Composers Workshop I
Sunday, October 31, 2021 at 7:30p in the Concert Hall
Program
Three Short Dreams, for piano |
Ramin ROSHANDEL |
Bowen Liu, piano |
Poem No. 4, for voice, viola, and piano |
Jinwon KIM |
Samuel Cho, tenor Donghee Han, viola Minji Kwon, piano |
There is a house with ten rooms. Each room has a different size and structure. And, each room is independent and has its own personality. However, it is not completely isolated because it is connected to a corridor. Like the corridors, the soprano penetrates all parts and gives unity. |
Stress Fractures, for cello solo |
Matt MASON |
Adrian Gomez, violoncello |
Stress Fractures explores five types of stress: compression, tension, torsion, bending, and shear, drawing inspiration from Newton’s concepts on loss of energy and conservation of momentum. Though scientific in its influences and construction, Stress Fractures should not be divorced from the psychological definition of stress. |
A Pleasing Aroma, for fixed media |
Stephan CARLSON |
A Pleasing Aroma is a musical work of fixed media which presents the listener with grainy collage composed of three aural images: a concert hall where a large audience offers applause in anticipation of a performance of piano music; a trio of monastic singers performing an Agnus Dei in their chapel, while bells sound overhead and a rainstorm offers additional counterpoint; and a rock concert— synthesizers, electric guitars, and intense, guttural vocals. These three images do not present themselves discreetly or in clear terms. Instead, their unique elements are warped and distorted as they are transformed at different rates from one into the other. The global effect is like that of a dream, in which separate images are smeared across each other until they are joined in a disorienting whole. |
study no. 1: every tree feels/falls the same, for oboe |
Mark RHEAUME |
Lexi Doremus, oboe |
On compound tintinnabulation: primarily, three scholars address the possibility of considering M- and T-voices as participating within a single melodic line. Leopold Brauneiss observes the potential of the “interlocking of melodic notes and notes of the tintinnabuli triad,” seen most clearly in Variotionen zur Gesundung von Arinuschka (1977). Hermann Conen terms this phenomenon as a “hybrid” of the M- and T-voices. Anabel Maler, building from Conen’s work, solidifies such combinations as its own kind of surface manifestation, which she terms as “compound tintinnabulation.” Contrary to simple tintinnabulation, which provides a harmonic framework, compound tintinnabulation offers a new lens by which to view M- and T-voices unfolding over the linear landscape of a piece. |
Burner (the dust we breathe in), for Electric Guitar and Tapes |
M DENNEY |
M Denney + “others” |
*Content warning - Transphobia, Violence* |