DIGITAL MIST
"Perhaps the work that most obviously played around with the effects of resonance was Sebastian Currier’s “Digital Mist” for violin, piano and digital echoes, another premiere that was performed with exquisite attention to timing and balance. Here, the interplay of the digital and the acoustic was delicate and subtle, each echoing the other in turn but the digital always hovering above the sounds of the acoustic instruments. When the instruments copied the digital lines, they did so with astonishing veracity." -Washington Post |
Program Note
Interest in the properties of resonance clearly extends as far back in time as music history itself. One of the earliest mentions that caught my attention is the Roman architect Vitruvius's plan for a theater that would have brass vases spread around the theater so that the sounds coming from the stage would resonate throughout the space. This interest in what happens to a note once the player has finished playing it, has been revisited again and again from Vitruvius until the present day. From chant performed in cavernous cathedrals to the invention of the piano with a sustain pedal, from the inventive coloristic pedaling of Debussy's piano music to Berio's trumpet Sequanza (where the trumpet points it bell into an open piano lid), to much of the electro-acoustic music out of IRCAM, to many of the most used, or even overused, 20th century orchestration techniques (imagine the sharp ping of a harp harmonic with the "resonance" of the note taken over by muted violins), it's clear that there's a basic allure in what happens as musical sounds spread out in space towards our receptive ears. Digital Mist once again revisits resonance. Here, with an electronics part that, for the most part, resonates with what the violin and piano play. At times, though, it's also the other way around: the violin and piano take up a pitch first heard in the electronics part. There's a great deal of electronic and electro-acoustic music that deals with resonance. My impetus is actually more old-fashioned and takes off from piano pedaling techniques. I'm sure many listeners know the much talked about pedal indications in the first movement of Beethoven's Tempest sonata. Beethoven asks for the pianist to hold down the pedal for an extended recitative-like single line. The result is that the melodic notes all continue to sound and as more add together the result isn't just the prolongation of the note just heard, but a pleasing haze that forms around all the entire passage. It's more this haze than a literal staging of resonance that interests me in Digital Mist: the violin and piano are surrounded not in space, but in time, by an ethereal mist of ones and zeros that at times build up to partially obscure them, then to withdraw, returning the duo to prominence. The piece was commissioned by the Library of Congress and Premiere Commissions. |
Scoring
Violin, Piano, Electronic Samples
This work requires additional technological components and/or amplification. .
Territory
This work is available from Boosey & Hawkes for the world.
World Premiere
5/6/2011 Library of Congress, Washington, DC
Colin Jacobsen, violin / Bruce Levingston, piano
Violin, Piano, Electronic Samples
This work requires additional technological components and/or amplification. .
Territory
This work is available from Boosey & Hawkes for the world.
World Premiere
5/6/2011 Library of Congress, Washington, DC
Colin Jacobsen, violin / Bruce Levingston, piano