Thursday, April 23, 2026

The Interplay of Experimental Photography and Contemporary New Music Notation

 

The Interplay of Experimental Photography and Contemporary New Music Notation


Introduction: A New Paradigm for Music and Visuality

The evolution of new music composition has often paralleled innovations in other artistic media, and in recent decades, experimental photography and film have emerged as potent vehicles for rethinking musical notation. The compositional archetype of the 21st century increasingly relies on interdisciplinary tools to bridge sound, space, and time. Experimental photographers such as Jennifer Walsh, Andreas Gursky, Thomas Demand, and others have introduced a visual language that transcends traditional boundaries, offering a profound aesthetic model for the conveyance and interpretation of contemporary scores.

This discussion explores how the experimental techniques of these photographers have shaped a new aesthetic paradigm for music notation. By examining their manipulation of space, distortion of reality, and layering of visual structures, we uncover how photography and film function as notational mechanisms that challenge performers and composers to breach unknown artistic territories.


Photographic Experimentation as a Framework for Notation

Experimental photography employs abstraction, distortion, and reconstruction to interpret and manipulate reality. This mirrors the act of musical notation, which abstracts sound into visual symbols for re-creation. Photographic techniques such as spatial fragmentation, temporal layering, and synthetic manipulation resonate with contemporary compositional practices, suggesting new methods for encoding musical information.




Key Aesthetic Contributions by Experimental Photographers

  1. Jennifer Walsh: Fragmentation and Ambiguity Jennifer Walsh’s photographic and filmic techniques dismantle linearity, employing fragmented visuals and overlapping temporalities. Her work evokes a sense of dislocation, where meaning emerges through the juxtaposition of seemingly unrelated elements. In the context of musical notation, Walsh's approach suggests scores that embrace ambiguity and multiplicity, challenging performers to navigate nonlinear pathways.

    • Potential Application: Layered notational systems where symbols are overlaid, requiring performers to interpret temporal and spatial relationships dynamically.
  2. Andreas Gursky: Scale and Density Gursky's monumental photographs, characterized by their overwhelming detail and expansive scale, transform everyday spaces into intricate tapestries of information. This density and abstraction are analogous to complex scores in new music, where detail invites immersive engagement.

    • Potential Application: Large-format scores that utilize expansive spatial layouts, demanding macro and micro-level interpretation by performers.
  3. Thomas Demand: Fabricated Realities Demand’s meticulous reconstructions of spaces blur the line between reality and simulation, presenting a hyper-real aesthetic that invites scrutiny and reinterpretation. Similarly, musical notation can fabricate its own reality, serving as a constructed space that invites the performer to inhabit and transform it.

    • Potential Application: Scores as fabricated objects, combining traditional notation with visual art, architecture, or tactile materials that create a performative environment.
  4. Andreas Gefeller: Aerial Distortions Gefeller’s overhead perspectives create disorienting views of familiar environments, revealing hidden structures and patterns. His work parallels the aerial view of traditional notation while challenging its hierarchical conventions.

    • Potential Application: Aerial-inspired scores that decentralize notation, allowing multiple simultaneous entry points and interpretations.
  5. Geert Goiris: Uncanny Atmospheres Goiris’s haunting, atmospheric landscapes evoke a sense of unease and the unknown. His manipulation of light and shadow offers a visual vocabulary for expressing tonal ambiguity and unresolved tension.

    • Potential Application: Scores that integrate chiaroscuro effects, using light and shadow as interpretative tools to signal dynamics and emotional tone.
  6. Naoya Hatakeyama: Industrial Ruins and Time Hatakeyama’s exploration of decaying industrial environments captures the passage of time and the interplay of human intervention and natural decay. This resonates with compositions that explore entropy, decay, and transformation.

    • Potential Application: Notation that evolves over time, such as scores printed on degradable materials, emphasizing the ephemerality of performance.
  7. Luisa Lambri: Interior Spaces and Abstraction Lambri’s focus on architectural interiors reveals abstract patterns and rhythms in spatial design. Her work suggests a compositional archetype where architectural form informs musical structure.

