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notes by eighth blackbird
Strings, winds, and percussion (including piano) have innately different
ways of attacking, sustaining, and ending notes and phrases, and therefore
composers have an enormous number of choices to consider when composing
for the sextet. We chose these four pieces for our debut recording
to illustrate that spectrum of compositional possibility: Tom, Joan,
David, and George have written these pieces in distinctly varied styles,
but all four works share a sense of intimacy. A sense heightened by
the act of listening to a CD — when you listen to a recording, you suddenly
become an audience of one. There isn’t anything quite like listening
to music in this way. It doesn’t
replace the live concert as the ultimate listening experience, but it
allows you to become closer to the music on a more personal level.
This CD is comprised of music that strongly resonates with every member
of eighth blackbird, so getting to know the music in turn acquaints you
with each of us as individuals.
Tom Albert knows us (especially Matt,
his son) and our playing styles quite well; for instance, he knows of
Matt’s love for soaring and meaningful melody, so he incorporated
that into many of the movements. He crafted a piece that exploits the
low end of the five octave marimba for Matthew, and he knows that Mike
and I have an affinity for blending our sounds to become one.
David Schober also knows each of us well — especially his college
roommate Matt (what is it with Matt and composers?). I love the opportunity
his piece gives us to play with a big, blended orchestral sound —
fooling the listener when the flute imperceptibly transforms into the
violin, which turns into the cello, and on and on throughout the ensemble.
George Perle, a wonderful person whom we met face-to-face for the first
time on the day of Critical Moments 2’s premiere,
has written a piece that forces us to listen to every part of every note
that each of us plays, tremendously refining our ensemble skills during
the rehearsal process.
Recording Joan Tower’s Petroushkates was
for us an opportunity to thank this fabulous woman who has been so instrumental
in paving the way for new music ensembles to prosper. Our sextet version
of this shimmering soundworld incorporates a percussion part, written
by our friend and mentor Allen Otte.
None of these pieces is long or
drawn-out; each says what it needs to in a poignant and meaningful way,
and then moves on. The various colors and harmonies of each work feed
off of and complement one another. We thank you for listening, and while
you are —
hopefully for the tenth time — please drop us a line or two. It’s
listening, thinking, feeling, and responding that keeps us, and all new
music, going. Thanks for doing your part.
—
Molly Alicia Barth
JOAN TOWER (arr. Allen Otte)
Petroushskates (1980)
Born in 1938, Joan Tower is at the forefront of today’s contemporary
music scene. In addition to commissions from nearly every major orchestra
in the United States and several around the world, she has received grants
from the Guggenheim and Koussevitsky Foundations, among others. A pianist
as well as a composer, she was a founding member of the 1972 Naumburg
Award-winning Da Capo Chamber Players. She is currently the Asher Edelman
Professor of Music at Bard College, where she has taught since 1972.
Joan Tower: In an attempt to understand why figure
skating, especially pair skating, was so
beautiful and moving to me I discovered a musical corollary I had been
working on for a while — the idea of a seamless action. (Skating,
of course, has no seams unless you stop!) I also always loved Petroushka and wanted to create an homage to Stravinsky and that piece in particular.
As it turned out, the figure skating pairs became a whole company of
skaters, thereby creating a sort of musical carnival on ice. The “carnival” idea
is further heightened in this arrangement of the piece as a sextet with
percussion. The percussion part works well because Allen’s arrangement
is subtly done, and Matthew plays it with taste and deference to the
other parts. I think it does create a slightly different piece — but
mostly one that has been enhanced by the percussion, rather than distracted
by it.
Lisa: The summer of 1997 was the first eighth blackbird spent
together. We had put together audition tapes and sent them to various
summer music festivals.
Amazingly, we got into them all — not bad considering we knew how to
play a total of four pieces. One of those was Noon Dance by Joan
Tower. We knew that Joan was one of the composers in residence at
the Norfolk Festival in Connecticut and we were thrilled at the possibility
of playing her piece for her.
Nick: Since it was our first summer at Norfolk,
we were there as students (i.e., we paid to go). At that point we had
hung out with Joan a little bit, but didn’t
really know the depth of her coolness, when we asked her to listen to
us play through Noon Dance. So we were a bit nervous — we
didn’t know what she was going to think.
Lisa: I’ll never forget that day in July. All
six of us were crammed into the shed annex with its noisy air conditioner,
friendly mice, and out-of-tune
upright piano. Joan sat about two feet away from us as she closed her
eyes and listened to us play.
Nick: When we were done, she was silent
for some time. She first said, “Wow,” and then made a comment
that I remember well, but not precisely. She said that I had actually
made the cello solo sound good — she had never been very pleased
about how she had composed it and thought that it just would never really
work. Suffice it to say this made me very happy.
Lisa: She had tears in
her eyes, and told us the reason she hadn’t
immediately agreed to listen to us play Noon Dance was that
she had never really been comfortable with the work. But she said our
performance that day had changed her mind about the piece.
