Category Archives: New works

Choral Videos

This afternoon, Dr. Carlson, the commissioner of To a Poet a Thousand Years Hence, posted a link on Facebook to a video of the ISU Madrigal Singers performing the aforementioned piece.

On a lark, I did a little search for my name and came up with a recently posted video of The Passionate Shepherd to His Love performed by the Southern Miss Chamber Singers, conducted by an old friend, Dr. Andrew Jensen. Andy was a member of the ISU Madrigal Singers during my days in the choir, and was a singer in the premiere of Passionate Shepherd. This is a truly beautiful performance:

Phoenix Concerts commission

Yesterday afternoon, I received an email from Gilda Lyons, the founder and Artistic Director of The Phoenix Concerts asking if I would like to a) perform one of my short songs and b) write a new short song for a a concert she’s scheduled for March 2011 celebrating composers who have attended the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Of course I said yes!

Gilda is a great composer herself, and she does a wonderful job running The Phoenix Concerts, which are always interesting and of the highest caliber. I’m really looking forward to writing for her series, as well as performing again with my good friend Rob Frankenberry!

Echoes in the tubes

Yesterday did you all hear some echoes in the tubes? If you did, it was the ISU Madrigal Singers running through my latest choral opus (my, how I dislike that word), To a Poet a Thousand Years Hence, for my benefit via Skype. Since I don’t have the time (or money) to fly to IL prior to the official premiere of the piece for a proper in-person coaching, we decided to fire up our webcams and do it the newfangled way.

I was quite pleasantly surprised with the outcome – the technology worked! It wasn’t perfect, but – hell – I got to hear a choir in central IL sing one of my pieces live while I sat in my apartment in Manhattan. And were they ever good! I’m always so happy when an ensemble is both talented and prepared enough so that I only need to nitpick!

I offered a handful of constructive criticisms, but mostly got to sit back and enjoy a great choir singing my music. I’m definitely looking forward to hearing them live in December!

Getting over the hump

Thanks to the economy tanking in September 2008, everyone seems to have had a difficult time making ends meet. I certainly know that I have. Being a composer is not a particularly lucrative vocation, being a young composer especially so. As a result, since moving to New York City in September 2004, I’ve made my living as a temp.

I give up roughly 40 hours of my week hopping from office to office in Manhattan. I’ll spend days, weeks, or even months in an office, performing mostly menial tasks – filing, data entry, and rarely (very rarely) a bit of reception work (which I invariably loathe). I was very fortunate prior to the economic crash – I had found a great long-term temp gig in the Alternative Fund Services department of HSBC. The VP who oversaw the area that I assisted was also a musician, so he understood my situation and did his best to keep me on for as long as possible. Ultimately, I was there for three and a half years, not including a several-month stint where I temped for a jewelry company. In the middle of this 3.5 years, I spent about six months as a full-time, salaried employee of HSBC – I was a Fund of Funds Administrator (basically, I was an administrator for a particular type of hedge fund) – but it was too great of a draw on my time, so I quit, left on very good terms, and was called back again as a temp when I finished with the jewelry company. I stayed until about two weeks before the crash, when every single temp in the company was let go at once.

After that, the economy was so terrible that my temp agencies had a very difficult time finding me work. From September 2008 until August 2010, I worked a total of maybe 10 weeks – not because I didn’t want to, but because the work just wasn’t there. I was fortunate in that I could draw Unemployment for a year, and I was able to design a website or two, but none of this was enough to pay the rent, let alone bills. After my Unemployment ran out, I was in pretty dire straits. Consequently, I got myself into a bit of a financial pickle, and was fortunately bailed out by my parents earlier this year. (Hooray for parents!)

The constant financial worry was obviously a major draw on my mental abilities. The anxiety and subsequent depression made it pretty much impossible to write. I even had a rough go of it during my stays at artist colonies – I couldn’t maintain my concentration, and kept feeling as though maybe I shouldn’t be there at all, if only because I couldn’t afford to travel or be away from potential jobs. And while I was in the City, I spent almost zero time writing – I would sleep embarrassingly late and then fritter away the remainder of the day. Not an existence indicative of a healthy mind.

I managed to write only a handful of works during that period, most of which had pretty strict deadlines, and it was still like pulling teeth to get me to sit down to write, even with the promise of money.