    • Potential Application: Spatially informed scores that integrate architectural schematics as part of the notational language.


Film and Photography as a Reality of the Notational Mechanism

Photography and film extend notation beyond its static, paper-bound origins, transforming it into a dynamic, performative medium. By integrating photographic and cinematic techniques, contemporary composers can create scores that challenge the traditional relationship between composer, performer, and audience.

  1. Temporal Layering Inspired by filmic techniques such as double exposure, motion blur, and time-lapse, scores can incorporate temporal layering to represent overlapping musical events. This dynamic visuality fosters a synesthetic experience, where performers must interpret the interplay of time and sound visually.

  2. Synthetic Landscapes Experimental photography’s ability to fabricate synthetic environments provides a model for scores that simulate sonic landscapes. By using manipulated images as part of the notation, composers can evoke specific atmospheres or emotional states.

  3. Interactive Visuals Techniques from photographers like Thomas Demand and Todd Hido, who manipulate perspective and scale, can inform interactive scores, where the performer’s physical relationship to the score affects its interpretation.


Case Studies: Compositional Archetypes Inspired by Photography

  1. Jennifer Walsh’s Fragmented Temporalities

    • Hypothetical ScoreTemporal Oscillations combines fragmented text, photographic overlays, and animated film projections to create a disjointed but immersive performative experience.
    • Interpretive Challenge: Performers must reconcile visual and sonic disjunctions, navigating between simultaneous notational layers.
  2. Andreas Gursky’s Monumental Density

    • Hypothetical ScoreStrata uses large-format visuals to present dense notational grids. Performers must engage with the score as a vast sonic terrain, moving fluidly between micro and macro perspectives.
    • Impact: Expands the performer’s spatial and cognitive engagement with the score.
  3. Thomas Demand’s Constructed Realities

    • Hypothetical ScoreSimulacra integrates architectural diagrams, photographic reconstructions, and neologistic text, challenging performers to interpret an artificial musical environment.
    • Philosophical Implication: Questions the authenticity of the score as a representational medium.


Theoretical Implications: Breaching Unknown Territories

The integration of experimental photographic techniques into music notation destabilizes traditional hierarchies and encourages exploration into unknown territories. By treating the score as a site of visual, sonic, and material interaction, composers create a performative reality that transcends the boundaries of music, architecture, and visual art.

  • The Performer as Architect: The performer becomes a builder of meaning, assembling fragments of text, image, and sound into a coherent whole.
  • The Score as Artifact: Scores are no longer ephemeral instructions but enduring, multi-sensory artifacts that engage audiences beyond the concert hall.
  • The Audience as Participant: Photographic scores invite the audience to engage with the visual dimension of performance, transforming the act of listening into an immersive experience.


Conclusion: A New Aesthetic for Music Notation

The experimental techniques of photographers like Jennifer Walsh, Andreas Gursky, and Thomas Demand offer a radical aesthetic model for the future of music notation. By embracing fragmentation, materiality, and temporal complexity, these visual methodologies inspire a new compositional archetype that blurs the lines between sound, space, and visuality.

As photography and film become integral to the reality of the notational mechanism, they open pathways to unknown artistic territories, redefining how music is created, performed, and experienced. This interdisciplinary convergence signals the emergence of a profoundly modern aesthetic...one that situates music not as a solitary art form but as a resonant structure within a broader architectural and visual context.

"Yet The Star Enjoys Autonomy" for Bass


"Yet The Star Enjoys Autonomy"

for Bass

Bil Smith Composer

Link to PDF Score File





"The Kindly Machines" for Bass Clarinet

"The Kindly Machines" 

for Bass Clarinet

Bil Smith Composer

(2025)

Theoretical and Aesthetic Considerations of “The Kindly Machines” for Bass Clarinet by Bil Smith

by Markus Birnbaum

Bil Smith’s “The Kindly Machines” operates within a discursive zone that destabilizes conventional music notation, merging material culture, semiotic density, and performative ambiguity into a single score-object. The page evokes an epistemology of fractured legibility, situated at the crossroads of conceptual art, post-structuralist theory, and contemporary composition. It does not direct the performer toward a singular sonic outcome, but instead insists upon interpretive agency and embodied exploration.

