Sunday, May 10, 2026

The PHLASH Composition

 



The PHLASH Composition

There is a particular kind of short piece that does something a long piece cannot.

Not because brevity is a virtue in itself. There are plenty of short compositions that are merely small, that exist in the time they take and leave no trace. The PHLASH is not that. The PHLASH is the composition that drops you somewhere else before you have consented to the journey, and returns you, blinking, before you have had time to get your bearings. You were gone. You are back. The clock says eleven seconds have passed.

The word itself is not established nomenclature. It is a working term, the kind that circulates among composers before it ever reaches theory. But it names something real, something that practitioners have been noticing for as long as extremely short music has been written with serious intent: that duration and depth are not the same variable.

The Paradox at the Center

Most musical experience is cumulative. A symphony builds its world over time, laying infrastructure, establishing expectations, paying them off or deliberately refusing to. The listener's entry into that world is gradual, almost geological. You are not transported so much as slowly relocated.

The PHLASH works by a completely different mechanism. Its world is not built but detonated. The piece does not invite you in, it simply opens somewhere else, and if you were listening at the moment of detonation, you went with it.

This is paradoxical in a precise sense. The piece is too short to establish context, yet context arrives anyway. The piece is too short to develop emotional material, yet the listener surfaces from it having moved through several emotional states that resist sequential description. Something happened in there that the clock did not account for. The work created more time than it used.

Anton Webern knew this phenomenon intimately. Several of his Bagatelles for string quartet, movements lasting under a minute, produce an afterburn wildly disproportionate to their duration. You spend longer sitting with the silence after them than the piece itself required. The silence is still vibrating with something the notes only just managed to release before stopping.





Why Brevity Can Rupture Rather Than Merely Abbreviate

A long composition can ease its listener through a portal. The PHLASH has no easing mechanism. The transition between the world outside the piece and the world inside it is violent, even when the music is quiet. This is structural, not temperamental.

Because there is no time for acclimation, the perceptual apparatus is wrong-footed from the first moment. The brain, expecting to receive introductory information, finds itself instead already inside a fully realized elsewhere. The experience of being inside the piece is therefore heightened in a way that extended duration rarely achieves, because the listener never had the opportunity to settle. They are perpetually arriving.

Morton Feldman wrote short pieces that operate this way, pieces where the first note is already deep inside the territory the piece inhabits, with no preamble and no establishing gesture. The listener is placed, not led. There is a difference in the body between these two experiences, a difference in the quality of attention that the placement demands.

The Emotional Myriad in Miniature

One of the more disorienting aspects of the genuine PHLASH is the sense, upon returning to ordinary time, of having moved through more emotional material than the piece's clock-time should have permitted. This is not illusion, or not only illusion. It reflects something true about how emotional states are triggered in musical listening: they are not proportional to duration. A chord can do it. A single interval, arrived at from an unexpected direction, can do it. The PHLASH is a composition designed, consciously or not, to maximize this non-proportionality.

The mechanism is something like compression. The piece holds back nothing. It spends all of its material immediately, without the long-form composer's instinct for husbandry. Where a larger work might introduce an emotional color and then return to it several times across its architecture, the PHLASH gives it once, fully, and then it is gone. The listener carries it out of the piece the way you carry a dream out of sleep: vivid, intact, already beginning to fade at the edges.

John Cage's 4'33" is the most famous meditation on the relationship between duration and musical experience, but it operates by radical subtraction. The PHLASH operates by radical concentration. Where Cage empties the frame, the PHLASH overfills it so completely that the frame cannot contain what happens, and the experience spills forward into the silence and the rest of the day.

Composing for Rupture

Writing a successful PHLASH is harder than writing a successful long piece in at least one respect. In a long piece, mistakes have time to be corrected by what follows. A gesture that lands wrong can be recontextualized. Material that does not immediately open can be retrieved later. The composer has recourse.

In the PHLASH there is no recourse. Every note is load-bearing. Every silence is structural. There is nowhere to put anything that does not work, because there is nowhere to put anything at all. The piece is all surface, which means the surface must be everything.

