yelling—though always with loving intent—was Lynn Blakeslee, an exquisite violinist and master teacher who died suddenly in August at age 75.  I traveled to Rochester this past weekend to attend a memorial concert in her honor and was moved by the loving remarks and performances by her former colleagues and students.

Looking back on my time at Eastman, it is clear that Lynn had the largest overall impact on my time there.  Part of this was the sheer number of hours we spent together—a weekly hour lesson, technique class, and the 3-hour Wednesday evening studio class—but the bigger factor was the intensity of these experiences.  For all the thoughtful discussion and even argument that takes place in composition lessons, it simply doesn’t compare to the physicality of applied music study and all the hours in the practice room or rehearsing with your collaborators that lead up to the weekly lessons and eventual performances.

As a composer my relationship with Lynn was perhaps different from those whose dream was to have a performing career.  Of course Lynn taught me the technical side of violin playing, and she did so with an uncanny ability to isolate the smallest technical details and explain them and improve them (even with her eyes closed).  But more than technique, Lynn taught me that music making is a process that is passed down through study and performance by individuals.  Music making is about shaping technique so that performers and audiences can create and recreate conversations with specific times and places—a long chain of sounds and gestures and phrases being passed down over many generations—and composers are an important part—the starting point—of this chain.  To hear Lynn play was to hear the voices of music’s past sing through her violin.

The summer following my sophomore year at Eastman I lived on the third floor of her lovely home on Berkeley Street, the site of many unforgettable parties and where she taught me to “appreciate a good glass of wine.”  She was in Europe at “her castle” during part of the summer, but the rest of the season we shared the house and many conversations.  Lynn got to know me in a more personal way than any of my other teachers.  She knew that I had no money while at Eastman, so she invented odd jobs for me to do around her house—painting her white picket fence, organizing her garage.  She let me use one of her wonderful bows from then until I graduated.  And after I graduated she was a force in helping me to receive a commission from Eastman’s Hanson Institute for American Music, which supported the composition of my Chamber Concerto for one of her students.

As part of the memorial concert we heard a recording from Lynn’s final recital at Eastman in 2012.  Listening to her play Debussy’s La fille aux cheveux de lin, I was transported back to our times together, and a flood of memories and images flashed through my mind.  Rarely has listening to a single recorded work produced such strong and mixed emotions.  With the dim fade-out of the work’s final cool harmonic, Lynn’s song had come to an end.  But like the generations of violinists who preceded her, Lynn’s voice lives on through all of us who studied with her.  She is part of us.  Listening carefully I can hear her now…“Sing!  Sing like the Italians sing!”

I will, Ms. Blakeslee.  I promise.

soundSCAPE 2016 Composer Fellow

I am thrilled to announce that I have been selected to serve as the soundSCAPE Festival’s Composer Fellow in 2016 and will be returning to Italy next summer to teach private composition lessons to the festival’s approximately two dozen composition students—representing many of the top music programs in the nation—and to assist with the administration of the composition program.  In addition, Tony Arnold and Eastman BroadBand, led by conductor Tim Weiss, will give the Italian premiere my complete Sandburg Songs, with performances of other works to be announced.  (Two songs received a stunning premiere performance last summer.)

I was humbled to learn about this selection but am already counting down the days until my return.  SoundSCAPE is one of the festivals I would most recommend to colleagues because of the excellent performance opportunities, positive atmosphere among students and faculty, and stunningly beautiful setting in the Italian Alps.  And yes…there’s great food!

Willapa Bay Residency

I’m very happy to have been selected for a residency at Willapa Bay AiR in Oysterville, WA next summer.  This is a relatively new residency in a very beautiful part of the country, and I’m looking forward to making a lot of new music and getting to know my fellow artists over what will certainly be some delicious local meals.  (That was certainly the case at Camargo Foundation last spring….)

UMBC Lecture

I’m delighted to be presenting my music to students and colleagues at UMBC tomorrow afternoon and plan to focus on three different works:

Sandburg Songs, my current project, a portion of which was premiered in Italy at the SoundSCAPE Festival last summer;

In Search of Planet X, a work from 2009 that shows a bit of what I think about rhythm; and…

Celebrations, a solo work for gayageum, as a way of talking about my works for Korean traditional instruments and how that experience plays into my work more broadly.

All three works are available on my soundcloud page.

