Monday, August 27, 2012

Milestone revision 22

I've made my improvements on the seagulls and frogs.  CLICK HERE to listen to Draft 22.

The video is on youtube.  Beverly, Ryan and I are thinking of making a few improvements, like adding the names of the birds, how to contact us and adding in the revision 22 music. Also, we're thinking the video of the cardinal singing should be heard and mixed in with the symphony.

Here are more beautiful new sunrise photos by my friend and colleague, Beverly Gaddy.


My serious composer friends and mentors are telling me to do more with the orchestra, because now it's taking a back seat to the birdsong, whereas it should be more like a concerto...I'm going to leave it alone for a few weeks and come back to it to see how I can strengthen the orchestral writing so it has more meat and isn't just "nice."

For my composer friends, click here to see the score.

My wish is that this work will guide its audience to better listening to nature. It's all about the respect and love of the intelligence and purpose of nature sounds. Thanks for letting me know your thoughts!   -d

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Beautiful Video!

My son was here for three days and we worked together to put Beverly's photos together with the Symphony.  As much as we could we put in the actual photo of the bird whose song is heard, or at least its habitat!  It's lighthearted and playful, and educational!  yippee!

Here's the link to youtube:  http://youtu.be/mHDUk7AUQmQ


Yes, I put the song of the seagull in.  It came out nicely but I have a feeling I'll be fine tuning it.  Also, I'd like to do a little more with the frog section.

Enjoy!

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

On Further Reflection ...

Since I last posted I was able to get one more awesome recording with my colleague Beverly--we went at night to the SeaPines nature preserve to get the owl and were not rewarded. So we went further into the plantation to where a friend and resident told us she had heard owls regularly. It was 9:14PM just as we pulled into the spot, at the start of the trail leading to the Stoney-Baynard ruins.

Within seconds of hanging my parabolic microphone out of the car window a night bird started its loud, repeating song.  What a strong vocalist! It must have been right overhead!  Jump to the last minute of my symphony draft 20 to listen to our night singer!
(We stay in the car to avoid the insects and creepy-crawlies and prickly bushes along the trail...it's easier to keep quiet and still.)
We thought it was a Whip-poor-will (click here to listen to Cornell's Ornithology recording) but we were wrong. It is a Chuck-Will's-Widow (click here to see and hear it.).

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THE SYMPHONY WITH THE NEW BIRDSONG ENDING

So that was June 3rd.  Today is July 25th and like most of you, my crayons have gotten dumped out and put back into the box again through a series of big life events (a birthday, a premiere of another new work for Providence Presbyterian, a move to Alabama, a bad fall from a ladder by my husband who broke BOTH wrists, and a new setting and job for me...).

I sent the symphony to four people since I last posted: my performer friends (to check the part writing-strings, timpani, brass), Sam Adler, one of my professors at the Eastman School of Music (to critique my writing), and my son, Ryan Schinder (to put the photos and music together in a video). I'll write more about these later.  I just want to report here that I'm taking some action on the business side of this endeavor!  I'd like to have a finished product that's useful and effective. 


I've had a lot of time to let the work rest and during that time, my mind was not at rest with it...While I like the new ending, I miss the sound of the surf, and most especially, I regret that I didn't use any of the shorebird calls. Their sound is not pleasant, but from the feedback of my listeners, I'm learning that the frogs arent' especially nice, either. So I feel it would represent the lowcountry more accurately to have them included...so next I will begin draft 21 with shorebirds and less frogs. I think it will have more depth and the birding theme will be more prominent.  We'll have songbirds, shorebirds, surf and frogs.

Thanks for all your encouragement and interest!

Here are some of Beverly Gaddy's photos that match the recordings I've made of shore birds. Beverly has some beautiful note cards with these images if you want to transform them into love notes with your friends!

Take care,
-d






















Friday, May 25, 2012

Final Mix of Symphony of the LowCountry

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THE MUSIC

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE SCORE

Recording frog chorus at Providence Presbyterian March 2012
(This particular attempt was not used -- too early for frogs.)
(Photo by Beverly Gaddy)

This eight minute work depicts dawn to dusk in the quiet lowcountry region of South Carolina where I live. I traveled the region with my recording gear in search of song birds, frogs, and other critters that move or fly about. While I was recording the audio my colleague, Beverly Gaddy, took photos documenting the locations and conditions (and actual birds) where we recorded. The equipment for this project was funded through a grant from "The Coastal Community Foundation of South Carolina." Five tape tracks must be played back (on cue from the conductor) to synchronize with the orchestra. The orchestra serves as a listener and translator of the tapestries of nature, sometimes taking the lead but like in a dance, sometimes following the beautiful performances of nature.

(The only future change I forsee is the addition of a barred owl at the end...it has eluded me! The ocean recording can be replaced with a better one once I obtain it.)

Hey, Thanks for listening and for sharing your thoughts on this work!  I hope it makes you more curious and aware of the musicianship of nature!

