Saturday, March 7, 2026

"A Miraculous Positional Memory". For Alto Clarinet and Baritone Horn. The Score



"A Miraculous Positional Memory"

For Alto Clarinet and Baritone Horn

Bil Smith Composer

The Full Score:














Richter and Fluxus Inspired Score for Contrabass Clarinet

 



My score for Solo Contrabass Clarinet, inspired by both Gerhard Richter's "Strips" paintings and Fluxus practices, offers a unique synthesis of visual art, randomness, traditional notation, and intermedia. It challenges the very notion of traditional musical composition, blurring the boundaries between auditory experience and visual interpretation, extending into a realm where technology, pictorial reflection, and radical artistic opposition converge.


Gerhard Richter’s Strips and Pictorial Expansion


Richter’s "Strips" paintings, which emerge from slicing his abstract canvases into horizontal strips and then reassembling them into new configurations, serve as the conceptual bedrock for the score. The "Strips" paintings are not mere reproductions but are fusions of past painterly gestures and digital manipulation. They acknowledge the historical baggage of painting, while actively engaging with technology's influence, a kind of digital mourning for the traditional canvas, transformed through modern tools.


The inspiration from Richter’s work can be seen as a metaphor for the digital fragmentation of experiences: the sonic and visual worlds splintered and yet reorganized into something unfamiliar, but still deeply tied to their origins. Similarly, in this score, the musical ideas are deliberately fragmented—dissected and reassembled—inviting the performer and listener to experience sonic "strips" that are constantly recombining.


The score’s format, consisting of individual cards housed within a Fluxus-like box, mirrors this fractured yet cohesive approach. Each card, akin to Richter’s strips, provides a segment of sound, a piece of the overall structure that the performer can reassemble, much like an abstract collage of sonic moments. These moments defy linearity, embracing the Fluxus ethos of randomness and recombination.


Fluxus and the Intermedia Approach


The Fluxus movement, as described by Dick Higgins in his coining of the term "intermedia," sought to dissolve the boundaries between different forms of art—painting, music, performance, and even life itself. The Fluxus artists were deeply involved in using everyday objects, exploring chance, and breaking down the formal constraints that separated one genre from another. In this composition, the score’s DIY aesthetic, where the performer must physically interact with the cards, directly engages with Fluxus' spirit of anti-commercialism, collaboration, and experimentation.


Found materials and randomness, hallmarks of Fluxus compositions, are central to the performance. Here, the cards act as modular components—no single "right" way exists to perform the piece. The contrabass clarinet, with its broad tonal palette and capacity for extreme textures, lends itself to this improvisational style. The performer, much like an intermedia artist, must become a collaborator with the score—interpreting, organizing, and performing it with creative agency.


Technology, Pictorial Mourning, and Resistance


The idea of pictorial mourning—mourning the loss of the traditional canvas in the digital age—extends into the sonic realm in this score. The score’s use of Richter’s fragmented approach can be seen as an act of defiance against the totalizing claims of technology over art, in this case, over musical notation. Just as Richter’s "Strips" reflect the impact of digital technology on painting, this score reflects how digital culture has transformed musical composition and performance.


Here, the score does not regress into nostalgia for classical musical forms but instead confronts technology by using it to further challenge and subvert traditional musical expectations. Each card in the Fluxus box is an "act of mourning" for the disappearing boundary between sonic experience and technological mediation, yet also a celebration of the possibilities opened up by these very technologies.


The juxtaposition of quasi-traditional Western notation with photorealism also serves to reflect this confrontation. Photorealist notation, in this case, rejects the usual intent of notation to represent a world of feeling or motion and instead mirrors how a camera would capture the world—cold, detached, and exact. This detachment underscores the idea that music, like painting, has evolved under the shadow of technology and is now seen through a lens of distillation, a “camera’s” version of what we once perceived as deeply human and emotional.