For quite a while I thought that the problem was that I didn’t have a draw on my time – that I needed to have less of my time available to me so that I would value what little time I had to write and use it properly. Now there may be some validity to this, but it never once crossed my mind until a few weeks ago that my problem was that I couldn’t think except to worry about the five dollars in my checking account and thirteen cents in savings. The worry would keep me up at night. I was afraid to buy anything. I was terrified every time I swiped my debit card, expecting that the tiniest purchase would be denied because I might not have enough money in my account.

Some of the haze finally cleared a few weeks ago on the plane en route to Santa Fe, NM to see my friends Danny and Kaity get married and hear the premiere of The Gallant Weaver, which I arranged for solo guitar as their processional. In August, my boyfriend’s sister recommended me for a freelance temp job in the Finance office at New York City Center, where she had worked in Development. That assignment lasted “officially” from mid-August to October 1. I say “officially” and put it in quotes for two reasons: 1. I’ve been asked back for a while to help out in the Capital Projects office, and 2. I’ve been offered (and I’ve accepted) a full-time position in Finance starting December 13. I’ll be taking over for a really great guy who’s been at City Center for quite a while, and is retiring at the end of the year. Big shoes to fill!

It was around the time that my boss-to-be began making job-style overtures in my direction that I started to realize that my compositional problem hasn’t been too much time on my hands – it’s been incessant, gut-wrenching, debilitating anxiety/depression over the fact that I’ve had no money for the past two years! So once there was a light at the end of the tunnel, an oasis on the horizon, I was finally able to think more clearly and realize that my creative process had been hijacked by paralyzing anxiety and a real, deep depression.

Now it feels as though a huge weight has been lifted from my shoulders. I still have to live a little frugally until the job starts in mid-December, but I’ve been able to breathe and sleep easier.

And the music has begun to flow again! In a matter of days, I wrote a 4-minute choral work that I’m really excited to hear when it’s premiered at Illinois State University the weekend before I start full-time at City Center. I feel energized to write and write and write!

I intend to attack the Songbook Project again, and I’ve got an interesting series of short chamber works bubbling away in my brain. Also, I’ve found a direction for the orchestral piece I started at Ucross last year that I think is going to propel it into something quite good – important, even. So let’s get to work!

New choral work and upcoming performance

Lots of fun news to report, much of which will wait til a later post when I have a bit more time to write.

In the meantime, two fun bits of news:

I’m nearly finished with a new choral piece commissioned by Illinois State University, titled To a Poet a Thousand Years Hence. The piece commemorates two events: the 55th Annual ISU Madrigal Dinners, and the 40th Anniversary of the founding of the ISU College of Fine Arts. As always, it’s an honor to be asked to write for ISU’s choirs, and I look forward to their performance of it on the Madrigal Dinners in early December. I’ll be attending one of the later performances with a sizable entourage of friends and family. I encourage anyone in the area to check out the Dinners, which are a great event (I was one of the Madrigal Singers during my ISU years, and had quite a bit of fun singing, eating, and wearing silly costumes – particularly the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Memorial Pillbox Hat™, which I promise to find a photo of). I’ll have the piece finished in the next day or so, as all that remains to be done is to compose music for half a line of poetry, flesh out harmonies for two other lines, and finish the engraving and proofreading.

And Saturday, October 16, the ISU Madrigal Singers will perform one of my slightly older choral works, Fair Robin I Love, which hasn’t seen the light of day since it was premiered 5 years ago (!) for the 50th Annual Madrigal Dinner. I’m glad it’s being done again – I particularly like it, and it’s a refreshing departure from the bulk of my choral works.

More happy news soon about day jobs, planned works, and more upcoming performances. A new little side project that I’ve been tinkering with. And some heavier, more personal posts coming reflecting on my recent difficulties composing, and responding to some very sad recent events.

Until then!

September Catch-up

Once again I fall off the face of the blogosphere! What have I been doing to warrant having neglected my dear, dear readers? Not enough to excuse myself, but enough to fill a short post with!

The Gallant Weaver
About a month ago, I finished a solo guitar transcription/arrangement of "The Gallant Weaver" from And He’ll Be Mine. The piece will be premiered at the wedding of my good friends Danny Stone and Kaity Volpe in Santa Fe, NM on Sept. 18.

Soliloquy
Last week I finished revisions to my first solo flute piece from 2004, Soliloquy, for Kristi Benedick, a flautist I went to Illinois State University with. Mostly, the revisions took the form of renotation of the original score into traditional notation. However, I also tightened up a few sections – dropped a few phrases here and there, and elided others. Kristi will perform the piece on November 14 at Southeast Missouri State University. She will also premiere the flute and piano version of at least a moment in Spring 2011.