Sunday, May 20, 2012

A Bird in the Hand is worth TWO in the Bush

There is a bird in that bush!
Recording lapping surf at Port Royal.


setting up the microphones for the frogs at sunset.

Pinkney Island
(Photos by Beverly Gaddy)

OK so I think I'm done, but I'm not satisfied....here's where it gets tricky...I'm so close to what I want, it's too easy to overwork it and start moving away from my target.  So do I stop now, not quite feeling good about it or do I continue? 

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO DRAFT 18.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE SCORE FOR DRAFT 18.

For me, I've got to keep working to make it better.  It's the frogs:  the rising pizzicato line is not thematically related to the frogs.  Frogs don't ascend a scale, even though all the notes in the scale come from their chorus.  None of the animal songs do this. Scales are a human construction.  So I've got to eliminate it.  I've got to do better.

Personal Best says to let go of the bird in the hand.  Artists don't settle.  I guess we'd rather starve!

Sunday, May 6, 2012

The Camouflage of Birdsong: working toward Draft 17

DazzlepatterningTessellations.  Transformations and Tessellations.  Camouflage. Sparkling Water. Tapestry. Wallpaper. The staring out the window at the glide of power lines in the family stationwagon on a long summer trip. These are a few of my favorite things!  These are some of my favorite sounds and sites in nature.


My favorite parts to the symphony so far are where the patterns emerge and shift --
 first in birdsong (at minute 2:15) and then the frog chorus (at 6:20).  

Ace Basin, SC (Beverly Gaddy)
I wonder if this is why the shore birds prefer mixed flocks: their colors and shapes complement and make interlocking patterns, obscuring one another.  And now that I'm listening more to birdsong, the afternoon is full of momentary tessellations:  mixed birds with interlocking song.  So that's what I want to do more and better in Section B (minutes 2-4:30).  In this section I want the birdsong to win out over the echos and tapestry of the orchestra . I'll have to do some trimming. (And Ray, the Timpanist with the HHI orchestra says less timpani here!)  Also, I need the real birdsong to have the "last word" in the conversation.  (Musically speaking, I suppose this section is like a concerto for birdsong and orchestra!)

Let me describe the sections of the work for you. 
(--and for me!  It's hard leaving my work for a few days and returning to it.  If nothing else, this blog helps me to focus my thoughts and set my intentions. So I apologize again for all the detail.)

The work is descriptive of a (winter*) day in the LowCountry of South Carolina--Beaufort, Hilton Head, Charleston and even Savannah, Georgia. We start with the first daylight song: Cardinal. Then the Carolina Wren trumpets the morning and defines his territory.  In Section B, other Carolina Wren songs are shared and at mid-day (Section C) all the birdsongs that I collected are shared and woven into a busy tapestry (Section D)-Cardinal, Chickadee, Woodpecker, Crow, Mockingbird.  At sunset (Section E) the frogs emerge and close out the day.  The ocean takes us off into sleep. Click here to see a picture of the mixdown for Draft 16.


The A section (start to minute 1:30) is more like the competitive language of birdsong, especially at night or in the morning when each bird is laying out their territory.  The bird with less of a song (quieter, slower, less rigorous) must leave.   I didn't intend this, but in my symphony I let the orchestra win.  The trumpets take over and the natural bird stops.  So I'm thinking about whether to allow it or accept it.  The fact is, I'm not simply using nature's music, as other artists have done.  I'm trying to show nature in an artistic perspective: conform it to harmony and rhythms that humans can enjoy.  And so it's true: orchestra wins out the territory over the birdsong.  And I accept this.

How would it be if the birdsong had won? Other artists have simply added birdsong in with new age music. To me this is too non-committal.  It's more like "co-existance" than cooperation and acceptance, or understanding.  Or they have taken recordings of  nature and used them as the raw material for digital sound processing and mixing.  The listener is left to make artistic judgement about it; even so, it's still handled and manipulated by man.  Dr. Bernie Krause has just published a book on nature's tapestries: The Great Animal Orchestra. Very interesting! Other composers have notated birdsong into symphonic works before me--Messian being the most prominent, Stravinsky being preferred by me and Vivaldi being the best at tessellations in Seasons/Spring--he actually does a metric modulation without writing it in.  Phillip Glass I believe was fascinated with executing musical tessellations. At least, that's how I make my way through it.  Ultimately, I think these dazzling patterns are a form of mind-alteration, mesmerization and meditation--some might say analgesic.  When I meditate, I find the world slips into interlocking patterns. Activities and people in my life form a tide or current that moves and changes in "the cycle of existance."  So this fascinates me, inspires me as a moment of moving beauty and I wish to express it here.  So my work continues!

So I'm not alone in my musical or philosophic pursuit.   Although I feel like a pioneer, as I attempt to study the birdsong and the intention of the communication (the purpose of the birdsong) and to use my analysis in determining my work.  The birdsong and frog chorus are the key to the design of this symphony. I wish only to honor nature and understand and respect it.  It's the language the human race has not learned yet.

