COMPEL Omeka Dev

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  • By deconstructing the sonic features of a recorded sound and applying a model-based musical framework to the result, it’s possible to re-imagine the original audio in an instrumental context.
  • Bregman Electronic Music Studio. Source material collected in Mexico with the voice of Marysa Navarro.
  • Bregman Electronic Music Studio.
  • Performed live at the 1978 Dartmouth College Glee Club’s Winter Carnival Concert, Spaulding Auditorium, Paul Zeller, director.
  • The percussion is accompanied by a virtual 8-string instrument with LOTS of feedback and distortion.

    The electronics for Solis-EA are organized around a physical model of an 8 stringed instrument capable of producing a huge amount of distortion and internal feedback. This instrument responds to the material played by the percussionist, attempting to track the pitch of these sometimes “unpitched” instruments as best it can.

    The piece is loosely inspired by the novel Stillaset Brandt, by the Norwegian author Pedr Solis. Having created several other pieces that are tightly connected with the principle (unnamed) character in the novel, Solis-EA is more concerned with the author himself, his unusual and dichotomous life, and his mysterious disappearance (or tragic end, depending on which biographer you read).

    This piece is dedicated to Ryan Packard

  • This is an overture to my opera Pedr Solis, though the instrumentation is quite different.

    Though atypical in many ways, this piece is in fact an overture for my upcoming opera, titled Pedr Solis. For one thing, it will probably never be heard in front of the opera as the instrumentation is quite different. It was also written before the opera, and thus acts as more of a sketch pad than a summation of primary themes. The material types and the melodic fragment toward the end of this piece do play key roles in the larger work however, which had been under development for some time when the overture was composed.

    The opera chronicles the fictionalized tale of an actual Norwegian author, Pedr Solis, whose work was best known in Scandinavia during the 60s and 70s. Solis wrote only two novels, the most famous of which is Stillaset, published in 1970. It is perhaps the most extreme example of literary modernism to emerge from Norway, and, as with many of his writings, takes literary modernism itself on as a subtext. A third, still unpublished novel was apparently well underway when Solis disappeared from the public eye. Many speculate that he isolated himself in the far north of Norway, though this was never officially confirmed. The libretto for the opera, by Paul Schick, draws upon this account of Solis’ life, as well as von Hofmannsthal’s play The Tower.

    The melodic fragment heard toward the end of the overture in the strings is a modified version of a traditional Finnish song reminiscent of a joik, the traditional song form of the Sami people of northern Scandinavia. The song is Kuu kulta kivestä nousit as performed by Me Naiset. Regarding the electronics, though all the instruments are amplified their sound receives no further processing. The piece does include electronic sounds though, all of which are pre-recorded and played back by laptop onstage.

    This piece is dedicated to Wild Rumpus.

  • Written for violinists Tiberius Klausner and Sylvian Iticovici. Concert recording by David Abel.

    Supported in part by a grant from the Missouri Arts Council.

    Composer contact: mobberleyj@umkc.edu

    Website (scores, recordings and info): http://jamesmobberleymusic.com
  • smudge attempts to take the tuba’s sound and blend, smear and shade it in the same way a visual artist would create a charcoal drawing. The two electronic effects used in the piece serve this goal. Reverb, which acts like the damper pedal of a piano, blurs the sound horizontally in time while ring modulation creates pitched sidebands around the tuba’s sound, blurring the sound vertically. The melodic material is also “smudged” in a similar way. The materials always heard with reverb are musically expanded in a vertical direction while the materials associated with ring modulation are horizontally developed – creating a paradoxical and elastic experience with an instrument that usually draws in a straight line.
  • There are six parts written in Max/MSP. No conductor is needed and the time is automatically set in the patches.
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