This is why so many extremely short pieces by serious composers feel more concentrated than their longer works, not more slight. The Webern Bagatelles feel denser than most twenty-minute compositions because every musical decision inside them was made under conditions of total accountability. Nothing is there by accident or habit. Nothing is there because there was room. There was no room.


A Form That Is Still Being Discovered

The PHLASH as a deliberate compositional strategy rather than a lucky accident is still being worked out. The composers most interested in it are not always the ones writing the shortest pieces: they are the ones asking the specific question of how a piece might deliver its entire world in the time it takes to register that the world has arrived.

That question does not have a single answer. It has as many answers as there are composers willing to take the brevity seriously, which means taking it not as a constraint but as the condition that makes a particular kind of rupture possible. Not every short piece breaks through. The ones that do are doing something very specific with the time they have.

The PHLASH is the name for what they are doing.


Sound Morphology is an ongoing investigation into the edges of compositional thinking.

PHLASH Compositions: "Sea Circus Syndrome" for C Trumpet and String Quartet. Bil Smith Composer


Sea Circus Syndrome


"Sea Circus Syndrome" 

for C Trumpet and String Quartet.  

Bil Smith Composer

"Sea Circus Syndrome" orchestrated for C Trumpet and a String Quartet, is a testament to the essence of a "PHLASH Composition," a spectrum of work characterized by an abbreviated modality.


The PHLASH Composition


This enigmatic term signifies a musical piece that is notably brief, yet possesses the uncanny ability to plunge its listeners into an alternative realm. Such compositions are designed to be paradoxical, enabling the listener to traverse through a myriad of emotions, thoughts, and contemplations within an astoundingly short duration.



"Pelippopism": A Score-Borne Theoretical Framework


In the evolving landscape of contemporary composition, where the boundaries between visual art, linguistic play, and sonic event are deliberately destabilized, I introduce a provocative conceptual framework: Pelippopism. As a term coined from the concatenation of visual, onomatopoetic, and pseudo-Hellenistic fragments, Pelippopism proposes a multi-modal ideology that situates the musical score not only as a site of instruction or sonic coding, but as a poly-referential object of cognition, rupture, and performative agency.





Defining Pelippopism

At its core, Pelippopism asserts that a musical score, particularly within Smith's oeuvre, is not an antecedent to sound, but a non-hierarchical parallel to sound, language, and architectural form. The term itself, with its recursive loops of plosive and sibilant sounds, evokes the vibrational logic of both semiotic interference and kinetic movement—sound as a glyphic vibration, notation as optical residue.

In my compositions, such as Effluvium and Retro-Gradient Lustration, or A Game of Curtains, Glass Door, Twice Closed, Pelippopism reveals itself through the layering of modular symbol-sets, syntactic disobedience, and a rejection of stasis. Scores become "anarchival zones" in which the functions of notation are subjected to erasure, overwriting, and distortion—gestures that enact Pelippopist refusal.

Materiality and the Pelippopist Score

Pelippopist works often begin as corrupted vectors—post-architectural blueprints infected by linguistic spores and pharmacological diagrammatics. On the page, this takes the form of compositional glyphs that recall industrial design patents, histological charts, or circuit board overlays. The typographic elements, often modeled after extralinguistic scripts or proprietary fonts, function not as legible carriers of meaning but as disrupted conduits—subject to failure, re-appropriation, and misreading.

In this framework, Pelippopism is less a doctrine than a behavior. The composer acts not as author, but as cartographer of chaotic fields. The score becomes an event horizon where disciplinary silos collapse: notation as textile, performance as forensic audit, typography as bio-linguistic residue.

The Performative Imperative



Pelippopism demands that performers not interpret, but inhabit the score. Rather than seeking fidelity, the performer becomes a strategic interlocutor between unstable systems. In one example, the presence of transparent euphoniums, spectrographic glyph overlays, and asemic typographies requires the musician to interact with the score as though it were a spatialized hologram—reading not in time, but across layers of opacity, feedback, and contradiction.

