Conductor Fuad Šetić and lovely impro ensemble: Amila Ravkić-Mezzo, Andreja Boltek-Flute, Ilma Cagalj-Clarinet, Zuhra Melić-Horn, Suada Kurić-Violin, Anela Botticini - Cello, Tarik Kamaric-Guitar, Ammar Biser-Guitar, Ismet Skrobo-Guitar, Muharem Osmanagić-Accordion, Emina Huskić-Piano, Hanan - Flute + guests concert: Kenan Kojic - Piano and dino rešidbegović - piano.
Program: Cornelius Cardew, Hoods stock-Ramati, Bil Smith, Dino Rešidbegović, Kaća Hadžifejzović, Ivan Dujmović
Performance Notes:
Aftonian Sequenza is an obvious nod to Luciano Berio’s
solo ‘Sequenza’ pieces which are a large influence in my work in general. This score is essentially three vignettes in
which you can capture the continuity in the visual score, yet with each
successive page the score becomes more disruptive. The frenetic notation in the third page is
meant to mimic that of a short wave radio and I would ask the solo
instrumentalist to interpret it as such.
The lone boot suggests to the instrumentalist to stop, and stomp their
foot on the floor at approximately half way through the work.
In this piece, the link
between synthetic sound and philosophical performance should always
be self-evident—it’s about getting under the surface, and abstraction...
it is about challenging inherited conceptions of what it means to be
a musician, what it means to sense, to understand, or to think. This means
expanding your perception of the world through new musical concepts, using
philosophical performance to break down what’s known and familiar
until you realize that underneath those recognizable ordinary surfaces there’s
a whole world of intricate abstract mechanisms working away.
Counterfly is inspired by a character in the Thomas
Pynchon novel “Against The Day”. As this
novel opens, the ‘Chums of Chance’ (who are a pack of children) are floating
aloft in a hot air balloon. The intention
is for the performers to assume a more
minimalist, whimsical…even child-like approach.
In one performance, I encouraged the performers to exchange instruments
for a short passage.
I compel the performers
to recognize that there’s a really beautiful process where, if you have
integrity and pay careful attention to how this music thing is growing, how it
presents itself, what it connects to, and if you make only the right
compromises (because you’ve got to make some), then it becomes much bigger than
either of you as performers. ,Then the
composition and performance becomes something real, has a certain independence
from you, and in effect tells you what you can and can’t do with it.
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