On January 21, Maria Frodl (vc) and Kaori Nishii (pno) will perform «la terra sommersa … un campanile» at the Palais Meran in Graz
Ten years after its premiere at the Musikverein in Vienna, my piece for violoncello and piano will have its first performance in Graz. The concert on January 21st will be hosted by the Styrian Composers’ Association (Steierischer Tonkünstlerbund) and I’m particularly happy looking forward to hearing the interpretation of two excellent musicians who have already played my piece a few years ago in Vienna.
Originally written for Alexander Gebert (violoncello) and the pianist Anna Magdalena Kokits in 2012, this is undoubtable one of my oldest pieces that I’m still happy to see on a concert programme. Back then I was about finishing my bachelor’s studies in composition and this was indeed one of my first major artistic projects together with the string quartet. Although I have moved far away from it stylistically, there are some things in this piece that are still important to me compositionally today, such as contrasting cloudy vertical situations with clear harmonies. In «la terra sommersa … un campanile» I made use of clusters in the piano for instance, something I really disappreciate today—knowing today that there are far more interesting and subtler ways of creating harsh and noisy sound events for such situations—and these clusters fall apart and eventually turn into qualified sounds such as bell-like chords.
The premiere of the duo by Alexander Gebert and Anna Magdalena Kokits was quite successful and my piece ‹survived› alongside works by Brahms, Penderecki, Schwertsik and Martinu on that day, as it was played marvellously by the two outstandingly good musicians. That experience motivated me to orchestrate it and thus a version for large ensemble was created which was first performed by the Ensemble Kontrapunkte in 2015, also at the Musikverein. A recording of the latter version was released in the ORF Edition Zeitton—you can listen to it here.
I hope to meet you on January 21st at the Palais Meran. The concert will start at 4 PM and will feature also works by Alyssa Aska, Morgana Petrik, Franz Zebinger and others, as well as some free drinks and small snacks.
On June 19 I was invited to present «Music With Moons» at the Anton Bruckner Private University in Linz
In the course of the Austrian Composers’s Week 2023 organized by the Austrian Composers’ Association my work was showcased at the Bruckneruni’s Sonic Lab, a great new concert hall opened in 2015 and dedicated particularly for performances of computer music. Prior to the event a call for scores was advertised and I feel very much obliged that Mr. Andreas Weixler, head of the Computer Music Studio (CMS) at the Bruckneruni who curated the programme, chose my work for a performance.
In the meantime I have uploaded the concert version of the piece — feel free to listen to the piece here. To start the piece, hover over the invisible play button below the title (which then will become visible) and click Play ►.
Here are some impressions of the presentation and the concert:
Within the frame of the «23. Lange Nacht der Musik» my piano piece »four stars and one dark nebula« will be premiered by the German pianist Annette Kurz in Oldenburg on June 17. The work was awarded a second prize in the 21st Carl von Ossietzky Kompositionswettbewerb organised by the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg.
A primary goal of the composition competition was to find and present new works that are ideally suitet for discovering experimental playing techniques and expanding a student’s pianistic skills in that respect:
Die eingesendeten Werke sollen von geschulten Laien bzw. interessierten Klavierstudierenden gut zu lesen und aufführbar sein, um die Literatur experimenteller Spielweisen am Tasteninstrument kennenzulernen und als Erweiterungen des Klangspektrums erfahrbar zu machen.
Admittingly most of my piano pieces are quite hard to learn and require solid pianistic abilities in many ways—however, everything I write remains perfectly playable and several of my compositions have been staged by students thus far. It is very important to me that on the one hand no compromises are made with regard to what it takes to create a certain soundscape: If it means to be techically difficult it will simply turn out to become an arduous piece to learn—so what. We take things seriously and practising takes a lot of time, but if we love what we’re doing professionally, we love practising something very hard whenever the outcome is good.
On the other hand, I keep striving towards being a ‹friendly composer› in terms of notation. Perhaps, because of creating graphical works as an artist as well, I am definitely not interested in complexifying my scores graphically. That’s old school in my opinion, we have had that since the 60s of the very past century and I feel there isn’t any need to emulate this tradition any longer.