Duo for Violin & Piano
I’m also revising my Duo for Violin & Piano, which should be finished soon. I’m extending the opening section, and fixing a pesky transition that didn’t work in the original.

MichaelKorie.com
I’ve picked up a new web client. (Did I tell you this? I’m too lazy to check.) I’m currently designing a website for lyricist/librettist Michael Korie, who I met through another of my clients. More news as the site develops.

Keyed Up Concerts
I started a mock-up today for another client, the Keyed Up Concerts, run by my good friend Marc Peloquin.

PatriciaLeonard.com
Next month, I start yet another site for composer Patricia Leonard!

DavidShohl.com
More websites! I’m in the data entry stage of the creation of a website for my friend David Shohl, also a composer. David was actually my first web client, but as we both have an amazing capacity for procrastination, and David later fell seriously ill (he’s much better now – hooray!), we haven’t gotten around to making it happen until now.

Split Second Piano Ensemble
Yet another website that’s in the data entry stage is for the Split Second Piano Ensemble, made of the duo Marc Peloquin and Roberto Hidalgo.

New Commission
In the next week, I’ll be starting work on a new choral work for the Illinois State University Madrigal Singers. Karyl Carlson, the Director of Choral Activities, has been a great proponent of my music, and she’s commissioned this new work for the 55th Annual ISU Madrigal Dinners, which coincide with the 40th Anniversary of the founding of the ISU College of Fine Arts. The new piece will be performed alongside two of my other choral works, Fair Robin I Love (2005) and Take All My Loves (2009), both written for the ISU Madrigal Singers.

NewMusicShelf.com
NewMusicShelf is chugging along – I’m still building the composer roster, which is taking a little more time than expected, as getting composers to put their scores together is like herding cats. However, I’ve made a lot of improvements to the site, and am still looking for ways to make the site better.

New Day Job
To top off this list of busy-making things (and in addition to a 10-day trip to visit family in Illinois), I’ve started a new short-term, part-time day job assisting the Finance Office at New York City Center. I’ll be there through the end of September, when I’m back out on the streets looking for more ways to pay the bills.

VCCA 2010: Week 1

Greetings from sunny Virginia!

I arrived this past Monday at the VCCA, and have been settling into a creative groove and meeting some great people. Shortly before I left NYC, I plunked out a few introductory notes for a new violin and piano duo, so I’ve been expanding on that. My daily output has been a little inconsistent thus far, but I largely attribute that to having just arrived and the various minor distractions involved in settling in for a month’s residency.

Monday was a complete creative wash since I spent the day on the train from NYC to Lynchburg – a surprisingly pleasant 8-hour trip. I find myself increasingly anxious when I’ve traveled lately, which I suspect is due in large part to the draconian rules and restrictions surrounding air travel, and which easily associates itself with train travel, as well. But I arrived in one piece and with only minor aggravations from having slightly overpacked. Since my train didn’t get in until after dark, I forewent a trip to the studio, and dove into the social scene instead, which was a great time, although I should have gone to bed a little earlier and had slightly less wine than I did. But: when in Rome!

I’ve managed a reasonable amount of writing each day so far except for yesterday, which was fraught with a number of distractions, some of which were self-imposed. Most aggravating was an issue with Sibelius, which has been giving me problems lately. There has been some glitch with the Kontakt player that causes the program to crash. As a result of this glitch, whatever score I happen to be working on becomes unusable unless I use only General MIDI for playback, which is a complete nightmare. It refuses to open, and crashes Sibelius instantly if I have the Kontakt player enabled.

I spent some time on the phone with technical support, and was given instructions for a potential solution. First, though, I need my Sibelius installation disc, which I left at home. Fortunately, I have a friend apartment-sitting for me, and he’s already put it in the mail to me. Wish me luck!

The weather has been absolutely gorgeous – in the mid-80s today! – and I’ve been doing my best to get out and about to enjoy the beautiful scenery and to get some exercise to lose these 10 pounds that I’d like to shed before summer.

The food has been slightly problematic so far, though I expect it to improve soon. The issue boils down to my Celiac Disease, which has never been an issue before at colonies. I understand that the menu for this week was made before the kitchen was informed of my gluten thing, so I hope that the situation turns around soon.

I typically don’t write on the weekends, though I may this weekend since it’s been a slowish week. I intend to spend the majority of my time hiking and enjoying the beautiful weather!

Three new arrangements: at least a moment

Today has to have been the most productive single day I’ve had in ages.

