The Best of 2009

1/23/2010 | posted by Armistead Booker | 0 Comments |



Here are a few highlights from our concerts in 2009, edited and produced by Gareth Paul Cox. Groanbox on January 28, 2009, featuring the works of David Bruce, Michael Ward-Bergeman, and John Adams. Glimpses on May 6, 2009, featuring the works of Vivian Fung, Jakub Ciupinski, and Cristina Spinei. New Music 101 on September 16, 2009, featuring the interactive works of Jakub Ciupinski. Reverb on November 19-20, 2009, featuring the works of Jakub Ciupinski, Vivian Fung, Erin Gee, and Cristina Spinei.

Looking for more of our best videos from the past four years? Check out this exclusive collection and our complete video archives.

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Erin Gee Finds Her Voice

11/17/2009 | posted by Armistead Booker | 0 Comments |

This post was written by Timo Andres, one of Metropolis Ensemble's featured composers in Spring 2010, for the upcoming Reverb concerts at (Le) Poisson Rouge.



As a composer, Erin Gee seems to have emerged fully-formed. She's reluctant to ascribe any personal experiences or motivations to her work; quite the opposite, in fact. This is unexpected, even contradictory, because she plays an irreplaceable role in her pieces: as vocal soloist, performing in a made-up non-language constructed out of disconnected phonemes, vowels, sung tones, clicks, whistles, and sighs- a style she calls Mouthpiece.

To hear her describe it in precise, almost scientific terms might lead one to believe that Erin is not her music's best salesperson; that is, until she gets on stage. She is a dynamo, unleashing torrents of non-words, at once somehow familiar and foreign-sounding. Emotionally and dynamically restrained, she nonetheless conveys a Pierrot-like dichotomy; playful, acrobatic, even funny, but with underlying melancholy (her brother, it just so happens, is a performer with the Cirque du Soleil). "As much as possible," she says, "I wanted to try and remove the ego, identity, or character... moving in the direction of voice as a pure instrument."

The process of formulating her unique vocal style appears to have been similarly dispassionate. "The Mouthpiece series grew out of a search on my own voice for possible sounds... looking most intently for timbral possibilities within a soft dynamic, and ways of quickly interspersing percussive sounds with disjointed and sparse sung tones." What resulted from this search is a series of 19 works (so far), all titled Mouthpiece and all featuring Erin's own voice. Though some are structured based on existing texts (some refer to ancient Japanese or Sanskrit), Erin uses those structures linguistically, divorced from any literal meaning. She's re-thought a process humans execute without thinking - the formulation and vocalization of language - and put it in a blender.

Erin grew up in Iowa, but has studied and lived in Germany and Austria. The active surfaces of her music refer to a certain contemporary European sound, composers like Beat Furrer and Brian Ferneyhough, who write music of such complexity that it becomes a kind of minimalism. Yet one comes away from a piece such as Mouthpiece X with a sense of relentless stasis. Details fly by at an uncountable rate; but zoomed out, they become a heterophonic entity, like a stew with a vast number of ingredients, or a midwestern prairie viewed out the window of a speeding car. Erin describes it as "The shift between human and mechanical, psychological and physiological... an experimental non-language, containing the virtuosity of a native speaker."

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New Sounds, New Ideas

10/30/2009 | posted by Armistead Booker | 0 Comments |

With four completely different voices, the composers in our fall concert, REVERB, have summed up their thoughts on what new music can express. Here's some excerpts from the program notes.

Erin Gee:

The music seeks an experiential non-language, containing the virtuosity of a native speaker.


Vivian Fung:

I am not an ethnomusicologist and am less concerned with replicating anything akin to an exact version of these works than with the way I have internalized the shimmering harmonies and interlocking rhythms of their traditions into my own original voice.


Cristina Spinei:

My interest in integrating percussion with orchestra comes from varying sources, each stemming from dance. I constantly immersed myself in sounds that shared one common principal: rhythm as the driving force of music that inspires and compels movement.


Jakub Ciupinski:

Avant garde composers were trying to find new solutions by rejecting the past. They were really trying to find something new. Whereas our generation is trying to find something new by incorporating elements that already existed. So this is an entirely new philosophy.


And some parting thoughts from Metropolis Ensemble Music Director Andrew Cyr on his curation of this concert of commissions and premieres:

In getting to know these composers and the nuances of their compositional styles in the process of developing these new commissions, I realized over time that they shared something in common that I found to be artistically fascinating and vital: an open and deep curiosity for exploring diverse source material and developing new and highly individual systems of compositional techniques to absorb these modes of representation.


Read more in the program notes...

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