The Performer’s Role and the Idea of Agency


The performer becomes more than just an interpreter—they are an active creator, engaging with the score as a dynamic, malleable construct. The "strip-like" fragments of notation and their reassembling reflect the performer's agency, much like a Fluxus artist assembling found objects into new configurations. The contrabass clarinetist, in this new score, becomes similarly empowered. They take on the role of both performer and curator, crafting a narrative from fragmented, non-linear parts.


Each card, like Richter’s strips, could be seen as a miniaturized, self-contained world. When assembled, the cards form an expansive and unpredictable sonic landscape, reflecting the performer's choices. This reciprocal oscillation between performer and notation forms the core of the piece—creating a living dialogue between sound, visual art, and performative intent.





Thoughts on Bespoke Performance Notes

 


Thoughts on Bespoke Performance Notes


I have found in my compositions, particularly those that utilize alternative notational systems, the traditional approach of providing uniform performance notes often falls short in capturing the unique essence of each performance. This realization has led me to adopt a personalized approach, one that respects and harnesses the individuality of each performer. Like a tailor crafting a bespoke suit, I write customized performance notes for each of my compositions, ensuring they fit the musician's technical and interpretative prowess .


I begin with a simple, yet essential step: getting to know the performer. By requesting recordings of their previous performances, I engage in a process akin to reading a personal diary. These recordings offer a glimpse into their technical skills, interpretative abilities, and, most importantly, their unique musical voice.


Once the essence of the performer is understood, the task of tailoring the performance notes begins. This process is not just about adjusting the technicalities to suit the performer's skills but about aligning the composition's soul with the performer's spirit. The performance guidance is crafted to resonate with the musician's strengths, to challenge them appropriately, and to guide them in interpreting the composition in a way that is both true to its essence and their own.



In music, as in life, one size does not fit all. A composition, especially one that deviates from traditional notation, demands a unique interpretation each time it is performed. Standardized performance notes, while providing a foundation, often limit the performer's ability to fully express themselves and the composition. By providing customized guidance, I open a world of possibilities, allowing the performer to explore the depths of the composition and their relationship with it.



Alternative notational systems, by their very nature, invite a broader range of interpretation. They are not bound by the rigid structures of traditional music notation, offering instead a canvas on which the performer can paint their interpretation. Customized performance notes serve as the brushes and colors, chosen specifically for the artist at hand, allowing them to fully realize the potential of these innovative systems.



The result of this tailored approach is a performance that is not just a rendition of a composition but a conversation between the composer, the performer, and the audience. It is a performance that breathes with the life of the musician, infused with their personality, their emotions, and their story. This approach does not just elevate the quality of the performance; it transforms it into an intimate, personal experience for everyone involved.



This approach acknowledges that every musician brings something unique to the table, and it is this uniqueness that breathes life into a composition. By tailoring the performance notes to the artist's essence, I not only honor their individuality but also enrich the musical experience for all.

Intuitive Compositional Tablatures: The Circos Development Tool

"Dendon" for Solo Tuba (2018)



"I Think I Am Rich" for Tuba and James Trussart Steel Deville Electric Guitar


Circos is a novel software program  for visualizing data and information. It visualizes data in a circular layout — this makes Circos ideal for exploring relationships between objects or positions. Circos was initially designed for displaying genomic data (particularly cancer genomics and comparative genomics) and molecular biology.

"Temperance Meant Swimming Through The Heat" For Accordion and Schilke 'G' Trumpet

"Vague Emotional Overflow" for Trombone and Flute


"Craterfaced Woman Sell Sugarcane Juice In Plastic Bags" for Three Sopranos

"Extremity, Such As It Is, Half-Mercifully Attenuates Itself By Being Quotidian"
For Oboe and English Horn

Composers at Laboratorie New Music have been working on modifications of the Circos program to create a systematic, fluid tablature system to facilitate compositional structure.  The notion to explore this powerful visualization tool came about from a separate study we were conducting on the implications of 'Big Data' on outcomes relating to visualization and experimental musical tablatures.