This afternoon, I finished work on the redesign of Darien Shulman’s website, darienshulman.com, which has been in the works for a few months. The design process for this site was rather different from that of other sites I’ve designed, and was informed by the ways that Chet Biscardi and I work together on updates for his site. When Chet needs updates done to his site, we go through the changes together – Chet at his computer, me at my laptop on the other side of the room. It makes for greater accuracy in whatever edits are made, and is generally a lot more fun (though also incredibly draining since we tend to work for 6 or so hours in a row!). So, once I reached a certain point in the design process, Darien and I began sitting down in the same room and working through details. I think it’s a really great way to work, and makes for an incredibly personalized site, which is something that I really aim for, and that I think sets me apart from many web designers out there.

After we launched Darien’s site and worked out the remaining kinks, I went on to create three (count ‘em, three!) new arrangements of at least a moment: for flute and piano; alto flute and piano; and alto flute and harp. This, hot on the heels of the paraphrase of "One Train May Hide Another", Best at dawn, for Marc Peloquin (which still requires some minor revisions in the score layout).

I strongly doubt that I’ll be doing an arrangement for flute and harp, however nicely that might round out the set. The flute version requires that I transpose the entire score up a minor third (as opposed to the alto flute versions, which merely (yet annoyingly) require that the alto flute line be transposed up a fourth), and, as fun as it was making sure of the harp pedalings for the original song cycle, I don’t feel much in the mood to tackle such a problem again – especially in a setting not involving actual composing, but just score editing. However, if anyone out there in Interwebs-land finds themselves hankerin’ for such a work to perform or record, I could be convinced to make the effort.

Regardless, if anyone is looking for a new piece for flute or alto flute: I’ve got three!

Best at dawn?

The new piano piece is essentially finished at this point. All that remains is to make some minor engraving revisions based on feedback I’ll be getting later this week from Marc Peloquin, who will be premiering it on March 9 — and to settle on a title.

I’ve been expecting to title the piece “Best at dawn”, which is a reference to the first song in the Koch cycle. However, I ended up arranging only the third song instead of the entire cycle, as I’d originally planned; so now, the reference isn’t quite as appropriate. At least in my mind.

I’ve spent some time today reading through “One Train May Hide Another”, searching for a phrase that I think suits the piece well. I’d like to avoid using the title of the song/poem to minimize confusion between the song and the piano piece, since confusion there will be aplenty once I’ve finished the version(s) for alto flute. (At the very least, I’m arranging it for alto flute & harp and alto flute & piano, though I’m also considering an additional arrangement/transposition for “regular” flute and piano. (I suspect that a transposition for flute and harp might be too much of a headache in terms of harp pedaling!))

Maybe I’m being silly by wanting to keep the poetic reference specific to the song that spawned this paraphrase.

The thing that made me reconsider my choice of title was a realization I had while sitting down to write the program note – certain musical and formal elements achieve greater prominence in the solo piano setting: the train-like nature of the piece, with different sections strung along like train cars; the bookended beginning and end of the piece, similar to the engine at either end of a train; and the pedal point/ostinato sounding reminiscent of a railroad crossing bell.

Of course, regardless of the title, the program note will obviously refer to the original song/poem, as well as these elements, so my bases are quite amply covered. We are not inside a bottle (vacuum), thank goodness! And it’s not as though the listener will be missing anything earth-shattering if they don’t know all these niggling (for niggling they are!) details.

Best at dawn it is, then!

Looking Back and Looking Forward

2009 turned out to be a particularly slow composing year for any number of reasons. Last year I finished the final quarter of “Permanently” from at least a moment; wrote one choral work and four short songs; and started – but didn’t finish – a short work for orchestra.

One reason for my lack of significant output turned out to be a little surprising – I didn’t have a teacher anymore! I’ve always been quite a self-starter, so I was a little surprised to realize that one reason why I wasn’t churning out music was that no one was looking over my shoulder, and I didn’t have to have a certain amount written each week for someone else to look at. I’ve temporarily changed that state of affairs – this past weekend, I started private study with Chester Biscardi, a web client and good friend (also the Director of the Music Program at Sarah Lawrence College). We’ve decided to use the orchestra piece I started in Ucross as a jumping-off point. I’m glad to be finishing the work finally, and to be working with Chet because he’s a fantastic composer – and by all reports a great teacher, as well!

