Composers
- Katherine Balch
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- Huang Ruo
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- Howard Shore
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- Stanislaw Skrowaczewski
- Elijah Daniel Smith
- Kate Soper
- Gregory Spears
- Morton Subotnick
- Dobrinka Tabakova
- Karen Tanaka
- Ken Ueno
- Stewart Wallace
- Shelley Washington
- Kurt Weill
- Scott Wollschleger
- Katherine Young
- Ellen Taaffe Zwilich
Blog Archive
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- Alvin Singleton's "Sweet Chariot" at the National Museum of African American History & Culture
- Joan La Barbara Performs "Music for Merce" in Minneapolis & Chicago
- Praise for Kate Soper's "Ipsa Dixit"
- Æolus Quartet Performs Keeril Makan's "Washed by Fire"
- Mario Diaz de Leon Premieres "Sacrament" with Talea Ensemble
- Ann Cleare's "eyam v (woven)" Premieres at RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra
- Music from Copand House: Pierre Jalbert, "Secret Alchemy"
- Kettle Corn New Music Presents Scott Wollschleger's "Brontal Symmetry"
- Third Coast Percussion Premieres Christopher Cerrone's "Goldbeater's Skin"
- Anthony Cheung in Residency at 113 Composers Collective
- Kate Soper's "Ipsa Dixit" Premieres at Dixon Place
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(5 posts)
- Andrew Norman's "Play", Revised & Ready for Action at the LA Phil
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- Contemporary Piano Video Library features Lei Liang's "Garden Eight"
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- New Works by Kate Soper and Mario Diaz de Leon at the LA Phil
- Lerdahl and Carrick Performed by Sound Icon in Boston
- Yale Choral Artists Perform Hannah Lash's "Requiem"
- Ann Cleare's "Mire |...| Veins" at the Festival of New Trumpet Music
- Ted Hearne: Sounds from the Bench
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- Lei Liang: Deriving Worlds
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- New Releases of Morton Subotnick's Works for "Ghost Electronics"
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(8 posts)
- Hannah Lash at the New York Philharmonic Biennial
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- World Premiere of Mario Diaz de Leon's "O Ignis Spiritus" by the TAK Ensemble
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- Awards Season for PSNY Composers
- Upcoming Performances of Wollschleger, Cerrone
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- Christopher Cerrone's "High Windows" on Q2 Music's "LPR Live" Podcast
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- Alex Mincek Portrait Concert at Miller Theatre
- Ted Hearne Premieres "Baby (an argument)" with Ensemble ACJW
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- Marilyn Nonken Debuts Richard Carrick's "la touche sonore sous l'eau"
- ▼January
(7 posts)
- Kate Soper Profiled on NewMusicBox
- Timo Andres at the Phillips Collection
- Sleeping Giant at Carnegie Hall and Le Poisson Rouge
- Josh Modney Performs at Spectrum NYC
- Lei Liang Performed by the Mivos Quartet
- Gregory Oakes Performs Ken Ueno at the 2016 New Music Gathering
- PSNY Remembers John Duffy (1926-2015)
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- Ted Hearne's "Law of Mosaics" in Chicago; "The Source" CD Release
- "The Branch Will Not Break" at Present Music
- Two New Works by Timo Andres
- Soper, Lash, and Pintscher Performances on the East Coast
- Sound Icon Performs Ken Ueno's "Zetsu"
- Andrew Norman Premieres "Switch" at Utah Symphony
- PSNY Around America
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(8 posts)
- New Works on PSNY: Wollschleger, Ueno and Cerrone
- New Works and Performances by Ann Cleare
- Hannah Lash Premieres Two Works with ACO and Ensemble Intercontemporain
- Keeril Makan's "Persona" Premieres at National Sawdust
- JACK Quartet and ACO Premiere New Alex Mincek Concerto
- Rufus Wainwright's "Prima Donna" on Deutsche Grammophon
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- Vijay Iyer Joins PSNY!
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- Opera News from PSNY Composers
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- A Keeril Makan Premiere, Conducted by Richard Carrick
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Newsletter
Posts tagged 'electronics'
New Works by Ann Cleare
PSNY is happy to announce that two new works by Ann Cleare, one of which is in two arrangements, are newly available this week on PSNY.
Cleare's work has often explored concepts of presence, becoming, and immanence, dwelling in sound-worlds made manifest by her maserful use of instruments and electronics. Cleare's Inner, in a new version for violin and piano, "probes the subcutaneous space within sound", positing sound as a body with porous boundaries. Inspired by French philosopher Gilles Deleuze, Cleare writes: "the internal is given a multidimensional quality, fragmenting the outer surface", a metaphor for her compositional interplay between instruments and sound.
(page 1 from Inner)
In Cleare's On Magnetic Fields, the ensemble is split up spatially and sonically on stage: two "whirling" ensembles, featuring violins, flank the left and right sides, while a separate ensemble of harp, piano, and percussion creates a "box of light" in the center. We have published both this version for full ensemble, as well as a version for two violins and loudspeaker. The interplay between the two magnetically-charged ensembles on either side and the "piercing, alien light" of the center ensemble forms the basis of the composition. Check out a recording excerpt below.