I’m really happy that my attempt of creating a piece that conveys my personal language uncompromisingly while being still attractive for young and less experienced piano students to learn was awarded a prize in composition. It means a lot to me, because if our music is not eligible for young musicians at all, they will just keep loving the old pieces forever, but not the new ones.
Generative AV «Music With Moons» will be staged at the Austrian Composers Week 2023 at the Anton Bruckner University’s Sonic Lab on June 19
Winning a call for scores by the Austrian Composers’ Association «Music With Moons» will be played at the Austrian Composers Week 2023 in a concerts that takes place at the new campus of the Anton Bruckner Private University in Linz. The Sonic Lab which only opened in 2015 was designed as a computer music concert hall at the ABPU in Linz.
In the concert on June 19 works between the poles of notated compositions, fixed media, improvisation and real-time processed structures will be presented. The programme includes works by Sam Erpelding, Ángel Hernández Lovera, Christoph Renhart, Belma Bešlić-Gál, Se-Lien Chuang, Dieter Kaufmann, Peter Trabitzsch, Tom Aitken, Andreas Weixler, Gabriel Bramöck and Markus Bless.
I’m particularly looking forward to this very first public concert in which a large work of mine from the field of computer music will be staged.
Recording of «XXI Orakel der Nacht – Zweites Heft» available on CD
On May 12 a new CD dedicated to Gerd Kühr, professor emeritus in composition at the University of Music and Performing Arts Graz will be released by the Austrian label col legno. Alongside piano pieces by Gerd Kühr we have recorded several other works for the piano by composers who have lived or worked in Graz. The album outlines a synopsis of the manifold compositional works by composers who are for the most part fellows of the University of Music in Graz, too.
On the new disc, my own recording of «XXI Orakel der Nacht – Zweites Heft» will be released as well. The other pieces were played by Chiemi Tanaka, Krzysztof Dziurbiel, Anton Bashynskyi, Milica Zakic and Stipe Bilic. The recording was made in Oberschützen last October and funded by the City of Graz, the Gesellschaft der Freunde der Kunstuniversität Graz and SKE.
Recording of «Drei nautische Stillleben» to be presented in Ö1 Zeit-Ton on May 16
The Austrian public radio station Ö1 will present the recording of the Ensemble Kontrapunkte’s concert from April 17, 2023 at the Musikverein, Vienna. Under the direction of Gottfried Rabl, two new works for large ensemble were premiered, Martin Bjelik’s «Schattenbilder II» and my composition «Drei nautische Stillleben» for mezzosoprano and ensemble. The soloist part in my work was sung by Elsa Janulidu.
Moreover two works by the American Pulitzer Prize winning composer Joseph Schwantner were staged in Austria for the first time by the Ensemble Kontrapunkte on April 17. Ö1 will broadcast the recording on May 16 at 11:03 PM in their radio programme «Zeit-Ton». The programme will be available online at oe1.orf.at for one week.
The South Korean ensemble blank conducted by Jaehyuck Choi stages «Échos éloquents» on April 29 at Seoul Arts Center
Winning the ensemble blank’s international Call for Scores 2022, my work for seven players will be performed in a concert in the South Korean capital Seoul on April 29, 2023. The concert will take place at the Seoul Arts Center (IBK Chamber Hall) and will feature works by Rebecca Saunders, Anton Webern, Tristan Murail, Ungjin Lee, Christophe Bertrand and J. S. Bach alongside my composition.
About the work
Échos éloquents was written in 2016 and premiered in the same year by the Schallfeld Ensemble in Graz. In 2019 I wrote a second version for the Belgian Ensemble Musiques Nouvelles in the course of the ‘tactus Young Composers’ Forum. The piece lasts approximately 11 minutes and has two large parts that are linked together by a cadenza. The first part is much shorter than the second part—a basic concept of the piece was to find an interesting solution that could address this problem in the form (a cadenza and a climax coming early in a composition).
Ensemble Kontrapunkte plays «Drei nautische Stillleben» in April with soloist Elsa Janulidu
On April 17 the Viennese Ensemble Kontrapunkte will stage my new work «Drei nautische Stillleben» for mezzo soprano and ensemble under the baton of Gottfried Rabl. The soloist part will be sung by the Greek mezzo soprano Elsa Janulidu. The event will take place at the Musikverein’s Gläserner Saal.
Being my third collaboration with the Ensemble Kontrapunkte, I’m particularly looking forward to rehearsing the piece with an ensemble that I consider ideal for the aesthetics I seek in music. I have chosen a wide range of instruments for the orchestral version of this song cycle that is based on my own texts: Five woodwind instruments (including two clarinets), three brass instruments that play with different mutes for long periods, a large percussion part for three percussionists (which also features three percussion frogs that do sound like real rogs), a piano part that also features a virtuous celesta passage and string quintet section. The entire piece is estimated to last approximately 20 minutes.
About the work
«Three Nautical Still Lifes» for mezzo soprano and ensemble is based upon four poems, that I wrote as a starting point for a new song cycle for mezzo soprano and piano. The chamber music version was composed in 2021 — it is the basis of the present version for mezzo soprano and ensemble.
The surreal texts are framed by instrumental sections. An instrumental prologue is put in front of the first poem, which anticipates the wet atmosphere of the texts. A monologue recited by the ensemble forms the middle movement. At the climax of the cyclic work, the cachalot stands as a metaphor for an erupting volcano, which collapses spectacularly. In the epilogue, the voice and the ensemble find together finally in a rather melancholic certitude: «Auspicious in the asters’ morass, the loam quenchs the sore furrows».
Please use Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge when playing the piece—the JavaScript engine in Firefox is too slow while the other two browsers perform signigicantly better here. A sufficiently fast computer is recommended as well.
Music written in JavaScript
Music With Moons is an audiovisual composition that is intended to be staged in an internet browser such as Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge. Basically, it uses the same sound library as the Typophone that I have written previously in 2021-22. Similar to the Typophone Music With Moons makes use of a software sampler included in the JavaScript library Tone.js. Additionally I have recorded a few more sounds for this piece and some other new sounds have been created in SuperCollider. All in all the entire piece consists of prerecorded instrumental sound samples which are put together on the fly and in a most flexible way every time the piece starts. It was crucial for me that the piece stays unpredictable to a certain, yet well-defined extent.
musical form and randomness
Unpredictability of a composition might seem to be inconsistant with a clear musical form. However, this alleged contradition can be found extremely often in classical masterpieces. Albeit a concerto by Mozart will follow a well-known formal pattern—to a certain extent—an thus remains predictable, many key events will occur surprisingly at unforeseen moments. The balance between answering the listener’s expectations and not satisfying them is the traditional game a composer plays. This game involves a third and critical protagonist, the performer. When the performer is a computer, this play gets easily distortet and a fixed media composition becomes predictable when we have listened to it once or twice. I tried hard to find a compositional method that turns the computer into a real performer of my music. That means that every performance of the piece must differ from every other interpretation of the piece.
How do we turn a computer in a performer? What kind of interpretative decisions can a computer make? This is the point where randomness comes into play. When it gets down to taking random decisions, computers outmatch humans by far. We must determine a range of numbers or events from wich a computer chooses randomly, though. And of course we can consider the distribution of the probabilities for any event to happen. Take a simple array of numbers for instance: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] It is equally probable that the element 6 from this list is chosen by a random function as the element 1. If we add another element 6 to this array, thus [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 6], it is more likely that 6 is chosen than all the other elements. Here is the point where the artistic work starts—to distinguish between events that are more likely to happen from events that occur less likely only due to aesthetic reasons.
Let’s get back to the question of musical form. Music With Moons consists of four main parts. Each part is triggered, when several conditions are complied. There is a counter running in the background, for example, that increases every time a drawn line hits the margin of the screen. Another counter sums up the amount of spirals already drawn and even another one the overall amount of triangles. When a triangle is drawn or when one counter surpasses a certain value, a sound is triggered. In this way, the graphical events are linked closely to the sound events and vice versa.
