Sainsburymusic

The 'higher listening grounds'

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Philosophy & Poems - 2

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Poems on Music Themes

    The 'Aranjuez' Adagio
                              

        As a sure Spanish brow                                   
        Surveys, the seventh fret                                  
        Concedes.                                                       
        The first finger                                                
        Sensing nylons clement             
        Tension, prepares the ‘barre.’                                    
        Third and fourth                                              
        Make Obeisance                                             
        And fall into position.                                       
        Eager for tone,             
        Thenar eminence                                             
        Confirming beneath the neck                             
        Assures                                                          
        The right hand,                                               
        Now ‘sul tasto’ readied.                     
        And…                                                            
        In that moment,                                               
        Perhaps                                                          
        In the first few rows                             
        One hears,                                                      
        As if it were…                                                
        That ‘pre-empting ring of vinyl’                        
        Bleeding ahead of play,                                    
        Ghosting
        An Iberian ‘arpeggio’.

 

Symphony of the Birds 

The Symphony of the Birds features Australian bird sounds of the Central Coast region as the source material for all sounds in the work. It was an obvious choice for Chris who was raised on the Coast and knows and loves these birds. It also dovetailed nicely into the commissioner's request to 'keep it local'. The composer recorded and notated various bird sounds over many months. In the piece he links some together to form broader melodic themes. Conversely, other bird calls and bird songs appear as a one-off. Birds that feature include the butcher-bird, the lorikeet, the wattle-bird, the koel, various finches and wrens, galahs and plovers among others. For the most part Chris uses the bird sounds 'as they are' without any 'melodic treatment' that composers usually pride themselves on.

The piece is in three movements being:

1) First Light: essentially a sonata complete with a slow prelude of two minutes (First Light), then our A and B themes, development, recapitulation and coda.

2) Parrot Fun, then Fugue: This movement is in two sections, the first which dissolves traditional form (which is harmony centred) in favour of presenting a 'bush texture'. We hear just melodic fragments and reverb (through the writing of 'space' into the music). The second section of this movement is a complex fugue (very much harmonic centred). This movement features strings and harp.

3) Canopy Delights and Last Light: This is the 'movement of contrasts'. From the initial 'spiritoso' theme, to a central 'adagio', to two distinct brassy climaxes to a a 'meditative mysterioso' and finally a short 'chorale' to close the work (being the Last Light).

The composer also uses several unusual 'performance directions' and 'tempo indications' in the piece. Among these are 'With the wind' (similar to allegro), 'Albatross big' (similar to grandioso), 'With fire flight' (taken from a poem about birds by I.Robin), 'Ferny glades' (a 'lush' indication), 'Squakato' (squaking), 'Gliding' (for sempre legato), 'Sun-Kissed' (an allargando section), 'Crowning', and the list goes on.

 

The 'Ground Sounds and Sky Sounds Approach to Composition and Orchestration'

Furthermore, in this work Chris uses what he terms 'ground sounds', 'sky sounds' and 'near-melodies' (original terms). He has identified these as integral elements of the natural Australian sound-world. The ground sounds are sustain, repetitive device, non-development of idea - essentially the static. They are present through the use of ostinati, the converging and blurring of chord changes, a heightened aspect of tone (at times over and above melody and harmony), and also 'melod-ercussive' thumps, scratching, breaks, and bumps that whilst integral are not necessarily prominent nor developmental in a Western-music sense. The sky sounds are 'sky reverb' and 'sky amplification' which occur naturally under the skies. Chris has cleverly rendered these sounds into the piece through a heightened attention to texture, effectively at times orchestrating both reverb and amplification into the music. The 'near-melodies' are the 'melodic fragments', 'abandoned improvisations' and 'hints towards melody' that are the stuff of so many bird sounds. Simply, in some sections of the work the melodies do not have the opportunity to 'take wing' (excuse the pun). Nevertheless, this is balanced with a fair element of classicizing the material into readily understood themes and contrasting sections. Chris hopes that you hear the bush and the birds in this piece, his Symphony of the Birds.

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For more poems from music view the PDF Da Capo here or return to Home page.