Nick: Since
then, how could we not have gotten along with her famously? And how could
we not include a work of hers on our first commercial release?
— Lisa
Kaplan & Nicholas Photinos
GEORGE PERLE
Critical Moments 2 (2001)
Pulitzer Prize–winning composer and MacArthur Foundation fellow,
George Perle was born in 1915 in Bayonne, New Jersey. He was among the
first American composers to be influenced by the revolutionary
transformation in the language of music embodied in the work of Arnold
Schoenberg and the Second Viennese School. From his first encounter
with this technique in the summer of 1937, he subjected it to a radical
reinterpretation that he calls “12-tone tonality,” which is
still the basis of his own musical language. Along with his many
compositions, which are widely performed and recorded, Perle has
written seven books, including a two-volume study of the operas of
Alban Berg. He lives with his wife in New York City and Richmond,
Massachusetts.
George Perle: The instrumentation of these nine short, self-contained,
and strikingly individual movements for six players corresponds to that
of Pierrot Lunaire, except for the substitution of a percussion part
for the quasi-spoken (Sprechstimme) vocal part of Schoenberg’s
work. I had taken much pleasure in the composition of a set of six such
pieces in 1995–96, and was already strongly inclined to undertake
such a project again when an unexpected commission from the Naumburg
Foundation gave me an opportunity to do exactly that for eighth
blackbird. The nine movements range in duration from 45 seconds to 2
minutes, and there are quite definite structural details in many of the
pieces that make their brief duration seem exactly right. But I
don’t think I should get into this in the program note — it
sort of misrepresents the compositional process, which feels much more
intuitive. Above all, I would say, each piece has its own
“expression,” in the sense in which Emerson uses that word
in his essay, The Poet: “Every line we can draw in the sand, has
expression.”
Michael Maccaferri:
Yes, I’ll have a Citron martini, desert dry, up, with a
twist,
shaken gingerly. He’ll have the same. Thank you.
As I was saying,
Critical Moments 2 came to life in quite an unexpected
way. As part of our Naumburg prize in 2000, we were
awarded a commission by a composer of our choice. Thrilled
at this opportunity, we sent in a list of composers we were
interested in at the time, all of whom were rejected by the
foundation. Excuse me, I said DESERT dry. This tastes like an oil slick.
"Not American. Already received a Naumburg commission. Never
heard of them. She’s working on an opera and won’t be
able to write until 2010.” Obviously, we hadn’t understood
the criteria correctly. Before we had time to create a new list,
we got word that
the foundation had already commissioned George Perle on our behalf.
Um
hi, I said a twist; these are OLIVES.
Imagine our control-freak-y
chagrin. A few of us in the group had heard his music before and were
shocked by how dramatically different it was from the majority of our
repertoire at the time. We had been heading in a distinctly
non-academic direction focusing on composers closer to our generation.
[Sigh] Getting closer, I’m not quite sure HOW you confused
“Citron” for “Peppar” but I’m SURE
you’ll get it right this time.
With no option for discussion, we
kindly thanked the foundation. Now at the time, we were skeptical, but
also intrigued: hesitant because George is considerably older and
stylistically unlike most of the composers we had commissioned at that
point in our career, yet curious about what such a renowned and expert
craftsman might come up with.
There we go. FABULOUS.
We got the parts,
rehearsed, performed, and recorded it, and you know what? We’re
thrilled with this piece. Each movement is such a microcosm of
counterpoint and harmony, with every note serving its own specific
purpose and direction. It’s a wonderful complement to the rest of
the disc — I recommend putting your CD player on shuffle and
letting your ears and mind do a little dance.
Kind of like I feel like
doing with this excellent martini. You know, the bartenders here are
really underrated…
DAVID SCHOBER
Variations (1998)
David Schober (b. 1974) is currently a doctoral candidate and a fellow
at the University of Michigan Institute for the Humanities in Ann
Arbor. During his undergraduate studies at the Oberlin Conservatory, he
received a Theodore Presser Foundation grant to study at Yonsei
University in South Korea. National recognition for his composition
work has included two BMI Student Composer Awards, the ASCAP Foundation
Morton Gould Young Composer Award, the San Francisco State University
Wayne Peterson Composition Prize, the Aaron Copland Award, and a
Charles Ives Scholarship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
He has received commissions from the Minnesota Orchestra, the Naumburg
Foundation (for the Miró String Quartet), the BMI
Foundation/Carlos Surinach Fund, eighth blackbird, and violinist
Gregory Fulkerson. His current project is a Fromm Foundation commission
for a concerto for eighth blackbird to be premiered with the American
Composers Orchestra in 2004.
