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Young Chang
The danger in playing other people’s work too much is that the music
can resemble what Alan Terricciano calls “museum practice,” especially
when the scores come from late composers.
“It’s important to remember this is a living practice,” said the
composer. “Composition is a wonderful thing to do if you’re a musician.”
He and three other faculty members from UC Irvine will present their
works at the Composers Concert today, part of the UCI Chamber Series.
“I think it’s very important for the students to hear their faculty’s
compositions,” Terricciano said. “It demonstrates that we believe, as
fully as possible, in practice.”
The program will include Terricciano’s “To Asylum” for piano and tape
(which refers to recorded music), Bernard Gilmore’s “Duo for Bassoon and
Cello,” Christopher Dobrian’s “There’s Just One Thing You Need to Know”
for piano, synthesizer and interactive computer systems and Michael
Zbyszynski’s “Daguerreotype” for cello and live electronics.
“I think there’s a very wide range of styles and I think the digital
pieces are kind of on the cutting edge,” said Gilmore, a professor of
music in the composition department at UCI.
Zbyszynski’s work will involve using electronics to alter the sound of
the cello -- to refocus, refract and reflect it in a way similar to how a
camera lens creates different perspectives for photos.
The UC Berkeley graduate wrote “Daguerreotype” for cellist Hugh
Livingston, whom he met there.
The title refers to an archaic photographic technique that required
longer exposure times lasting sometimes as long as a minute. The subjects
of the pictures were, as a result, required to hold their poses.
“I started thinking about how that’s different from a snapshot,” the
composer said. “A snapshot is a frozen slice of time whereas a
daguerreotype portrait is a longer section, a meditation.”
Zbyszynski wrote his piece for Livingston to similarly achieve with
music what daguerreotype did with images.
“Sort of like taking a daguerreotype of him and outfitting him in a
certain pose and forcing him in a certain frame that’s, to some degree,
artificial,” Zbyszynski said. “And making him assume that position for
the duration of my piece.”
“Daguerreotype” also looks at the difference between composed music
and improvised music, as Livingston will improvise for part of the work.
Terricciano’s “To Asylum” was also inspired by something from the
past.
The composer, who is a professor of dance at UCI, started his project
after reading a poem by Mary Oliver about Robert Schumann. The verses
reflect on the late composer’s time in an asylum toward the end of his
life and also trace back to when he fell in love with his wife Clara.
“The poem inspired me to think of how we deal with our memories and
how, when you’re close to someone and it’s a bad time for them, we use
our old memories or fond memories to deal with that,” Terricciano said.
The recorded part of his work is a collage of Schumann’s compositions
and some of his wife’s, who was also a composer. The newly-composed score
is for the piano.
Terricciano, who has performed in the Composers Concert in years past,
said he is flattered to be a part of the show partly because it’s “a
healthy thing to put out work.”
“I think it’s very important for students to understand that their
faculty, their professors, are active musicians and that what we do is
still vital,” he said.
FYI
* What: Composer’s Concert
* When: 8 p.m. today
* Where: Winifred Smith Hall at UC Irvine. The university is at the
corner of Campus and University drives
* Cost: $10
* Call: (949) 824-4259
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