Saturday, June 27, 2026

"A Faraway Curtain Of Purged Hide Whose Edges Let In Blue Light" for Bass Trumpet and Flute

 


"A Faraway Curtain Of Purged Hide Whose Edges Let In Blue Light" 

for Bass Trumpet and Flute

Bil Smith Composer

Link To PDF of Full Score (15 pages)


Published By LNM Editions


At the heart of this composition lies a planimetric system of notation, a dense patterned topographical system, which organizes motifs in a manner that is inherently continuous yet segmented categorically. The continuous nature of these motifs presents a controlled fluidity while their categorical segmentation imposes a structure that demands meticulous attention to detail from the performers.


The score further defines itself through the use of a dissimilar combination of spatial references, which serve to produce displacements within the musical narrative. These displacements are not random but are carefully calculated to yield the perspective information necessary for performance calibration. By manipulating spatial references, I created a sonic landscape that is constantly shifting, compelling the performers to adapt their interpretive strategies in real-time. This dynamic interplay between spatiality and sound adds an additional layer of complexity to the piece, challenging performers to recalibrate their approaches continuously.


The performers must embrace the recognition of the mutability of substances as a driving force behind the score's structure. This mutability is not merely a metaphorical concept but a tangible element that influences both the creation and execution of the piece. Just as substances change state in response to external conditions, so too does the musical material of this composition respond to the interpretive decisions of the performers. The initial composition, while providing a framework for the piece, is only one component of its ultimate realization. The true essence of the work emerges in the interplay between the written score and the performers' interpretation, a dynamic process that gives life to the music in real-time.











Friday, June 26, 2026

"Rhetorical Reverie" for Vibraphone. Bil Smith Composer


"Rhetorical Reverie" 

for Vibraphone.

Bil Smith Composer

PDF Link




 

Excerpts from New Work for Violin (Film, Hyper-Notation, Text, Iconology)



Excerpts from New Work for Violin (Film, Hyper-Notation, Text, Iconology)









 

Fanfare "Xenium" for Trombone


What sets "Fanfare Xenium" apart is its profound engagement with the concept of alienation; not in the sense of estrangement or loneliness, but as an artistic strategy. The piece deliberately alienates aspects of conventional musical traditions, extracting them from their familiar contexts and recontextualizing them within a new, metaphorical space. This space, pressured by the introduction of disparate objects and ideas, becomes a canvas upon which meaning is both constructed and deconstructed.

Contrary to the practices of composers who work within metaphorical spaces or who seek to depict space in their compositions, "Fanfare Xenium" eschews these approaches in favor of something more radical. The piece does not endeavor to represent space; instead, it challenges the very notion of what space can signify in music. Through its notational innovation and conceptual depth, "Fanfare Xenium" invites the performer to navigate this uncharted territory, relying on their interpretive skills to bridge the gap between the isolated elements presented in the score.





"The Illusion Of Control" For Bass Flute. Bil Smith Composer

 





"The Illusion Of Control"

For Bass Flute

Bil Smith Composer

32" X 12"

Link to PDF


"The Illusion of Control" for bass flute inspired by Leonora Carrington is a product of my compositional bounding theory and augmented notational archetypes. It is an exploration of the multidimensional sound-world of the bass flute, a defined space within which I can move rationally. Through this work, I aim to create a sonic landscape that is both distinctive and transformative, building upon the rich legacy of physical perceptions and cultural traditions that have shaped the bass flute over time.

Leonora Carrington is a writer whose imaginative worlds have inspired generations of creative thinkers. Her unique vision of the world, infused with a sense of mystery and wonder, serves as a powerful backdrop for my exploration of the bass flute's sonic potential.

At the core of my compositional approach is an emphasis on listening to the particularity and differences of the instrument. I seek out possible points of contact and connections between dimensions that retain their autonomy, exploring the boundaries of my own models of representation to discover new facets of sound. This process requires a level of vigilance and sensitivity, as every detail can constitute an illuminating difference or remarkable connection.

This piece is not simply a representation of the bass flute's sound-world, but a transformation of it. Through the performer's concrete actions, the practice and intelligence of the sound are inscribed upon the body and the space in the ritual and impersonal dimension of the common listening. Sound, body, listening, space, and community cannot be separated, and each element plays a critical role in shaping the final sonic landscape.

The bass flute, with its unusual distribution of sound sources and audience, offers a unique opportunity to create a complex, visionary multiphony. The dishomogeneity and dispersive potential of the instrument's attack become the power center for articulated relationships, creating forms and degrees of resonances that are apparent in their peculiarities. The resulting sound fills the entire space, stimulating a constantly unbalanced, asymmetrical mode of listening.

In creating this work, I rely heavily on augmented notational archetypes. These archetypes allow me to explore the full range of sonic possibilities offered by the bass flute, pushing the boundaries of traditional notation to create new forms of representation. By augmenting traditional notation with a range of graphical and symbolic elements, I am able to capture the unique characteristics of the bass flute's sound and translate them into a visual language that speaks to the imagination and the intellect.