David Schober: I’m not sure what to tell you about
the “variations” — it’s true that there’s
no theme, and what variation does occur concerns a harmonic unit,
primarily, a “motive” only in the general Schoenbergian
sense of the Grundgestalt. The harmony is filled in with
Messiaen’s Mode 3 (of which the five-note group is a subset) and
a dash of Mode 2 (octatonic)…. I’ve never analyzed
Knussen’s Variations for solo piano in detail, but that piece was
a strong influence in terms of gesture and variation technique (i.e.,
distinct but linked “units” — hardly conventional
variations — each recomposing out a basic cell, but not
necessarily thematic). That Grundgestalt — A C E B-flat — is
a first cousin once removed from mine, a subset of both Mode 2 and
Mode 3. Knussen’s piece is more subtle and seamless, clearly with
expressive goals different from mine, but a fascinating work.
Matt Albert: Dave and I lived together for two years, sharing a dorm room
at Oberlin. We both worked most of the time, but I tended to start
earlier and Dave continued later. One evening, I remember Dave working on
a
composition assignment around the time I was going to bed. I wandered
over to the little card table he had set up for composing and looked
over his shoulder at a diagram filled with chords he had propped
vertically in front of him. I was tired, but interested, so I asked him
about the chords. He explained the process he was using, and how it was
generating the pitches for the piece he was working on. I’m not
too bad with theory myself, but as usual at least part of his
explanation went over my head. So after letting him explain for about
five minutes, I interrupted him, saying, “Well, it’s all
just random notes anyway.” There was a beat, and then Dave burst
out laughing. After a moment, so did I. Now, years later, somehow those
notes of his don’t seem so random anymore.
THOMAS ALBERT
Thirteen Ways (1997)
Thomas Albert was born in 1948 in Lebanon, Pennsylvania and educated at
Barton College and the University of Illinois. His music has been
performed throughout the United States as well as in Europe, Brazil,
Japan, and Korea. Two of his works, A Maze (With Grace) and
Devil’s Rain, have been a part of the repertoire of
Philadelphia’s Relâche Ensemble for many years, and are
included on the group’s CD, On Edge. Other recent commissions
include incidental music for the University of Cincinnati’s
production of Angels in America: Millennium Approaches, The
Devil’s Handyman for Washington D.C.’s 20th Century
Consort, and a new work for The Folger Consort. He has received grants
from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Charles Ives Center for
American Music, and ASCAP, and he is currently the Associate Dean of
the Conservatory and Professor of Music in composition and music
theatre at Shenandoah University.
Thomas Albert: I started the piece with the
eighth way because it had a definite musical reference (and more
obviously because it was the inspiration for the group’s name).
So: noble accents, inescapable rhythms… what exactly do those
mean? The first idea that came to me was how the simple rhythm of the
accompaniment of McCartney and Lennon’s “Blackbird”
really propels the song — and does that make it an inescapable
rhythm? I thought so. Noble accents… I don’t know if
they’re noble or not, but the piano constantly interjects
accented cluster chords and accented 4-note groups. Both the chords and
the 4-note groups are intervallically related to melodic gestures in
the “Blackbird” accompaniment.
Once that movement was done,
I had to find the “hook” for each of the others. The
imagery of the poems is very strong, I think, and often visual. I
believe my approach to music composition is frequently visually
stimulated (in that I might “see” a musical formal
correspondent to visual art, or even dramatic art).
The aspect
of each poem that “translated” into music for me was
different: for some poems, it was a direct depiction of the imagery
— almost like underscoring for a film, without the film. For
others, the poem merely suggested some musical gesture or form.
Finally, a word about overall form. I am fascinated by the Fibonacci
series, a numerical pattern in which each number is the sum of the
previous two: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21…. There are 13 poems in the
set (a Fibonacci number); the group takes its name from the eighth poem
(a Fibonacci number). I had originally thought I would somehow connect
the first, second, third, fifth, eighth, and thirteenth movements, but
that didn’t happen. The first, fifth, eighth, and thirteenth all
contain some references to “Blackbird,” but the second and
third do not. Some things just don’t work out. However, each
movement has a Fibonacci number of measures (13 or 21 or 34 or 55), and
many of the movements have rhythmic or formal schemes based on the
series in some way.
Matthew Duvall: I hadn’t really
attributed any particularly personal connections to the poems. Everyone
always imagines their own visuals, etc., especially after so many
performances and hearing the poems so many times, but still, it was
never a personal connection. Recently, though, I was reading Operating
Instructions by Anne Lamott. It’s basically a journal of her
baby’s first year, and the entry dated Nov. 3 reads:
He laughed
today for the first time, when Julie from upstairs was dangling her
bracelets above his head while I was changing his diaper. His laughter
was like little bells. Then there was the clearest silence, a hush,
before total joyous pandemonium broke out between Julie and me. Then
we both stared almost heartbrokenly into his face. I thought of Wallace
Stevens’s “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird,” verse
five —
I do not know which to prefer,
The beauty of
inflections
Or the beauty of innuendoes,
The blackbird whistling
Or
just after.
I’ve never known what to think of that poem,
really. But now I think it will always have that association, because
it’s so relevant.
You have to forgive the one-track mind of an
expectant father. [Eva Marguerite Duvall was born March 4, 2003]
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