Lunar Ensemble: Old Text Woven New

I had the pleasure of attending Friday night’s season opening concert by the Lunar Ensemble, a young, virtuosic, and energetic new music ensemble and Ensemble-in-Residence for the Baltimore War Memorial Arts Initiative.  Led by the brilliant Gemma New, a conductor whose talents I witnessed two years ago when we were both fellows at Aspen, the concert offered three viewpoints on combining text and music.

Two of the selections allowed the ensemble’s soprano, Danielle Buonaiuto, to share her remarkable vocal gifts.  Baltimore-based composer Douglas Buchanan’s Prospero Variations was a fantasia on texts from Shakespeare’s The Tempest and showcased Buonaiuto’s dramatic flair in a variety of textures and moods.  Another vocal work, Canadian composer David Passmore’s My Mistress’ Eyes, on Shakespeare’s “Dark Lady” sonnets, stood out for its rhythmic nuance, changing timbres, and playful humor.  Passmore was able to immediately capture the mood of the text with succinct and memorable gestures and evocative melodic lines.

The concert began with John Harbison’s Songs America Loves to Sing, an instrumental work pairing solos and canonic treatments of popular American tunes like “Aura Lee”, the “St. Louis Blues”, and the “Anniversary Song” (better known for its birthday function).  What I love about this piece and Harbison’s music generally is that technical prowess is always at the service of expressive intent.  Within his strict framework, Harbison moves from honkey tonk to hymn tunes to hints of Ives with ease and charm.  For me the most striking portion of the work came in his treatment of “Poor Butterfly.”  After a lyrical opening clarinet cadenza (Bravo, Gleb Kanasevich!), the tune emerges in haunting, pale hues, while a subdued clarinet obbligato continues to dance slowly above.

For a different but no less ravishing take on this melody, I recommend Sarah Vaughan’s interpretation here:

 

Resonant Bodies

I enjoyed Zachary Woolfe’s review of the Resonant Bodies Festival in Friday’s New York Times. It featuring an amazing trio of new music sopranos–Tony Arnold, Lucy Shelton, and Dawn Upshaw–in performances of works by a grand selection of contemporary composers, including my former teacher, David Liptak.  I especially enjoyed Woolfe’s description of Tony Arnold:

“Her eyes wide and piercing, Tony Arnold is a master of bleakness, with a powdery white voice that rises to uncannily pure floated high notes. She always leaves the impression of singing, alone, in the middle of a vast, empty landscape of ice.”

I couldn’t agree more!  It was such a pleasure to write for Tony at last summer’s SoundSCAPE Festival in Italy.  Watch her thrilling premiere of my Sandburg Songs here.

Sounds of Being

The concert season at UMBC got off to an great start last night with a solo performance by violist Jessica Meyer.  As a member of the ensemble counter)induction, Meyer is an experienced presenter of contemporary music, and it was clear from the start that she thrives on exploring the viola’s full expressive capacity, regardless of stylistic boundaries.  Through the hour-long performance of her original works, Meyer showcased the expressive possibilities of amplified viola with loop pedal, transforming the instrument into larger ensembles through careful layering and repetition of a variety of timbres and playing techniques, notably pizzicato and scordatura.  My favorite of the works was Afflicted Mantra, which, with its drone and gradual introduction of speech, created a mesmerizing texture and harmonic landscape.  Like many of the works, I felt this could have gone on even longer, but there was something alluring about the brevity of these encounters.  With each selection preceded by introductory remarks from the stage, the evening paired performance with confession.  Meyer’s biographical vignettes allowed for a more immediately personal connection between the audience and the performer, which was very welcome; many classical performers could learn something from this example.  Because of this comfort, I could easily have imagined the performance taking place in less formal surroundings…with dim lighting.  And good drinks.

Baltimore-bound

After thirteen years in the City of Brotherly Love, I have relocated to Baltimore, where I am teaching at the University of Maryland Baltimore County.  I am especially excited to be connected with UMBC because of its new music focus, which includes the faculty ensemble, Ruckus, and an annual contemporary music concert series, Livewire.  Beyond the UMBC campus, Baltimore is home to the Peabody Conservatory, Lunar Ensemble, and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, among many other musical institutions.  I feel very fortunate to be making my home in this rich, diverse, artistic environment.

JACK in Ottawa

While in Ottawa I was happy to attend a performance by the JACK Quartet as part of the Ottawa Chamberfest.  The JACK Quartet is close to my heart, first because its members were my Eastman undergraduate colleagues, and second because I am writing them a new quartet called Witness.  I started the quartet while in residence at the Camargo Foundation in France, hit the pause button to compose two Sandburg Songs, and am ready to resume the composition with renewed inspiration from this excellent Ottawa performance.