At the score’s center lies a sculptural tableau: what appears to be a photographic or rendered grid of compressed, industrially wrapped packages, each with varying sheen, opacity, and chromatic temperature. This imagery displaces the primacy of notes or staves, suggesting instead a syntax of objects. The performer is positioned as an archaeologist of material semiotics, interpreting density, contour, weight, and implied texture as sonic provocations.

Notational Philosophy

Smith’s approach reflects an explicit turn away from teleological composition toward what might be termed non-linear performative cartography. The visual system resists hierarchy.  His numbers, grids, symbols, and objects operate without a centralized logic. In this way, the score invokes the aleatoric structures of John Cage, while visually recalling the architectonic syntax of Sol LeWitt and the visual fragmentation of Mark Lombardi's diagrammatic drawings. The performance of this piece is not only musical but investigative serving as an excavation of surfaces.

Aesthetics of Refusal

This page resists the rationalism of classical modernist notation. In the tradition of Dieter Roth or Hanne Darboven, text, number, and structure are conflated and abstracted. The grid, often a symbol of order, becomes here a space of potential collapse or infinite recursion. Numbers are scattered and color-coded, detached from any clear metric function, behaving more like Deleuzean rhizomes than linear indicators.

Further, the embedded symbols (e.g., the pink silhouette, the blue 8.03, the mirrored 7.118) function less as instructions and more as residuesto imagined processes. These may allude to biochemical weights, timestamps, or even emotive instructions. Jacques Derrida’s concept of diffĂ©rance is apt here.  The meaning of these signs is perpetually deferred, never fixed, and always negotiated anew by the performer.

Performativity and Objecthood

The presence of wrapped forms suggests an engagement with materialism and post-object art. The performer must decode not just symbols, but objecthood itself. This is reminiscent of Thomas Hirschhorn’s bricolage installations, in which debris, commodity, and text are layered into critical density. Similarly, Smith’s score merges the banal and the cryptic, making no distinction between high concept and packaging material.

A Musical Artefact of Ambiguity

The bass clarinet becomes an instrument of friction.  It is literally grinding against the granularity of the visual field. This may call for techniques that are gestural, timbral, or even choreographic. The inclusion of expanded notation elements and pictographic suggestions de-instrumentalizes the act of performance. It echoes Fluxus sensibilities, where the distinction between performer and observer collapses, and where notation becomes performance in itself.

Conclusion

“The Kindly Machines” is not a score in the traditional sense, but an aesthetic object that demands a rethinking of sound production as a form of spatial and conceptual inquiry. In its visual logic, theoretical density, and performative provocation, it aligns with a lineage of artists, composers, and thinkers who seek to dissolve the boundary between instruction and interpretation, between language and matter, between image and sound. It is not meant to be deciphered but engaged.  To be contested, misread, sounded out.


 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

More Complex or Less Complex than Sisyphus Redux?

A Surface Construct as a Tablature for the Performer. The Evolution of Composition and the Score. 

 A student asked me is this piece more complex or less complex than Brian Ferneyhough's Mnemosyne or Sisyphus Redux? 

 My response..."Don't weaponize complexity" 

Any part of this new notational system (tablature) can be generated by the functional demands it has to meet, however its relationship to those requirements is not an ethical one; they are not necessarily the nature or true substance of the notational system. 

 The polytypic nature of this new music lexicon (language) suggests that there can be a gap between the way each visual icon will look and perform. For the performer, this notation or pattern can play multiple interrelated roles, each capable of being understood without knowledge or appreciation of the others. One might zero in on a particular coloring effect while another gravitates towards its structural logic. It can also appeal to multiple audiences. 

 In this work for solo flute, here are two pages for the performer to interpret throughout the score. The overlay transparency page consisting of Moire elements lies above the surface construct tablature page. 

