Monday 25 May 2015

Addendum to article in the horn call

Hello faithful readers... reader...silence?

If you may have noticed I had an article appear in the Horn Call, the journal of the international horn society. There is mention of some "examples" that seem to not be in the printed publication so, I submit for the approval of the midnight society, those said examples.

I should also be releasing soon a recording of the premiere performance of the work by Jordan Kusel that is spoken about in the article soon.


Example 1


Example 2


So.. there ya go. if you have any questions fire them off, I had even more hours to stare at the score and come up with ideas for this particular work. So ask away, hit the +1, throw a share.

Tuesday 19 May 2015

Thoughts on curating a performance

Back when I started this blog, one of the first posts I wrote about was in regards to my thoughts surrounding the programming of new music. You can fine those by following the links below.

What is in a performance Part 1

What is in a performance Part 2

So I went back and read these, one thing I have expressed in the past, and have impressed upon me heavily by one of mentors and a conductor I am fortunate to work with Michael Lewanski is this concept that as artists we form opinions, these are opinions we feel strong about and try to express them in our art. Those opinions should continue to change and evolve even if it means changing your mind. So in that spirit I am going to pull a few key points from the earlier posts and highlight them here, though if you have time, have a read and build an opinion, especially if it is contradictory, then we can talk about that.
  1. I always strive to have some kind of internal consistency that help pull things together, OR helps progress the concert from work to work in a way that you can go from Gabrieli to Globokar.
  2. The more radical a program becomes the more I am aware of this since people (me included) can only take so much.
  3. I try to avoid programming works that are very similar, if I do I need to find a way to give the listener time to digest things
  4. The Audience is the king, they buy tickets, they tell their friends, they literally feed us, both in food and in the ability to acquire more food. That being said, Everything starts from what WE want to present. We then find a way to balance things so that the audience walks away and remembers what they say.
We will stick to these four points.

It's funny remember when I said we can change our minds, wow do I ever feel that way. That is a big reason I decided to come back to this idea. So before we dig into past Mat's mind I want to start with a few key thoughts. These thoughts stretch beyond new music in my mind and are just things that I feel are important.

First and this is something I have really been thinking about these past few months is the difference between programming a concert, and curating a performance. I think these are very different processes that have a big impact on what we present and how an audience responds to them. First though let's set some terms straight here.  

Below are three definitions of curating from the Institute of Cultural Practices:
Definition 1“Curating is the process by which a physical or virtual space is designed and formulated to include a collated, selected, interpreted and intended concept, which can be articulated through a variety of media” 
Definition 2“The organisation, discussion and presentation of information including objects, facts and opinions, in order to create value and meaning to be understood by the public” 
Definition 3“Curating is examining, researching and documenting a collection with the aim of making it accessible to the public. This is done through careful interpretation of the objects, space and text to curate an informative exhibition”


So first of all we see that this idea of curating is more complex then Merriam-Webster would have one believe. 
Where does this leave us in regards to programming vs curating? Here is a scenario for you, our example performer really enjoys playing Strauss and has been waiting to tackle the Second horn Concerto. They also need an unaccompanied work so they stick with a well known work like the Malcolm Arnold fantasy. They also program the Mozart horn quintet and the Gliere Valse Triste as they are both really nice works they enjoy that they want to perform.
The above is how "programming" tends to happen, at least in my experience. For the sake of today we are talking solo recital. Curating a concert around Strauss' second Horn Concerto would be a very different process. For me it would begin with asking a series of questions to myself. 

1. What other pieces would I like to perform (this is the same as above except we are going deeper)
2. Do the pieces work together. The answer to this is not a simple yes or no, we have to consider many different variables.
3. Why do these pieces matter, and why would the audience care. Pieces may matter in other situations, but not when in a set.
4. If the pieces do in fact work together what is the element that connects them. There is a good chance that it is something you never considered. It could be a formal consistency, or formal inconsistency, how we listen, etc. There needs to be, in my opinion some kind of connection.
5. Start looking for new pieces, since your greatest hits won't work. So this step is here since the hard reality that a program comprised of our favourites is very much a mix-tape made for yourself. It can be cold, impersonal, and very disconnected as many recitals tend to be. Think about when you made a mix tape back in the 90s for someone, you slaved for hours to make it perfect, to let songs flow into one-another or clash in conflict. That is the kind of thing we are after, we understand that for there to be meaning to others it takes a complicated effort.
6. Keep repeating steps 2 - 5 until you have a program with a purpose, something unique we cant just stream online.

So that is my process now. It has evolved from where I was before. So let us go back to those 4 points and pull them apart for the present.

  • I always strive to have some kind of internal consistency that help pull things together, OR helps progress the concert from work to work in a way that you can go from Gabrieli to Globokar.

On the surface this is something I still believe in. I would probably never write the sentance that way now, but that is another thing. This idea really relates back to my curating process, but it was still in it's infancy and lacked complexity and depth.


  • The more radical a program becomes the more I am aware of this since people (me included) can only take so much.

Well I can put this one out to pasture as I don't really believe in it anymore. In some way I think this idea existed because of a lack of the third point in my curating process. Which is to say I was still making a mix-tape for myself. The next two points are in ways byproducts of this idea, so I will save the big finish until the end.

  • I try to avoid programming works that are very similar, if I do I need to find a way to give the listener time to digest things
If an audience needs time to "digest things" you, or me, as a curator have not done your job. It i one thing to feel overwhelmed as a listener but to require time is the byproduct of our good old fashioned mix-tape. There obviously are exceptions, if you have never heard an electronic piece before and the first thing you hear is something incredibly dense and complex you may blow your mental CPU, but that is the listeners job to address. We, as serious performers have no job pandering to the listener, or to underestimate the intelligence of them.
  • The Audience is the king, they buy tickets, they tell their friends, they literally feed us, both in food and in the ability to acquire more food. That being said, Everything starts from what WE want to present. We then find a way to balance things so that the audience walks away and remembers what they say.
The audience is NOT in charge. End of story, it is the performer, the composer, the conflict between the live performer interpreting ink that is important and relationships that exist. I programmed a recital this year I was REALLY worried may have been "too far" for the circumstances. It turns out the time spent painstakingly curating the program paid off. I performed 5 works, and in the process explored the possibilities of 14 total works, some are on a list to be played later, some I moved on from. What I have learned, which Tom Varner express in a great way is that:

Your audience is usually happy to go on a ride that they 
have not been on before. 

In the end I believe we owe it to our audience to treat them intelligently, yes they are there to support us, or music, but they can also be looking for something new, something they never thought of.

Just a thought.