Such performative instability is not an error but a core feature of the Pelippopist ontology. The score is not a pre-image of performance, but a provocative partner, oscillating between architecture, image, and ruin.

Pelippopism as Aesthetic Strategy

Conceptually, Pelippopism aligns with para-Futurist sensibilities, Lettrist dérives, and the anti-systemic gestures of Jean Tinguely and Hanne Darboven. However, my embrace of pharmaceutical nomenclature, forensic simulation, and speculative linguistics places Pelippopism within a distinctly post-biotechnological aesthetic. It is a mode that treats the score as a semiotic organ, constantly rewriting itself through contamination, refusal, and breakdown.

In this light, Pelippopism is not merely a neologism. It is a methodological disorder that invites mutation, a radical anti-mnemonic strategy for encoding musical thought in the age of spectral excess and information decay.

Pelippopism offers a new topology for thinking the musical score—not as static artifact, but as a feedback vector, a non-linear libretto, and a semiotic surface infected by language, image, and speculative pharmacology. It serves as both aesthetic provocation and conceptual scaffolding—a refusal to resolve, a demand to reconceive.

Let Pelippopism, then, not be defined, but continually enacted.
Let it mutate. Let it resist. Let it sound.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Xipense (with Definition)






 

WIP>>>>>>>


 

Compositional Relic Systems

 \
Compositional Relic Systems

Scores that feel like artifacts from an invented musical civilization.

There is a category of musical score that does not read as instruction. It reads as evidence.

Evidence of a culture that measured time differently. That believed pitch was a property of color, or of weight, or of the hour at which something was buried. That had rituals requiring notation, and notated them, and then vanished, leaving only these pages behind.

This is not a description of ancient music. It is a description of a certain kind of contemporary composition: works whose scores exist not merely as maps to performance but as objects carrying the weight of an imagined elsewhere. Call them compositional relic systems — notational architectures so internally consistent, so formally strange, and so aesthetically sealed that they suggest the remnants of a complete musical world rather than the product of a single composer's imagination.



The Score as Archaeological Object

The conventional score is a delivery mechanism. It moves information from a composer's mind to a performer's hands with as little interference as possible. Its symbols are conventions, its conventions are contracts, and its contracts are renewed every time someone sits at a piano and opens a page of Beethoven.

The relic system operates on an entirely different premise. The score is not a transparent medium but an opaque one, a surface that resists immediate comprehension the way a fragment of an unknown alphabet resists reading. You can see that it means something. You cannot immediately determine what. And in that gap between visible intention and inaccessible meaning, the object begins to feel ancient.

Cornelius Cardew understood this intuitively. Treatise, his 193-page graphic score completed in 1967, arrives with no performance instructions whatsoever. Its symbols, circles, lines, numbers, grids, shapes hovering between geometry and glyph, are self-consistent enough to suggest a system without ever disclosing one. Performers who have worked with it for decades still argue about its internal logic. This is not a failure of the work. It is precisely the work's achievement. Treatise feels excavated. It feels like Cardew found it rather than made it.


Internal Consistency as World-Building

What separates a true relic system from mere graphic experimentation is internal consistency. Random marks make nothing. Marks that follow an invisible grammar, even one the composer has never explicitly formalized, produce the sensation of a complete world operating just beyond the threshold of understanding.

Horațiu Rădulescu's spectral scores have this quality in abundance. The notation system he developed, dense, numerical, resistant to piano reduction, cataloguing harmonic series as ratios rather than conventional pitches, looks less like a Western score than like a page from a treatise on cosmological mathematics that happens, incidentally, to produce sound. His scores posit a civilization that heard the overtone series the way we hear melody: as the primary unit of musical meaning, requiring its own completely different notational language.

The scores of James Tenney, particularly his later lattice notations mapping just-intonation pitch relationships across multidimensional tuning space, carry the same quality. They read as documents from a culture that built its entire musical architecture around ratio rather than temperament. They are internally rigorous. They are formally beautiful. And they are completely alien to anyone trained in standard notation.