Josh Modney Performs at Spectrum NYC
Josh Modney is one of the leading interpreters of contemporary music for the violin, and there is certainly not a lack of music for him to play. As the executive director of the Wet Ink Ensemble, a member of the Mivos Quartet, and a frequent performer with the International Contemporary Ensemble, Modney's calendar is packed with premieres and performances. So it's a rare treat to see him perform a solo recital, with some help from fellow Wet Ink instrumentalists, at Spectrum NYC, on New York's Lower East Side.
On Saturday, January 16th, Modney will perform six works featuring the violin, including pieces by PSNY Composers Mario Diaz de Leon, Kate Soper, and Scott Wollschleger. Diaz de Leon's piece, ii.23, is scored for viola and electronics, and the score calls for extra subwoofers to make the bass felt in the space. Check out a clip:
Modney will also be performing Kate Soper's Cipher, a work Soper commissioned for him, along with the composer herself. One of Soper's signature works, Cipher explores the limits of language, sound, and performance in the intimate connection between instrument and voice. Check out a video of the pair performing Cipher below.
Again picking up the viola, Modney will also perform Scott Wollschleger's Soft Aberration No. 2, for viola and piano, alongside pianist and fellow composer and Wet Ink member Eric Wubbels. Wollschleger's work evokes what he calls a "broken echo" between instruments—a fine pairing with Soper's work—exploring the shared sensibilities of sight and sound experience between two performers. Check out an excerpt below:
New Works on PSNY: Wollschleger, Ueno and Cerrone
PSNY is pleased to announce the addition of several major works from three of our composers, ranging from pieces for solo clarinet to a new work for piano and string orchestra. Four of these new works by Scott Wollschleger, Ken Ueno and Christopher Cerrone were composed and premiered within the past year.
Scott Wollschleger's Soft Aberration No. 2, for piano and viola, explores Wollschleger's concept of a "broken echo"—imitation between instruments that is refracted and softened by the act of communication in performance. Meditative and insightful, this work illustrates the diffusion of tonality with expressive, lyrical harmonies in the piano that are echoed in the viola's muted melodies.
As in Soft Aberration No. 2, Wollschleger's Meditation on Dust presents the listener with a transfigured aural landscape of tonality through expressive, gestural motifs—though in this piece the piano is accompanied by a full string orchestra. Wollschleger imagines Straussian tone-poems petrifying in the desert, taken out of their fin-de-siècle Viennese context and into the future, where they still sound through a layer of dust. This isn't a "dusting" of tonality; rather, it is expressive tonality rendered into granules—pulverized, decayed, transfigured into an enigmatic refrain. Check out a video of pianist Karl Larson with the String Orchestra of Brooklyn premiering the work in June:
In addition to these works by Wollschleger, we're very happy to make available three works by Ken Ueno, all of which embody Ueno's innovative use of extended techniques, multiphonics, and bold compositional voice. Ueno's Watt, for baritone saxophone, percussion, and CD Boombox, is an early example of Ueno's journey into multiphonics. Taking inspiration from John Coltrane's late albums such as Interstellar Space (1967), Watt shows Ueno's reconciliation of multiple symbolic, timbral, and functional systems into a kind of "flow", which he likens to a "manifold—like playing Scrabble and Mahjong at the same time."
Another work that features a reed instrument, this time a solo amplified Bb clarinet, is I screamed at the sea until nodes swelled up, then my voice became the resonant noise of the sea. The title of this piece comes from lore from the Korean tradition of Pansori singing, in which it is said that singers develop their trademark vocal timbre by screming at the sea until they develop nodes in their vocal chords. Ueno's work explores this idea through the clarinet, developing new techniques for overblowing, multiphonics, and the limits of humans and machines.
Ueno's interest in reed instruments, multiphonics, extended techniques, electronics, and the limits of sound, all come together in his stunning 2015 concerto for violin and chamber ensemble, Zetsu. This work not only asks its performers to push the boundaries of what is possible with their instruments—it also asks them to play new instruments designed by the composer, such as percussion idiophones tuned to the microtonal intervals particular to the piece's harmonic spectrum, and the "hookah sax"—a saxophone with a 7-ft length of plastic tubing that extends its range. Check out a video of the premiere below:
Finally, we are pleased to publish Christopher Cerrone's new song cycle, The Naomi Songs, in two versions: for voice and piano, and voice and 11 players. This cycle sets the poetry of Bill Knott, an enigmatic poet whose works were often short, metrical, and deeply self-depricating. In 1968, two years after announcing his own death, he published The Naomi Poems, a short volume that he often gave away for free and circulated via mimeograph. Cerrone's settings of these deeply personal poems matches their affect: the Naomi Songs are unified by the key of F, though their mode switches, and each song expresses a different aspect of joy, melancholy, longing, and desire. Check out an excerpt below: