Funky title? It's a dance piece that involves a bunch of rubber balls. "When Bounce Comes to Roll" was a commission by Elizabeth Drake-Boyt as part of her Masters degree at the University of Arizona. When Ms. Drake-Boyt first approached me, she was l [+]Funky title? It's a dance piece that involves a bunch of rubber balls. "When Bounce Comes to Roll" was a commission by Elizabeth Drake-Boyt as part of her Masters degree at the University of Arizona. When Ms. Drake-Boyt first approached me, she was looking for someone to find music that would best fit the choreography of her dance. After seeing a rehearsal of the dance, I decided that no existing piece of music would ever fit her work without making changes to the choreography. So I decided to write the music. Since I was given only a space of 2 to 3 weeks to finish the music and have it ready for the rehearsals, I opted to use my trusty old Kurweil PC88mx to realize the music.
The choreography involved the use of fluorescent rubber balls that are literally bounced among the group of dancers. It is divided into three main sections with the first section introducing the dancers standing in a line side by side trading the balls. After this short exchange of balls, the dancers then split up all while bouncing the balls to the beat of the music. This continues until the second section with solo dancer performing to quiet music. The third section is marked by the rest of the dancers each performing a short solo dance. The piece ends with the dancers returning to the original line of the first section trading the balls as the lights fade out.
The music was for the most part improvised and entirely realized on a sequencing program without ever scratching a note on paper before hand. It wasn’t the first time doing this since I had done several projects for film, but that was during a time when I considered them side projects while I continued my “serious” work on paper, of course. Nowadays, if a few notes fall here or there, it doesn’t matter; it is the end result and realization of the music that matters the most. I don’t see any difference to works being first written down on paper and those works that exist entirely as sequences, or recorded media.
"Scenes from a Ballet" is a piece that served as means of freeing up my own composition processes from the overcritical analysis of each and every note before being set down to manuscript paper. It was an attempt to let improvisation guide the music and to try to make a synthesizer sound less synthesi
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