The relic effect emerges from this combination: rigor plus foreignness. A score that is merely strange looks like a mistake. A score that is rigorously strange looks like a language.



Temporality and the Invented Civilization

The most powerful relic systems encode a different relationship to time.

Western musical notation is, at its core, a time-management system. The bar line divides. The time signature governs. The tempo marking sets the rate of consumption. Even the most sophisticated rhythmic notation in Ferneyhough or Finnissy is ultimately an elaborate administration of the same fundamental temporal premise: time moves left to right, at a speed we can specify, in units we can subdivide.

Consider instead the scores of La Monte Young, particularly the text scores of the early 1960s. Some consist of a single instruction, some of a single word, some of a described action with no specified duration. These are not underspecified Western scores. They are documents from a civilization that did not believe in musical time as a finite resource to be divided and allocated. Duration is not a box to fill. It is an environment to inhabit.

The long-scroll scores of certain Fluxus composers extend this logic further. Their horizontal sprawl suggests not a timeline but a terrain, something to be traversed rather than consumed. The civilization these scores imply did not sit in chairs to listen to music. It moved through it.

The Notation Invents the Music

Here is the deepest implication of the relic system: the notation does not describe a pre-existing musical idea. The notation generates the musical idea. The civilization comes first, and the sound is what that civilization happens to make.

This reversal is what distinguishes the genuinely radical score from the merely unusual one. George Crumb's scores are beautiful, strange, and often arranged in spirals or crosses on the page. But his notation, however visually distinctive, ultimately refers back to conventional musical parameters, pitch, duration, dynamic, timbre. The strangeness is cosmetic. The underlying civilization is familiar.

The scores Alvin Lucier produced for certain installations work very differently. Their notation systems diagram physical space, object placement, acoustic behavior, describing a music that could not have been conceived without the diagram. The notation is not downstream of the music. It is upstream. The score is the compositional act, and performance is merely what happens when you build what the diagram describes.

This is what the ruins of an invented civilization feel like: not décor but infrastructure. Not ornament but evidence that something was actually thought through, that a complete system of beliefs about sound and time and meaning once operated here, and that what we hold in our hands is what remains.

Making Relics Now

The challenge for composers working in this mode is avoiding the merely picturesque. It is easy to make a score look old, or alien, or archaeological. It is much harder to make a score be those things, to build a notational world of sufficient internal coherence that it earns the sensation of having been discovered rather than designed.

The composers who succeed tend to share one quality: they believe their system before anyone else does. They use it, extend it, derive new problems from its internal logic, solve those problems within the system's own terms. Over time the system develops weight. It accumulates the density of something that has been lived in.

This is, in the end, what a civilization is: not a collection of objects but a set of problems that generated those objects. The relic systems that endure are the ones whose problems we can still feel pressing against the surface of their strange, illegible pages, even when, especially when, we cannot yet read a single word.


Sound Morphology is an ongoing investigation into the edges of compositional thinking.

Hulls, Sutures, Sound: Composing with Lee Bontecou’s Voids

 

Hulls, Sutures, Sound: Composing with Lee Bontecou’s Voids

In the corner of the gallery, the Lee Bontecou sculpture stands like a portal to another universe. You can’t help but lean closer, drawn into the dark recesses, the shadowy voids that seem to whisper their own language. It’s not unlike the feeling of reading a musical score for the first time, that overwhelming possibility embedded in a system of signs and symbols. Bontecou’s work, with its industrial assemblages and eerily organic forms, feels alive in its potential, brimming with the same kind of energy that a composer seeks to harness in their music. It’s the energy of creation itself.  It's raw, exploratory, and unapologetically unconventional.

For composers, Bontecou’s work isn’t just an aesthetic marvel; it’s a roadmap, a set of principles and provocations for rethinking what a musical score can be. It’s not about copying her visual style but about channeling her ethos, her approach to material, space, and narrative, to forge something entirely new. Let’s step into Bontecou’s world and see how her artistic sensibilities might be translated into a composer’s toolkit, creating scores that are as much sculptures as they are blueprints for sound.



