diff options
author | (quasar) nebula <qznebula@protonmail.com> | 2024-04-21 20:15:34 -0300 |
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committer | (quasar) nebula <qznebula@protonmail.com> | 2024-05-15 21:40:25 -0300 |
commit | 908cc03fe4201dd2615f868b0d3b5a76925d55b1 (patch) | |
tree | 57a05c631f882dc2b38dbab377b9b15096e2542e /album | |
parent | 4ff7a01c7a2b44dc51b12903de6562f89b3958e3 (diff) |
senior recital youtube links + commentary
Diffstat (limited to 'album')
-rw-r--r-- | album/senior-recital.yaml | 63 |
1 files changed, 62 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/album/senior-recital.yaml b/album/senior-recital.yaml index e9ce4d66..38f76717 100644 --- a/album/senior-recital.yaml +++ b/album/senior-recital.yaml @@ -23,12 +23,25 @@ Has Cover Art: false Duration: '4:42' URLs: - https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/the-fall +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBS3mMegyLk Commentary: |- <i>James Dever:</i> ([SoundCloud description](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/the-fall), excerpt) Written in 2014, The Fall only recently was premiered in April of 2016. The Fall is written for a women's choir in four parts (divisi, eight lines) and utilizes and old Scottish Gaelic poem. + + <i>James Dever:</i> ([YouTube description](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBS3mMegyLk), excerpt) + + Premiere performance from April 28th, 2016 at UNC's Frasier Hall, conducted by the wonderful Will Ecker. A huge thank you goes out to him and this group of fantastic volunteers for supporting my music and senior recital! + + The Fall is my first attempt at writing choral music. Back in late 2014 I was still in my first year of the composition program and working with Dr. Robert Ehle when the first idea of writing for voices came to me. My music performance experience has been almost entirely instrumental, and specifically rhythmical, so I wanted to challenge myself by writing for a completely different ensemble than I had in the past. + + The text is from an old Gaelic hymn. When I first started working out ideas of how to set the text the idea of a rising line that encompasses an entire diatonic scale jumped out at me (that first passage can be heard at 1:47). From there, I decided that a closer knit group of voices would best be able to accomplish the smaller range of the piece which is why the piece eventually became for female voices. + + The music of Ola Gjeilo, Morten Lauridsen, and Eric Whitacre played a key role in the composition because of their music being the first choral music I really bonded with. The idea of the close intervals and clusters was not inspired entirely by their music, however, and I definitely credit the first ideas I found for this piece to the opening material of Richard Strauss' Eine Alpensinfonie. + + I hope you enjoy! Lyrics: |- As the rain hides the stars, As the autumn mist @@ -47,6 +60,7 @@ Has Cover Art: false Duration: '7:29' URLs: - https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/soliloquy +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oywk9ojKDUo Commentary: |- <i>James Dever:</i> ([SoundCloud description](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/soliloquy)) @@ -55,12 +69,27 @@ Commentary: |- For this performance, it was adapted for cello and electronics and performed by Brett Andrews. Both versions are available. The idea for the piece came from thinking of how to blend a string instrument with electronic playback. My solution was to record a viola and put the recordings through filters, samplers and oscillators. Midway through is a repurposed old vinyl recording of a viola concerto that I also manipulate through an oscillator. The hope was to make a more organic connection between the playback and the soloist. + + <i>James Dever:</i> ([YouTube description](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oywk9ojKDUo), excerpt) + + Performed at my senior recital at UNC's Frasier Hall on April 28th, 2016. Written for viola, this is the premiere performance on cello by the amazing Brett Andrews. + + Soliloquy was written in early 2015. It was one of the very first projects I worked on with my professor Dr. Paul Elwood. It was first formulated from a project I had in a digital composition course I was taking at the university. The project was to create a 90 second to 3 minute track using recordings and editing them in a DAW (in this case, Digital Performer). + + I enlisted my colleague and fellow composer Abi Evans to help get some recordings. She would play very brief passages on the viola using many different extended techniques. I manipulated those recordings with various filters and samplers to create the electronic background for the solo instrument. + + Originally, my intent was for the electronics accompaniment to purely be edited samples from a live viola that I recorded. Eventually I decided to include an excerpt from a viola concerto as well as a few small effects (like a noise filter near the beginning) to further flesh out the piece. + + Compositionally, I really wanted to explore the interesting different extended techniques string instruments could perform. I was also very inspired by composers like Joseph Schwantner being able to utilize pitch sets and serial concepts in more tonal leaning compositions. With that idea in mind I decided to make a reverse 12 tone inspired piece where instead of the row being defined at the beginning before being adapted and augmented, I began with a pitch set and more octatonic passages that slowly opened up more into atonal serialism by the end. The row, and one variation, are only stated in full at the very end of the piece. + + Thank you for listening! --- Track: Sand Molding Has Cover Art: false Duration: '10:05' URLs: - https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/sand-molding +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bvp05PkelZs Contributors: - Jeff Perry (performance) - Breana Meyers (performance) @@ -72,6 +101,20 @@ Commentary: |- Sand Molding explores the process of, well, using sand to mold iron and steel. Throughout the composition, the sounds of metal overtake the sounds of wood as the natural becomes the artificial. The piece is written in seven sections that repeat in one large arc. Each section continues to become more aleatoric until the mid point is reached before the piece wraps back to the beginning. + + <i>James Dever:</i> ([YouTube description](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bvp05PkelZs), excerpt) + + Premiere performance from my senior recital on April 28th, 2016 at UNC's Frasier Hall. Two wonderful colleagues from my percussion studio, doctoral candidates Jeff Perry and Breana Meyers, wonderfully realized this piece! + + Sand Molding was born from my increasing love for aleatoric music in my final undergrad year of studying composition. The piece explores aleatoric passages but is definitely not fully free form. The middle third of the piece becomes the most chance dependent before moving back into more traditional notation. + + As a percussionist, I've always been very much in love with all of the timbres and effects we create within multi percussion pieces. I had an idea floating around for years of having a wooden vs metallic battle between two percussionists and this project seemed like the perfect time to explore that concept. + + I was also very interested in mathematically assisted compositions by Iannis Xenakis which definitely played a role in the formulation of this piece. I began with a number sequence that I randomly created and explored that in as many different ways as I could throughout the composition. + + The other concept I've always found fascinating is a much older form of music: crab canon. The idea that if the piece was reversed, it would still be performed the same way creating a musical palindrome. I also found a way of encompassing that form into this composition by having the wooden percussionist rule the first half of the piece, meet in the middle with the metal percussionist, and be taken over by the metal by the end, arriving back where the piece began. + + I hope you dig it as much as I do! --- Track: Toward Eternity Duration: '6:31' @@ -90,6 +133,7 @@ Track: unrequited Duration: '5:12' URLs: - https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/unrequited +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TSxMEolI6EE Contributors: - Breana Meyers (performance) Commentary: |- @@ -98,11 +142,24 @@ Commentary: |- unrequited was composed in the latter half of 2015 under a different name. It is for solo five octave marimba and is the first of two planned movements. The premiere of the work was performed at the University of Northern Colorado in April of 2016 by Breana Meyers. + + <i>James Dever:</i> ([YouTube description](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TSxMEolI6EE)) + + First: Apologies for the phone quality and especially for me accidentally kicking the stand and dropping the phone early on! My camera power supply died and this was my only solution! Higher quality audio (where the cell phone drop is much less jarring) is available on my Soundcloud page [here](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/unrequited?in=jamesdevermusic%2Fsets%2Fsenior-recital). + + Premiere performance from my senior recital on April 28th, 2016 at UNC's Frasier Hall. Thanks to Breana Meyers for the great performance! + + unrequited was created from my absolute love of the marimba. It is without a doubt my absolute favorite instrument to play. The range, the tone, the timbre, everything about it sings to me. I've wanted to write for it for a very long time but always held myself back by fears of not being good enough as a performer/composer for the instrument. + + Eventually I decided I couldn't be afraid forever and set out to write a piece. I chose to be significantly more traditional in my tonality in this piece for a lot of background reasons surrounding the piece. The piece explores multiple different melodies that never quite fully become fleshed out, constantly getting in each other's way. A series of stray paths and half concepts that never fully are realized. + + Thank you for listening. --- Track: New Irish Stew Duration: '13:39' URLs: - https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/new-irish-stew +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2m71FGm3rs Contributors: - Conner Shaw (guitar) - Breana Meyers (marimba) @@ -115,7 +172,7 @@ Additional Files: Description: >- This track was also, for a short time, released as the track #6 on a Bandcamp album "Music in Circles" (released [[date:March 18, 2020]]). This file is a Google-cached copy of New Irish Stew's track page, and includes various metadata (<code>TralbumData</code>), but nothing for the other tracks on Music in Circles, unfortunately. Commentary: |- - <i>James Dever:</i> ([SoundCloud description](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/new-irish-stew)) + <i>James Dever:</i> ([SoundCloud](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/new-irish-stew) / [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2m71FGm3rs) descriptions, excerpt) New Irish Stew is a graphic score written in early 2016 and premiered in April of the same year. The piece is written for three indeterminate musicians and two narrators. @@ -125,6 +182,10 @@ Commentary: |- The premiere was performed at the University of Northern Colorado by guitarist Conner Shaw, marimbist Breana Meyers, bassist Ben Hornacek, and narration by Joe Darpino and Cathy Verbyla. + <i>James Dever:</i> ([YouTube description](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2m71FGm3rs), excerpt) + + I absolutely loved writing this and I hope you love listening! + <i>Quasar Nebula:</i> (wiki editor) Also released as part of "Music in Circles" ([[date:March 18, 2020]]) — see the page archive in this track's additional files. Includes touched up commentary based on the SoundCloud description, and an updated photograph artwork. |