At the same time, my work is grounded in a compositional bounding theory that emphasizes the importance of defined spaces and boundaries. By working within the constraints of these boundaries, I am able to create a sense of structure and coherence that allows the work to unfold in a meaningful way. The boundaries serve as a guide, allowing me to explore the full potential of the bass flute while still maintaining a sense of discipline and control.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

"Attache" for Harp Bil Smith Composer. Liberating the Human Agency in Musical Expression


"Attache" for Harp

Bil Smith Composer

Liberating the Human Agency in Musical Expression

The Coercion of Traditional Notation

In this work, my philosophy delves into the nature of time, duration, and the vital impulse of life. Similarly, traditional musical notation conveys a sense of coercive temporal rigidity. Each note, each rest, adheres to a predetermined temporal grid, stifling the very essence of human expression and spontaneity. The traditional score becomes a coercive force, attempting to confine the boundless flow of musical duration into rigid patterns.

Liberating the Human Agency

"Attache," is a call to liberate human experience from the constraints of matter; aims to liberate music from the constraints of strict conventional notation. The work recognizes that the harpist's agency, their unique touch, and their interpretive essence, are integral to the musical narrative. By intertwining with the harpist's creative instincts, "Attache" endeavors to restore the human agency back to the center of musical activity.

Duration and Expressive Flow

My concept of duration elucidates the dynamic, continuous flow of time. The harpist is invited to weave through the work's expressive tapestry, embracing the nuances of contextual duration. As each note resonates, it becomes a fragment of this temporal flow, a moment of dynamic expression.

Intuition and Creative Instincts

Intution becomes a profound means of grasping reality beyond the confines of discursive thought. "Attache" encourages harpists to rely on their intuitive grasp of the music. The work beckons them to engage with the composition on a level that transcends mere notation. Each note becomes an intuitive outpouring, an extension of the harpist's creative instincts.

Elan Vital: Enlivening Music

Bergson's concept of elan vital, the vital impulse that animates life, finds its echo in the vivacity of "Attache." The work seeks to infuse music with a renewed sense of vitality, of spirited animation. It beckons the harpist to infuse their performance with the elan vital, infusing each note with life, transcending the mechanical nature of traditional notation.

"Attache" is a call to restore the primacy of human agency, to liberate human creative instincts from the clutches of coercion. The work reinstates music as an ecological space where human expression thrives, where duration and expression intertwine in harmonious unison. 

Rethinking the Opera Score...A Work in Progress



Rethinking the Opera Score: Transformational Notation and the Emergence of Libretto-as-System

The score presented here rejects the historical function of the operatic manuscript as a container for linearity, character, and voice. Instead, it becomes a matrix; at once architectural, procedural, and epistemic. The traditional contract between librettist, composer, and performer is ruptured. In its place: an unstable yet fertile topology of notation as action, page as ontology.



This work does not feature arias, recitatives, or ensemble. Rather, what is offered is an accumulation of panels, systems, and graphic provocations that behave less like a musical score and more like a cartographic interface.  It maps cognition, semiotic interference, and muscular behavior into a unified performance artifact. The notion of “libretto” is absorbed into the visual schema itself. There are no characters. There is no sung language. The libretto, if one can still call it that, is dispersed and distributed across blocks, rotations, densities, and conditional architectures that transform the performer into both reader and medium.


Each component, whether it it a graphic vector, typographic glyph, or notational anomaly, functions as a trigger within a curatorial logic. This is not a ‘score’ to be interpreted for sound alone, but a manuscript to be curated in real-time. Footnotes are not marginalia but spatialized into blocks, giving the illusion of detached commentary, when in fact they are fully integrated executable devices. Their presence instructs the performer not with musical phrase but with categorical imperative. These inserts operate like switches of visual event toggles that determine how sonic material is negotiated. Their opacity is deliberate. They simulate the indexical function of critical apparatus while remaining gesturally generative.

The treatment of time is likewise inverted. The score is not temporal in its organization but accumulative. Time is not measured; it is collaged. Its geometry does not yield phrasing but instead creates terrain of which field conditions through which the performer navigates. Each instrumental line becomes a vector of behavior rather than a voice, each gesture a cue for physical transformation. The typical dramaturgical arcs of opera are displaced by mechanical flux and the emergence of form through repetition, fracture, and reconsideration.



This work poses a fundamental question: can opera exist without voice, text, or character? The answer here is a resolute yes—provided we understand opera as a system of intensities, not identities. The score presented is not merely prefigurative, but meta-operatic. It does not represent a work; it generates one. The libretto is latent, embedded within an ecology of signs, freed from the tyranny of verse and narrative. The result is not an opera that has evolved but one that has mutated into a score that is both surface and depth, both architecture and impulse, both instruction and artifact.

In this schema, notation is not a medium of communication but a mechanism of transformation. The opera is no longer staged. It is activated.