The Void as Musical Space

Bontecou’s most iconic works feature cavities.  Cavities that are dark, impenetrable voids that seem to both devour and radiate energy. These voids are metaphors for absence, mystery, and potential. In music, silence often functions in a similar way: it isn’t just the absence of sound; it’s a space pregnant with meaning, tension, and possibility.

Practical Application for Composers

Imagine a score where voids...literal cutouts in the paper or digital blacked-out spaces represent moments of interpretive freedom. These gaps could signify silences, open improvisations, or even cues for performers to physically move or rearrange parts of the score.  These voids disrupt the linearity of traditional notation, inviting performers to engage in a dialogue with the score’s architecture.

Assemblages as Modular Scores

Bontecou’s sculptures are intricate assemblages of materials where steel, canvas, and wire are stitched and welded into cohesive yet fragmented wholes. Each element is distinct, but together they form a narrative, a system that feels both industrial and alive. For composers, this modularity offers a way to think about musical structure in non-linear, combinatory terms.

Practical Application for Composers

Scores could be designed as assemblages being discrete, movable parts that can be reconfigured by performers. Each module contains its own musical material, and the performer determines the sequence or relationship between them.  The score becomes an interactive artifact, a collaborative process between composer and performer that reflects Bontecou’s layered, dynamic approach to composition.



Material as Meaning

Bontecou’s choice of materials such as industrial fabrics, molded plastics, and steel wasn’t just about aesthetics. These materials carried meaning, referencing the post-war industrial landscape, the tension between human and machine, the fragility of nature against the weight of modernity. For composers, the materiality of the score itself can be a narrative element, a tactile layer of meaning.

Practical Application for Composers

Instead of traditional paper, consider using unconventional materials for the score. Metal sheets, translucent acrylic, or textured fabric can each add a sensory dimension to the notational experience. This approach transforms the score into an object of art, blurring the lines between composer, performer, and sculptor.


Narrative Through Line and Shape

Bontecou’s drawings, often described as “kinetic psychologies,” explore line as a narrative force. Graphite arcs, jagged edges, and swirling forms seem to map out emotional landscapes, processes of thought and motion. In music, line is already central, but Bontecou’s approach pushes us to think of line as a gesture, a story unto itself.

Practical Application for Composers

Graphic notation inspired by Bontecou’s drawings could serve as a primary or supplementary layer of the score. Lines might represent trajectories of sound, shifts in dynamics, or even spatial movement of performers.  The score becomes a living narrative, an evolving dialogue between the composer’s visual language and the performer’s interpretation.



Bontecou’s Narratives of Mystery

Suzanne Hudson, writing for Artforum, described Bontecou’s work as narrating her own kinetic and interior process, glimpsing forms as they take shape and evolve. This emphasis on process over product aligns with the trend in contemporary music toward indeterminacy and open-form works.

Practical Application for Composers

Scores can reflect the process of their own creation, embedding layers of revision, improvisation, and discovery. The composer’s drafts, sketches, and marginalia could become part of the final score.  This approach aligns the score with Bontecou’s ethos of evolution and possibility, where each performance becomes an act of re-creation.


Looking Forward: Bontecou’s Legacy in Music

Lee Bontecou’s art offers more than inspiration; it offers a challenge. How can composers create scores that don’t just encode sound but evoke the tactile, the spatial, the emotional? How can the act of reading and performing a score become as dynamic and layered as Bontecou’s sculptures? The answers lie in embracing interdisciplinary methods, in treating the score as a multidimensional artifact that 

The Infinite Possibilities of the Void

Bontecou’s voids are never empty. They hum with potential, with the tension between what is seen and what is felt. In the same way, the contemporary score is not just a set of instructions but a site of exploration, a space where sound, touch, and vision collide. By drawing on Bontecou’s legacy, composers can create works that are not only heard but experienced, not only performed but lived. In this transformative era for music, Bontecou reminds us that the void is not an absence, but it is a beginning.