 As one pages through the score these are consistently alternating, one transparency Moire based score page residing above the surface imagery construct. The capacity of a surface construct to embody and adapt to changing material information being processed by the performer - information that is arranged to withstand large amounts of geometric interpretation provides a suppleness to the score. 

 At first glance, the page looks like a constellation of randomly chosen imagery as opposed to a traditional stave and notational system. In fact it is a highly calibrated and topologically generated tablature whose overall effect is sonically deep and complex. The interpreter/performer should recognize each page of the score and image itself belies its agility in adapting to different operative and environmental requirements. 

To successfully execute the score, the performer must take an integrative approach which will result in a combinatorial interpretation that performs multiple roles with nuanced effects. In this score, patterns are meant to function as more than a motif or an expedient design tool as they must be able to produce new sonic environments by linking the notation's internal (that is formal and spatial techniques) with extradisciplinary knowledge. 

Their capacity for doing so is granted along three interrelated lines; their redundant qualities, their flexibility and their combinatory logic.

In the end, it's music...it's composition that does not play by all of the rules.

"Seamless Opacity In Exchange For The Promise Of Transparency". For String Quartet. PDF Score


"Seamless Opacity In Exchange For The Promise Of Transparency"

For String Quartet

Bil Smith Composer









Typography as Sonic Blueprint: A Manifesto for the Architectural Language of Text in New Music


Typography as Sonic Blueprint: A Manifesto for the Architectural Language of Text in New Music

Introduction

To think of a score as merely an artifact of sound is a limitation.  It is a resignation to an antiquated system of symbolic constraints. In the compositional frontier of contemporary new music, text and typography no longer serve as subordinate tools to sound but as primary actors in a new architectural language of musical thought. Drawing from the destabilizing visual grammars of David Carson, the tactile materiality of Agostino Bonalumi, the conceptual irreverence of Piero Manzoni, the unsettling constructions of Thomas Demand, and the experimental cinematic manipulations of Jennifer Walsh, this discourse examines how text, neologisms, and typographic constructs architect new interpretative spaces for the performer, creating an interdisciplinary landscape where sound, type, and visuality intersect.

Text is no longer read; it is inhabited. Typography ceases to be merely visual, instead becoming tensile, pulling the performer between interpretative extremes. The compositional regime of text-as-music thrives in this liminality, where the boundaries between sound, architecture, and material collapse into a resonant void.



Typography as Structural Instability: The Influence of David Carson

Let's take David Carson’s typographic disobedience.  His disintegration of form into semiotic chaos provides an apt foundation for considering the role of type in contemporary composition. His designs, marked by fractured alignments and unpredictable hierarchies, resist the fixity of meaning. Similarly, text in new music is deployed as a destabilizing architecture, shifting from instruction to suggestion, from sonic blueprint to abstract provocation.



Take a hypothetical typographic score influenced by Carson’s visual language:

  • Neologisms such as Vistrallic or Obfuscene are fragmented, scattered across the score in disjointed alignments, forcing the performer to reconstruct their interpretative paths.
  • Overlapping layers of type oscillate between legibility and opacity, introducing a temporal instability where reading becomes a dynamic act of discovery.
  • Typographic weight and texture (bold, translucent, skewed) suggest timbral qualities, embedding sonic cues directly into visual design.

Carson’s rejection of conventional typographic order transforms the score into a nonlinear, multidimensional object. For the performer, this is not a roadmap but a labyrinth.  It is a space to be navigated, resisted, and reimagined.



The Tactile Horizon: Agostino Bonalumi’s Material Provocations

Agostino Bonalumi’s works where the canvas becomes a sculptural terrain, its surface punctuated by protrusions and tensions, redefine materiality as a carrier of meaning. His concept of "estroflessioni" (shaped canvases) is mirrored in the material interventions of typographic scores, where text is not simply printed but embedded, raised, or distorted into physicality.

In this regime, the score becomes a haptic field:

  • Raised lettering forces the performer to trace text through touch, linking the physical gesture to sonic output.
  • Embedded materials such as translucent Mylar, stretched wires, or latex membranes disrupt the act of reading, creating resistance that parallels musical tension.
  • Textural contrasts (smooth versus abrasive, pliable versus rigid) evoke specific timbral qualities, translating material into sound.