The concert began with a performance of Berlin-based composer Marc Sabat’s 2011 work, Euler Lattice Spirals Scenery.  Sabat’s exploration of microtones led to some interesting colors and sound transformations over the course of the work’s five interconnected movements.  For example, in the opening movement the sound gradually morphed from the clear resonance of open strings to a somewhat darker, hazier timbre through precise retuning of the instruments’ open strings.  It was as if a translucent cotton veil was gradually drawn over the performers.  In a later movement Sabat relied on harmonics to create a silvery sheen.  Most striking were the stratospherically high artificial harmonics in the violins, which, combined with certain rhythmic patterns and the homophonic texture, gave an almost Renaissance music quality to the piece.

John Zorn’s The Alchemist offered a great contrast to Sabat’s work, and it was smart programming to pair these two pieces.  If Sabat’s music was interested in process and evolution, Zorn’s was about collage, interruption, quotation, splicing, overlay, and humor.  I would say a lot of humor.  The net effect of the piece was something like looking into a kaleidoscope (Remember those?) and randomly turning it to produce a series of vague memories from your life experience.  Wile E. Coyote was falling off a cliff but instead would land inside a great gothic cathedral with a quiet organ prelude emerging from the balcony.  This is music that keeps the listeners on their toes.  And the performers?  Well, they were busy throughout with fantastic spiky pizzicati and daring rhythmic flourishes.  It was an entertaining, mind-cleansing experience.

There was a decent sized audience for this performance, but I was dismayed that a couple people decided to walk out early in the performance or—as was the case with the woman in front of me—to read a book.  They missed out by not sticking around.  Not all pieces develop at the same pace, and not all pieces can be listened to in the same way.  But it has been very rare for me to have heard an entire work and found it to have no interesting, beautiful, or thoughtful moments.

Seeing Sandburg Songs

I have received a video from my Sandburg Songs premiere at the SoundSCAPE Festival in Italy.  Watching this video gives a different perspective on the performance and allows the viewer (listener) to see (hear) the fantastic musicians of Eastman BroadBand as they count, breath, and bring the music to life.  There are three more songs to come in this cycle, and watching this performance inspires me to get back to work.  There are still more stories to tell.

Many thanks to Tina Tallon for her excellent, musically-informed, videography.

Sandburg Songs Recording

I’m very happy to share the recordings from the premiere performance of my two Sandburg Songs.  These are two of what I expect will be a larger song cycle on texts from Carl Sandburg’s Chicago Poems.  The premiere took place on July 7 at the SoundSCAPE Festival in Maccagno, Italy.  Tony Arnold, soprano, was joined by musicians from Eastman BroadBand under the direction of conductor Tim Weiss.

https://soundcloud.com/mschreibeis/lost

https://soundcloud.com/mschreibeis/limited

Sandburg Songs Premiere

Last night I enjoyed one of the best performances of my music to date here at the SoundSCAPE Festival in Maccagno, Italy.  Tony Arnold sang my Sandburg Songs with Eastman BroadBand, conducted by Tim Weiss, in a performance that offered everything a composer could want in a performance.  The BroadBand under Tim’s direction plays with a kind of telekinetic sense of ensemble, which allowed them to easily shift tempi in “Lost” while also giving the most streamlined dovetailing of scurrying lines and micro-dynamics in the doomed train ride of “Limited.”  From her first entrance, intoning the word “De-so-late”, Tony Arnold didn’t just sing, she told a story and led the audience on an emotional journey.  The journey led us from points of despair in the first movement (“in tears and trouble”), to torment (“shall pass to ashes”) and humor (“Omaha”) in the second.  There was an electric intensity to the performance, particularly in the fast second movement, and I could sense a palpable interest and focus from the audience.  It sometimes gets lost in all our technical discussion of notes and chords and theories that the first duty of a composer is to give an audience clear and meaningful emotional experiences, and that is what Tony Arnold, the performers of Eastman BroadBand, and conductor Tim Weiss gave us last night.  It was a real privilege.