While working on the orchestra piece (still as yet untitled!), I’ll also be working on a paraphrase of at least a moment for solo piano. Marc Peloquin and I have been putting together the next Tobenski-Algera Concert lately, and, while I didn’t plan on having one of my own works on the progrm for once, Marc insisted that I write a new piece for him to help balance the program. So, rather than wrack my brains for new material under such a tight deadline (the concert is March 9!), I’ve decided to rework the Koch cycle – shorten it considerably, and fold the vocal line into the piano. I consider it a “paraphrase” – a la DDT’s Acrostic Paraphrase, but I’m making the work shorter rather than three times the original length! I’ve made the bulk of the cuts already, so my next task is to start folding the vocal line into the piano part. I’ve been aching for a premiere of the cycle, so this performance will be a bit of a palliative.

In keeping with the arrangement kick…. Last year, I showed Chet the finished score of at least a moment – or, rather, emailed him the PDF of the score with MP3s of the MIDI playback from Sibelius. Since I loathe the voice sample used in Sibelius’s Kontakt Player, I always use flute instead. After listening to the MP3s and looking at the score, Chet made the comment that the vocal line stands so well on its own that I could easily pull out the text and use it as a flute piece. So, I shall! The only decision that remains to be made before I jump in with the Delete button is whether to transpose it or not. As it stands, the piece goes a minor third too low for a standard flute (the piece bottoms out at A3), though it’s ideal for an alto flute. So I have to decide whether to leave it as is and say it’s for alto flute, or bump it up a minor third. Or I could do a version of both!

Further on the compositional horizon – past the completion of several other works that have been in my compositional queue for far too long (completing the piccolo trumpet & string quartet piece for David Glukh; writing a duo for violin & piano for Roger Zahab) – I’ve been thinking quite a lot on a musical subject that I’ve frequently been told I should pursue: opera. Probably the main impetus for my starting to think seriously in this vein (I’ve frequently, and idly, thought about writing opera throughout the years, and have several ideas for larger-scale projects that I won’t tackle for a little while) is the fact that I’ve been lucky enough to go to the Met several times in the past few months: I saw Janacek’s From the House of the Dead (liked the music, hated the production) and Strauss’s Elektra (wonderful) and Ariadne auf Naxos (absolutely divine). I’ve started grabbing recordings of operas where I can find them and putting them on my iPod to listen to at work. (Recently heard Der Rosenkavalier for the first time and was absolutely transported!)

So I’ve been thinking about how I would go about writing an opera – what a good starting point would be. I may start with an existing short play, since that would probably be the simplest in terms of getting started and working on my own. I’ve definitely got my eyes peeled for a potential librettist, though. There are a few ideas bouncing around in my skull at the moment that have got me excited (not so much plot ideas, as structure and general concept), and I’d like to pitch them to a librettist. That is, if I can find one! I suspect that I could make one of my large-scale ideas happen fairly easily (and, frankly, I need to do it quickly if it’s going to happen!), but I’d like to have a chamber opera or two under my belt first. More details as things progress.

This sudden burst of compositional thought and action ties in closely with the second reason for my dearth of output last year. I spent all but a month and a half of 2009 unemployed (2009 didn’t manage to be the Year of Buying DVDs – instead it was the Year of Falling Behind on Rent!), which left me with a lot of free time. By all rights, I should have been churning out new works right and left! The problem, though, was that I had too much free time, and I fell into a horrible habit of intense procrastination. I would wake up late every day (between 10:30 and noon), putter around the apartment for a while, then settle in front of the computer for the rest of the day – frittering away the hours with blogs, silly internet videos, and watching movies and TV shows on Netflix. Needless to say, there was a bit of honest-to-goodness depression involved here, which also stemmed from the fact of my unemployment. I found that when I don’t have a draw on my time, my time tends to become somewhat valueless, and therefore meaningless. A day job – the eternal enemy – is actually a necessity at the moment. And for more than just paying the bills!

I recently started a new day job – some temp work, which allows me the flexibility to function as a musician – and the result is that I can now both pay the bills and feel as though I want to write again!

Now that I’ve discovered two creative danger zones for me, I can address the issues and fix them.

Hopefully 2010 will be a Year of Writing a Lot of Music. 2009 was a let-down in a lot of ways. Compositionally, I wrote far too little. Financially, I was always anxious and falling behind. Economically in general, things just sucked. And politically, the year was a little disappointing – although some good things were accomplished, those accomplishments went largely unnoticed amid the noise of Balloon Boy; the hyped-up, insane expectations of The First 100 Days; the utter absurdity of The Second 100 Days (as though we hadn’t head enough talking heads talking about other talking heads’ evaluations of etc); etc. But with the success of the first new T-A Concert, and the start of a new day job, I’m feeling energized and positive about this year.

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