The performer inhabits the score not as a flat page but as an affective architecture, where the physical act of reading becomes a sculptural performance in itself.



Conceptual Subversion: Piero Manzoni and the Absurdity of Text



Piero Manzoni’s irreverent conceptual gestures such as his canned Merda d’artista, his plinths declaring individuals as "living works of art" challenge the sanctity of artistic form. In the context of text in music, his ethos translates into an embrace of absurdity and irrelevance as generative forces.

Imagine a typographic score that employs Manzoni’s spirit of subversion:

  • Neologisms such as Somaticor or Anaesthovalence mimic pharmaceutical nomenclature (as in my hypothetical pharmacopeia), but their meanings are deliberately left undefined, forcing performers to navigate their ambiguity.
  • Typographic gestures where words are printed upside-down, mirrored, or partially obscured provoke interpretative crises, where performers must negotiate between visual absurdity and sonic coherence.
  • Blank spaces punctuate the text, functioning as silent "intervals" that demand sonic imagination rather than explicit notation.

Manzoni’s legacy in this domain is a permission slip for the composer to disrupt expectation, to revel in the absurd, and to create scores that are as much conceptual provocations as they are musical instructions.


Constructed Realities: Thomas Demand and the Staged Score

Thomas Demand’s photographic works are meticulously fabricated paper models photographed to simulate hyper-real spaces that interrogate the boundaries between authenticity and artifice. This approach parallels the typographic score, where the "reality" of text as a vehicle for meaning is destabilized by its architectural staging.

Demand’s influence manifests in scores that stage text as both construction and illusion:

  • Words are fragmented into modular units, which the performer must assemble or disassemble into coherent structures.
  • Layers of translucent type create shifting perspectives, where certain words or phrases emerge only under specific angles of light or manipulation.
  • The score’s physicality...its folds, layers, and distortions mimic the constructed nature of Demand’s models, inviting the performer to question the authenticity of their interpretative decisions.

In this constructed typographic space, text becomes a site of negotiation, where meaning is as much a product of the performer’s agency as the composer’s intent.


Cinematic Manipulations: Jennifer Walsh and Temporal Typography

Jennifer Walsh’s experimental films, where text, sound, and image converge into volatile assemblages, provide a model for integrating time-based typographic elements into the score. Walsh’s work demonstrates how text can function not just as static instruction but as a temporal medium, shifting meaning through motion, layering, and distortion.

In typographic scores inspired by Walsh:

  • Text is animated, projected onto the performance space, or printed on rotating surfaces, introducing a temporal dimension where meaning evolves in real-time.
  • Filmic techniques that dissolves, cuts, and overlays are translated into typographic gestures, where text layers interact dynamically, creating rhythmic and timbral cues.
  • The score operates as a cinematic sequence, where the performer must navigate its temporal logic, synchronizing sound with the text’s visual flux.

Walsh’s approach redefines the score as a time-based medium, where the typographic and the sonic are in constant dialogue.


Text as Monumental Alternative: Toward a Typographic Future

The convergence of influences, be it Carson’s typographic disobedience, Bonalumi’s material provocations, Manzoni’s absurdist subversions, Demand’s constructed realities, and Walsh’s cinematic manipulations positions text as a monumental alternative to traditional notation. In this future, text operates not as a secondary medium but as a primary architecture of sound, space, and interpretation.

Key propositions for this typographic future include:

  1. Neologisms as Sonic Triggers: Invented words function as nodes of ambiguity, where performers generate meaning through association, phonetics, and context.
  2. Material Interventions: The score as a tactile object redefines reading as an embodied act, linking physical gesture to sonic output.
  3. Temporal Typography: Animated, layered, or projected text introduces time as a compositional dimension, collapsing the boundaries between score, stage, and screen.

In the typographic score, language becomes architecture, sound becomes space, and performance becomes construction—a resonant interplay that challenges the very nature of musical notation and interpretation.