Feldman in Berlin

On my way to the SoundSCAPE Festival in Italy, where I’m excited to hear the premiere of my new Sandburg Songs for Tony Arnold and Eastman BroadBand, I’ve made a detour to Berlin, a city that has a special place in my heart as the destination of my first flight (at age 21) and my home for three summers in the International Summer University at the Freie Universität Berlin.  It was in Berlin, more than anyplace else, that I experienced the thrills of public transit, understood the true meaning of nightlife, and learned how being in a different place makes us different people.  Berlin is also where I studied German, New German Cinema, and later Composition with Samuel Adler.  This is Sam’s eleventh and final year teaching students from around the world, and I was happy to meet with him and see that he is as energetic, opinionated, supportive, and wise as ever.

It’s been nine years since I was last here, and the city has changed a lot.  The Ostkreuz of my memory—its dark, rusting, haunting presence—is now a modern train station with a huge McDonald’s on one end.  The big brand names all have their own stores here now, too, so if I have an emergency and need to buy some Timberlands I can do it in Berlin as well!  Everywhere you walk, you hear English being spoken, and there are Mexican, Japanese, Chinese, and Korean restaurants that I never saw before.

One thing that remains the same, however, (in addition to my favorite Eisstand) is the abundance of music being performed, including at the city’s three opera houses.  I was pleased to attend a performance of Morton Feldman’s opera, Neither, at the Staatsoper during my visit.  I first became familiar with Feldman’s music through my participation in the June in Buffalo festival at SUNY Buffalo in 2009 and 2012, and he is a composer whose music interests me more the more I hear it.  I am interested in the ways in which Feldman seems to suspend time through repetition, slight variations, and silence.

Neither, is a kind of anti-opera, lasting only 50 minutes—short by operatic and especially short by Feldman standards, and with only one vocal soloist and a large orchestra.  The soprano sings a short text by Samuel Beckett, which is presented with frequent pauses and always in the very highest register.  Because of this the vocal part emerges as a kind of additional instrument, a special coloristic veil over the changing textures of the orchestra.

The music develops by moving from one texture or gesture type to another with timespans that often lull the listener into a kind of trance.  The trance is only one aspect of the experience, however, for there is also the choice of sequence—of how to move from one element or emphasis to another.  Sometimes the change is a slight shift; in other cases, there is a sudden break to something completely new.  These successions, like a very slow-motion Stravinsky score, create the real drama in Feldman’s music.

In the Staatsoper production, Neither was preceded by Samuel Beckett’s short play, “Footfalls.”  This work, in which a woman paces back-and-forth in a series of nine steps, while having an inner conversation with her mother and with herself, provided a nice compliment to Feldman’s opera.  One of the most striking moments of the evening was when Beckett’s play ended and Feldman’s opera began without pause.  The back curtain rose with Neither’s opening chord to reveal an increasingly deep stage, in which a single woman pacing with one door on either side eventually became nine women pacing and twelve open doors casting light and shadow across the stage.  The choreography of these anonymous women walking in varied patterns across the stage was especially effective in helping to delineate different sections in Feldman’s score.  Like an additional layer to his broken treatment of the text, this physical movement offered a visual metaphor for Beckett’s opening words: “to and fro in shadow from inner to outer shadow….”

 

Sandburg Songs

I am happy to report the completion of two new Sandburg Songs for soprano and ensemble.  These songs were commissioned by the SoundSCAPE Festival in Maccagno, Italy and are dedicated to Tony Arnold, who will give the premiere this July with Eastman BroadBand and conductor Tim Weiss.  It is an honor to write for such compelling and fearless artists, and I am eager to hear the premiere in Italy next month.

In choosing texts I was drawn again to Carl Sandburg’s fantastic and evocative Chicago Poems (1916).  I hope that these two songs will be part of a larger cycle.  For now I selected two poems that offered me the opportunity to pursue great narrative and musical contrast.

I. LOST

DESOLATE and lone
All night long on the lake
Where fog trails and mist creeps,
The whistle of a boat
Calls and cries unendingly,
Like some lost child
In tears and trouble
Hunting the harbor’s breast
And the harbor’s eyes.

II. LIMITED

I AM riding on a limited express, one of the crack trains
of the nation.
Hurtling across the prairie into blue haze and dark air
go fifteen all-­‐‑steel coaches holding a thousand people.
(All the coaches shall be scrap and rust and all the men
and women laughing in the diners and sleepers shall
pass to ashes.)
I ask a man in the smoker where he is going and he
answers: “Omaha.”

Both these poems have been set previously, including a dark and haunting setting of “Lost” by Mario Davidovsky.  What strikes me most about Sandburg is his distinct cadence and searing, vivid imagery.  There is an immediacy to his words that brings the stories and souls of the past to our present day.  It has been wonderful to spend time inside these compact, giant worlds of words.