I decided that in every performance, all prominent events should appear at least once. In the first part, some triangles, spirals, twirly lines and the abstract dancer is drawn (or whatever else it might be—the figures are not supposed to convey any kind of meaning at all) and at its end, a series of loud gong strikes will be heard. In the second part, the harmony will chance completely and a moon will occur as well as an eye on the left side of the screen. The third part will start with a white line sweeping the screen and after that, thin green lines will flow down from the top. It will climax in a thick and loud metallic 2-1-rhythm. In the final section the screen will turn dark and an owl will pick the moon symbol from my work Mondviolen up from the bottom of the screen. Meanwhile, tree-like structures will emerge from the black background.
harmony
Working with a sampler allowed me to realise any desired intonation or (de)tuning. I defined several scales as a basic material in order to establish a great harmonic contrast between the structures whenever there was a need for such a distinction. One scale consists of an octave being devided into 10 equal parts, another scale of an octave devided into 16 equal parts, for a third scale an octave is devided into 24 quartertones. The most interesting scale is a fourth scale in which a fifth is devided into four equal parts. This scale is featured prominently at the beginning of the second part when the pale moon symbol arises on the right side of the screen.
Other than that, I occasionally implemented more traditional structures such as chords that approximate the natural harmonic series as can be heard in the opening sequence. Harmony relies mainly on redundancy. Redundancy again is something that can be established easily by distributing the probabilities for events to occur. Let’s get back to our trivial array from before. Instead of numbers, let’s take pitches this time. If we have a comuputer choose a melody of 30 notes randomly from this array, it will sound pellmell:
pitchArray1 = [C, C#, D, D#, E, F, F#, G, G#, A, A#, B] resultingMelody = A-D#-C#-C#-G#-E-F#-D#-E-A#-G#-B-C#-C-F-G-C-A#-E-B-A#-F-G#-B-G-E-E-B-D#-D
However, if we alter it and make it look like this array, it will play a melody that strongly suggests the feeling of C-major to the listener:
pitchArray 2 = [C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C, C#, D, D, D#, E, E, E, E, F, F, F#, G, G, G, G, G, G#, A, A, A#, B, B] resultingMelody = C-C-G-A-G-E-D#-B-F#-G-G-E-A-C-F-C-E-C-C-C-G-F-G-F-F-E-A-C-C-E-A-C
Source Code:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>
<p>Result pitchArray1</br/>
<span id="result1"></span></p>
<p>Result pitchArray2</br/>
<span id="result2"></span></p>
<script>
let pitchArray1 = ['C', 'C#', 'D', 'D#', 'E', 'F', 'F#', 'G', 'G#', 'A', 'A#', 'B'];
let len1 = pitchArray1.length;
let melody1 = 'resultingMelody = ';
for (let i = 0; i < len1; i++) {
melody1 += pitchArray1[Math.floor(Math.random() * len1)];
if (i < (len1 - 1)) {
melody1 += '-';
}
}
let pitchArray2 = ['C', 'C', 'C', 'C', 'C', 'C', 'C', 'C', 'C', 'C', 'C#', 'D', 'D', 'D#', 'E', 'E', 'E', 'E', 'F', 'F', 'F#', 'G', 'G', 'G', 'G', 'G', 'G#', 'A', 'A', 'A#', 'B', 'B'];
let len2 = pitchArray2.length;
let melody2 = 'resultingMelody = ';
for (let i = 0; i < len2; i++) {
melody2 += pitchArray2[Math.floor(Math.random() * len2)];
if (i < (len2 - 1)) {
melody2 += '-';
}
}
document.getElementById('result1').innerHTML = melody1;
document.getElementById('result2').innerHTML = melody2;
</script>
</body>
</html>
up next
After more than five months of work on this particular software I’d like to call it finished for now. Nonetheless some problems concerning the source code are left over. Of course no software, however important, can ever considered ‹complete› as long as it is being used. My programme—that is to say my composition or whatever else you would like to consider it (an animation?, a movie?)—is finished rather in an artistic way than in a technical one. As for the latter, I have not yet found a good solution for the PanVol object (which is responsible for the panorama as well as for the levels of the samples as its name suggests). I believe my software architecture is somewhat less than perfect to pull it charitably. Moreover all the samples should be recorded again in a very professional way. This should ideally be done in a studio and it would take a lot of time and it would cost a lot, too. As for now, I have focussed entirely on the artistic work, so let’s consider it an experimental composition. I hope, you’ll like it, though.