Recording on SoundCloud:
"Synerbes" for Orchestra and Electronic Tape Premiered January 17, 2013 at Zipper Hall, Colburn School of Music, Los Angeles, California -
https://soundcloud.com/bil-smith/synerbes-for-orchestra-and
The AFTERSOUND Composition
Music That Begins After It Ends
Some compositions are over before they begin. Others begin only after they are over.
The AFTERSOUND Composition belongs to the second category. It is not defined by what happens while the notes are present, but by what continues to happen when they are no longer there. Its true material is not sound, but residue. Not duration, but persistence. Not performance, but the disturbance left behind.
A conventional composition asks to be heard as it unfolds. The AFTERSOUND asks to be heard in retrospect, in the space where the ear is no longer receiving information but the mind refuses to stop processing it. The piece has ended. The room is quiet. Yet something has not been released. Something remains suspended in the listener, like dust disturbed by a door that has already closed.
This is not simply reverberation. Reverberation belongs to acoustics. Aftersound belongs to consciousness.
A note can end cleanly in the room and continue with frightening clarity in the body. A chord can vanish from the air and remain lodged in memory, not as recollection but as pressure. A fragment of rhythm can keep moving after the performer has stopped moving. The AFTERSOUND Composition is built around that phenomenon. It treats the silence after the event as the site where the work reveals itself.
The listener may believe the piece has finished. The piece knows better.
The Real Ending Is Never the Cutoff
Most endings are misunderstood. We tend to think of an ending as the point at which sound stops, the final bar line, the last attack, the moment the performer lowers the hands or releases the breath. But in the AFTERSOUND Composition, that moment is not the end. It is the transfer.
The work migrates from the instrument to the listener.
This transfer is delicate and sometimes violent. A composition may conclude with a sound so spare that the listener leans forward, still waiting for the next thing. Or it may end with an event so dense that the mind continues unpacking it long after the room has gone still. Either way, the piece refuses to occupy only the time assigned to it. It colonizes the aftermath.
This makes the AFTERSOUND Composition fundamentally different from music that merely fades, resolves, or concludes. It does not settle. It does not provide the courtesy of closure. Its ending is a wound, a hinge, a trapdoor, a residue field. The final sound is less a conclusion than a contaminant released into silence.
The old question is, what happens next?
The AFTERSOUND replies, you do.
Silence as a Host Medium
Silence is often treated as absence, but in certain compositions it behaves more like a host medium. It receives the outgoing sound, holds its shape for a moment, then begins to change it. The sound is gone, but silence keeps developing it.
This is one of the stranger properties of musical experience. A listener can hear the same final note differently after it ends than while it was sounding. The note becomes larger in disappearance. It gathers implication. It turns from event into evidence.
The AFTERSOUND Composition depends on this transformation. It is written not only for instruments, voices, objects, electronics, or bodies, but for the silence that follows them. The composer must imagine the silence as an active surface, capable of retaining marks. Every gesture must be judged not only by how it sounds, but by what kind of silence it leaves.
There are silences that erase.
There are silences that frame.
There are silences that accuse.
There are silences that continue the piece more powerfully than sound could.
The AFTERSOUND Composition seeks the last kind. It does not use silence as a pause. It uses silence as an extension of the instrument.
The Score as Residue Machine
A score designed for aftersound may look conventional, but it is not thinking conventionally. Its real instruction may be hidden in the relationship between gesture and disappearance. A note marked short may not mean brevity. It may mean impact. A long tone may not mean sustain. It may mean saturation. A rest may not mean waiting. It may mean the listener has been left alone with what was just done.
In more visually expanded scores, this becomes even more explicit. A mark may operate like an index of aftermath rather than a command for sound. A color field may indicate the emotional climate left behind by a gesture. A diagram may point to the way an event should decay in attention rather than in acoustical space. An image may be placed not to be interpreted as sound, but to alter the listener’s memory of what just occurred.
In this sense, the AFTERSOUND Composition is not only musical. It is forensic. It asks the performer to leave traces. It asks the listener to encounter those traces as the true field of the work.
The score becomes a residue machine.
It produces not a sequence of events, but a sequence of hauntings.
The Ethics of Not Finishing
There is a certain violence in refusing to finish a piece properly. Not the theatrical violence of shock, but the quieter violence of withholding completion. The AFTERSOUND Composition is often built around this refusal. It does not resolve because resolution would weaken the residue. It does not explain because explanation would consume the pressure. It does not release because release would convert the work into something finished.
This is not vagueness. It is precision of another kind.
To compose an aftersound is to decide exactly what the listener must be forced to carry away. The work may leave behind anxiety, tenderness, absurdity, erotic charge, dread, relief, numbness, or a difficult mixture of several states. But it must leave something definite enough to persist and unstable enough to keep changing.
A bad unresolved piece merely stops.
A true AFTERSOUND Composition continues by other means.
That continuation is not under the composer’s full control, which is part of the danger. Once the sound has ended, the work depends on memory, nervous system, room, expectation, mood, and the listener’s private weather. The composer has set the conditions, but the residue mutates in each person differently.
This is not a failure of the form. It is the form.
The Listener as After-Performer
The AFTERSOUND Composition quietly changes the role of the listener. Listening does not end when the sound ends. The listener becomes an after-performer, continuing the piece internally through recollection, distortion, resistance, and return.
This is why certain musical moments reappear later with no invitation. Hours after a performance, while crossing a street or opening a refrigerator, the listener may suddenly hear the piece again, not as memory exactly, but as a recurrence. A small detail returns altered. A silence returns louder than before. A sound that seemed minor becomes central. The piece, which appeared finished, has been working in secret.
This delayed action is one of the most beautiful and unnerving capacities of music. Sound disappears, but it does not always leave. The AFTERSOUND Composition makes that contradiction its governing principle.
It does not ask, what can music express while it is sounding?
It asks, what can music implant?
Against the Monument
The AFTERSOUND Composition is not interested in monumentality in the usual sense. It does not need scale, mass, grandeur, or extended architecture. A tiny piece can produce an immense aftermath. A nearly empty gesture can leave more behind than a page of virtuosity. The important question is not how much material the composer presents, but how effectively the material changes the silence around it.
This places the AFTERSOUND Composition close to certain forms of visual art, where the object is only part of the encounter. A small sculpture can reorganize the room. A photograph can alter the memory of a place it never occupied. A single word on a wall can continue speaking long after the viewer turns away.
So too with music. The composition may be brief, sparse, even evasive. But if it changes the listener’s relation to the silence that follows, it has expanded beyond its apparent limits.
The monument is not the piece.
The monument is the residue it leaves in perception.
Composing the Unheard Continuation
To write an AFTERSOUND Composition is to compose beyond audibility. The composer must imagine the unheard continuation as part of the work’s structure. What does the last sound do after it dies? What does the listener still feel responsible for? What has been left unresolved because it must remain alive outside the piece?
This kind of composition cannot be measured only by the score, the recording, or the clock. Its success occurs in the interval after documentation fails. A recording may capture the sound, but not the exact temperature of the room after the sound. A score may indicate the event, but not the private persistence it triggers. The work’s most important activity may happen where notation cannot follow.
That is the strange authority of the AFTERSOUND Composition. It accepts that music is not finished by ending. It accepts that disappearance can be a compositional material. It accepts that silence is not empty, but charged with whatever has been placed inside it.
The piece ends.
The aftersound begins.
And somewhere in that continuation, after the performer has stopped, after the page has gone still, after the audience has started to breathe again, the composition finally becomes what it was built to be.



















