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Mivos Quartet's World Premiere Recording of Lei Liang's Six Seasons Released on New World Records

Jun. 23, 2023

On June 23, New World Records released the world premiere recording of Lei Liang's Six Seasons, performed by the Mivos Quartet who premiered the work on October 15 at the Conrad Prebys Music Center at the University of California, San Diego. Six Seasons combines the sound of the ambient environment (ice, waves, wind), its inhabitants (beluga whales, bowhead whales, bearded seals)—captured by hydrophones deployed at the sea floor—and creative response from one of the world’s leading contemporary music string quartets, the Mivos Quartet. George Varga of The San Diego Union-Tribune reported on this unique creative partnership here.


Lei Liang/Six Seasons, Season 1: New Ice/Mivos Quartet

The composer notes:
"The Chukchi Sea, north of Alaska, is one of the most inaccessible places to humans on earth. Six seasons in the Arctic, according to Inuit, are not demarcated by a fixed calendar, but by patterns we can hear in the environment. 

Hydrophones, designed at the Whale Acoustics Laboratory at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, were placed about 300 meters below the sea surface at a seafloor recording location 160 km north of Utqiagvik, Alaska. They captured the sound of sea ice, marine mammals, and the underwater environment throughout an entire year. 

These sounds call for a different way of listening, challenging our temporal and spatial orientations. Our ocean is dynamic, unpredictable, and full of incredibly complex sounds – including sounds humans cannot perceive – and sounds that are vital for the survival of marine animals. Increasingly, these sounds are drowned out by anthropogenic noises including industrial activities and passing ships. Today, we can no longer presume any empathy with the ocean merely from the comfort and the fixed perspective of a beach chair: our oceans are in crisis.

Many marine mammals use echolocation to navigate in their living environment. We humans are not endowed to echolocate in the same way, but metaphorically, we do. The practice of sending out a “signal” and listening for its enriched “echoes” underlines musicking, reading, interpreting, and communication in general. 

Six Seasons mirrors echolocation: “call” and “echo.” The “call” is the pre-recorded sounds that I describe as “the living score” that function as interactive modules; the “echo” is the improvising musicians’ creative response, intertwined with the original signal. Just as ice and wildlife are the “living score” that Inuit set their lives to, the musicians’ role is as much about listening as about responding creatively to the pre-recorded sounds with their instruments. 

Our journey begins on October 29, 2015, just three days after new sea ice had started to form at the listening site: the birth of ice.

The “living score” itself contains the key to its own realization. The score – the pre-recorded sounds – are sound files in six categories, grouped by seasons as described by Inuit, the native people of the Arctic. A “season” is about what we hear in the environment. They are not demarcated by a fixed calendar date, but by the changing conditions – many of which are audible – of the environment. Just as ice is the “living score” that Inuit set their lives to, the musicians’ role is as much about listening as about responding creatively to these pre-recorded sounds with their instruments. The performers who are involved in shaping the work are indispensable in the realization of the piece."

To purchase the CD click here. Purchase the score and parts on PSNY.

Earlier this month, Lei Liang's music was featured at the Ojai Festival. Wu Man and Steven Schick performed Liang's vis-à-vis, and the following day, Wu Man and Nate Schram performed Mother's Songs.



Wu Man and Steven Schick perform Lei Liang's vis-à-vis at the 2023 Ojai Festival

Additionally, May 2023 saw the launch of LEI LAB at the University of California, San Diego, where Lei Liang is Chancellor's Distinguished Professor of Music. LEI LAB is created "with the conviction that we are living in the age of an inevitable convergence of arts and sciences; that the entire university is one indivisible unit; that creative listening offers unique potential for learning; and that we need to collectively and imaginatively respond to issues challenging all of us."

The interdisciplinary team includes highly regarded experts in a variety of scientific disciplines, as well as engineers, sound designers, software developers, musicians, and artists, working together on a variety of projects that explore the natural world in innovative and multifaceted ways.

Click here to learn more about LEI LAB and explore their research projects.


To learn more about Lei Liang, visit schott-music.com.

Lei Liang
Six Seasons (2022)
for any number of improvising musicians and pre-recorded sounds
ca.15-80'

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