The frog chorus (entering at the Golden Mean--5 minutes out of the 8 total) is so beautiful in itself.  I include the unaltered chorus in its full expression:  swell and ebb (crescendo, diminuendo). The orchestra long-tones in winds and horns serve it on a platter.  The strings are adding lightness in their pizzicato. This needs more work:  the strings sound un-related to the frog chorus.  Unless I can build up to this pattern from the frog chorus pattern.  Then I have understood it and not simply copied it.  (I haven't copied it exactly, as I have done the birdsongs because it is so continuous.  It leaves no room for me, the orchestra.  Instead, my role is to listen along with my trained ears, and I hope I have trained the ears of my audience by this time in the work.)  So my intent here is to do with the strings what the frogs do: camouflage and confuse, create a dazzling pattern.

Another example of how the birdsong has determined the design is in my overarching musical harmony is the first Carolina Wren song we hear, using notes  Eb, F, G. These are the keys for the modes (mostly a wholetone variation) and chords. Sections A-D are in Eb, Section E (the frogs) is in F (should be minor but I don't want it to get too dark) and I end with the ocean in G major. 

The Golden Mean has been important to me as a composer ever since I started at The Walden School at age 14.  I mind it but I can't say I understand it or appreciate it.  The actual sound that is the most inspiring, or elevating during this work is the solo cello at 4:56, just before the frogs enter.  So it's just a tad early for an 8 minute work  (where the golden mean is at 5:00).  Well, with the work I'm about to do on extending the patterns of the mid-day, (3:45-4:00) and it may result in a few more seconds, pushing this moment into the 5th minute, and voila!  just right!

So I am almost done.  Now I want to make what I have done better by emphasizing the tessellations and patterns, build a tighter tapestry.   

"Adventure is worthwhile in itself." 
- Amelia Earhart

* Winter in South Carolina is very mild so the insects are absent.  I really want the work to end with an owl song, but despite several night outings, I have not captured any usable owl songs. (OK, I have two recordings but the owl is too far away and they sound noisy and unusable.) Beverly and I are not giving up yet! 
Sea Pines Nature Preserve Gate Locked us in! (Beverly Gaddy)

One night Beverly and I went out to find some owls in the nature preserve and got locked in. 
Yikes! Thanks to our friends we were able to contact the security office and find a second exit! We thought the owls would be more active in the full moon (super moon!) but the cloud cover kept them away while we were out.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Laughing Crowd of Frogs: Drafts 15 and into 16

Tree Frog Hiding (Beverly Gaddy)

 NOTES ON DRAFT 15 HERE:  ONLY THE FROGS! 
(minutes 5-8 only)

OK now for the frogs!  I love their polyrhythms (two or more overlapping rhythms) - the way one frog will start and the others join in but not at the same speed or meter (repeating length), so you get this kaleidoscopic pattern...just when you think it's the same, it shifts into something new.  The problem is getting the harmony to brighten the sounds and not make it dark or dreary.  I believe they do this to camoflague themselves so you can't locate any one individual frog.  Their songs overlap and combine to confuse the predator.  It's mesmerizing, like tessellations.


The actual chord is an F augmented chord, which I used in Drafts up to 13.  But it was too dark so I brightened it up with an alternating chord sequence. Here is DRAFT 15a.  I plan to move the harmony into the winds but first I have to get the harmony right before I spell it out for all the instruments. (and add lots of rhythm and percussion!)

Tree Frog on sidewalk HHI (Beverly Gaddy)
Since I want to include the F tonic (home) and the sharp-5 I choose a new alternating harmony that includes both (F major to A major and back).  I love to hear the frogs breathe!  Here is DRAFT 15b.  It breathes.

I like the b sequence so I lengthen it to fit under the frogs, changing it up by stepping downward by whole steps until I get back to F - A -F, and then leaping up by major thirds until it gets too high for the horns and I have to shift into the winds.  Here is DRAFT 15c. I like the changing harmony. I don't like returning to the F (tonic) in the middle...needs to keep searching... Now I need to go to the beginning of the sequence and shift the harmony from brass to winds to show the living breath of the frogs.

Now Here's DRAFT 15d.  I had to switch things up a bit so it wouldn't get dreary. Got it to stick to the french horns for now, with the strings joining in at the end, making home, well "homier."
Tree Frog Wishing for Company (Beverly Gaddy)
I can't believe I wrote another DRAFT 15e. Finally I had the idea of adding in short notes--long notes are too dreary. Perk it up!

And another Draft 15f.  I was hoping this would be the last because it was "F" for frog, afterall! But the rhythm was off...so I made one little switcheroo with the rhythm:  Voila! Draft 15F version 2.

And happiness was starting to set in!  Here is Draft 15g .  I was just about laughing. Got it ready with Draft 16.  I've been so focused on listening I forgot to take notes for you.  Can you hear what I changed?

So I mixed it back in with the whole symphony and I named it DRAFT 16!  This is the draft I will take to show the symphony performers on Monday.  Here's a picture of the mixer window for Draft 16.

I hope it makes you smile!  Maybe it will help you feel more comfortable in a crowd!