On a somewhat different note, here are some photographs of Sandburg and Marilyn Monroe:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jiJWByhwU-Q

 

Rzewski at a Fish Market

Under the category of “Only in Pittsburgh” I’ve received word that Frederic Rzewski will be playing his epic The People United Will Never Be Defeated! at Wholey’s, the famous fish market in the Strip.  The performance will take place at 2pm this Saturday, April 18, in the upstairs dining room.  The performance is free.  What this means is that you can get enjoy the best fish sandwich anywhere while listening to one of the finest composer-pianists out there.  Mind the model railroad running above your head as you make your way up the stairs!

I’ve written previously about Rzewski’s performance at the Pittsburgh Festival of New Music here.  I expect Saturday’s Wholey’s performance will have added layers of meaning given the location.

Sneak preview the event from this live performance:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_mQiL19XmI

Relistening to Berio

As a conclusion to their time at Camargo, film maker Jorge Leon, actress Isabelle Dumont, and violinist and composer George van Dam spoke about their current film project on Wednesday evening.  George, who performs with the Brussels-based contemporary music ensemble, Ictus, is a champion of new music, and he offered an exciting performance of Berio to start the evening.

The Sequenzas remain a singular and fascinating contribution to modern music, simultaneously extending compositional process and instrumental technique in a series of works that captivate the listener with an immediacy of expression.  I’ve always been interested in how Berio recast his material in multiple compositions, for example the relationships between his Sequenza VI for solo viola (on which I wrote my Ph.D. essay) and the Chemins series of works.  Therefore, it was interesting to hear George perform not the Sequenza VII for solo violin but the solo violin part of Corale, the ensemble work derived from the violin sequenza.  George reveled in the shifting tension and timbres of the opening double stops and was especially effective in the moto perpetuo ending section.  I was reminded again of the skill with which Berio maintains the listener’s attention through the subtlest reordering of pitches, as well as the ease with which he spins out multiple musical trajectories at once.  It was a lovely way to start the evening.

Hearing this intimate performance brought back fond memories for me of the Berio Festival at Eastman in 2003, my final year as an undergraduate composer and violinist.  Over a span of weeks, the halls, stairwells, and, indeed, elevators of the school were filled with his intricate textures and luxurious harmonies.  I believe all the Sequenzas were performed, and all by students.  I personally had the thrill of playing in the ensemble for Corale and in the orchestra for the complete Sinfonia.  Both performances were led by Brad Lubman, one of the most dynamic contemporary music conductors I know.  How many violinists, let alone undergraduates, can say they played Sinfonia?  I treasure these experiences even more in hindsight.  If you want to know something about a composer’s work, there is certainly no replacement for studying it and performing it in concert.

Bill T. Jones on Art

https://soundcloud.com/whyy-public-media/bill-t-jones-storytime-the-life-of-an-idea

I really enjoyed listening to this interview with renowned choreographer Bill T. Jones on his book STORY/TIME: The Life of an Idea. Rarely have I heard so many brilliant statements in such a short time frame. Here’s just one:

“Art making is participation in the world of ideas.”

For a look at some of his compelling art, take a look at this:

Camargo Lecture

This Wednesday at 5pm I’ll be presenting a talk on my music at the Camargo Foundation. Unlike the artist colonies I’ve had the privilege of attending (Yaddo, VCCA, Kimmel Harding Nelson), Camargo Fellows come from both the arts and the humanities. Despite–or perhaps because of–our seemingly disparate research and creative pursuits, the presentations by my fellow fellows have been among the highlights of this fellowship so far. Fascinating questions and discussions by very informed and deeply thoughtful colleagues make this time together very special.

A fellow composer once told me that at their first meeting Milton Babbitt said, “Tell me everything about yourself–from the moment you were born. Musically speaking.”

That is rather what I intend to do this week, starting from my first musical experiences and working my way forward to my current project for the JACK Quartet. Here are some of the questions and topics I plan to discuss:

Big Questions
1. Why do I write music?

2. What does music do?

3. What is the experience of composing like?

Recent Works
1. In Search of Planet X: the stories behind music, my need for syncopation, expecting the unexpected

2. Noticing: the influence of traditional Asian music on my works, doing a lot with a little, going in and out of focus

3. Clarinet Sonata: different musics coming together, atmosphere and texture, our endless need for beauty

Current Camargo Fellowship Project
Witness, a new string quartet for the JACK Quartet