Partial element (utilizing Circos) from one of the pages of the score for "Partitions: Cambics Alive in Sensient Amplules" for Chamber Septet.  World Premiere, April, 2014 with Renee Baker and The Chicago Modern Orchestra


















The potential of big data is immense.  Eliminate constraints on the size, type, source and complexity of relevant data, and composers can ask bolder questions. Technology limitations that once required sampling or relied on assumptions to simplify high-density data sets have fallen to the march of technology. 


Protracted processing times and dependencies on batch feeds are being replaced by on-demand results and near real-time visibility.  As we see it from a musical perspective, this transformation not only changes the questions that we can ask, but it also requires new tools and techniques for composers to get to the answers.


"A variety of crucial, and still most relevant ideation about nothingness or emptiness in music has gained profound philosophical prominence in the history and development of complex notation. These traditions share the insight that in order to explain both the great mysteries and mundane facts about our performance experience as composers, ideas of ‘nothingness’ must play a primary role. Contrarian to this theorem, I present this architecture that is at once interpretative and constructive."

- Bil Smith Composer

Paper, Model, Score: Thomas Demand’s Afterimage in My Compositional Surfaces

 

Paper, Model, Score: Thomas Demand’s Afterimage in My Compositional Surfaces

Thomas Demand’s pictures have followed me into the studio for years—not as images to imitate, but as a procedure to inhabit. He reconstructs a scene as a full-scale paper model, photographs the model, then removes the evidence. What remains is an image twice mediated: a photograph of a construction that stands in for an earlier photograph. That double remove—world → model → image—reconfigures how we look. We scan for joins, edges, the flatness of paper. We learn to read surface for labor.

That lesson is foundational to my scores. I also insert a built intermediary between source and outcome. Where Demand builds rooms, I build pages: hyper-notational surfaces that must be navigated rather than merely executed. The performance you hear is not a translation of instructions; it is an excavation of a constructed field.

Thomas Demand's "Control Room"

From Photograph of a Model to Model for a Score

Demand’s practice taught me to distrust directness. In my work, I stage a sequence: concept → model (visual, typographic, photographic) → notational object → performance. Portrait sessions with models, tilt-shift photography, and photo-real fragments feed the page; the page is then collaged with blocks, legends, and vectors—the “Brutalist Tablatures,” among others—that turn notation into terrain. Like Demand’s sets, these pages are not neutral carriers; they are architectures that record the choices of their making and demand new choices from readers.

The effect in both cases is similar: a viewer or performer must confront the intermediary. The work refuses to disappear into fluency.



Objecthood as Method (Not Decoration)

Demand’s dye-rich prints condense time and manual procedure into surface. I aim for an analogous condensation: metallic powders, conductive inks, thermochromic and photochromic layers, dense graphite, aluminum supports. These are not embellishments. They are operational materials that change the kinetics of reading—how light grazes a line, how a block occludes, how a legend becomes legible only at a particular angle or distance. The page controls tempo before a single sound is made.

In rehearsal this has consequences. Performers negotiate wayfinding—landmarks, corridors, cul-de-sacs—rather than counting alone. The score becomes site: not a tape to be unspooled but a place where decisions are staged and restaged.



Spatial Resistance

When notation turns spatial, it becomes political. The linear staff over-optimizes for excerptability, logistics, and product. A spatial score resists all three. It cannot be skimmed, clipped into “best bars,” or sight-read on short call. It costs rehearsal, and that cost is the point: time redirected from efficiency to attention, from throughput to co-presence.

This is where Demand’s ethic touches mine most directly. His pictures slow spectatorship by making the image slightly “wrong”—convincing yet off, familiar yet modeled. My scores slow performance by making the page thick—fields of potential that frustrate frictionless delivery. In both cases, the work’s difficulty is not punitive; it is repairing. It restores our capacity to read with care.



Instruction, Trace, Object

I’ve long been drawn to the hinge where instruction becomes object. In my practice, the score is simultaneously:

  • Instruction (it can be played),

  • Trace (it records a process of construction, including failures),

  • Object (it holds on the wall, on a table, as a sculpture of information).

Demand’s model/photograph dynamic clarified this for me. We both use an interposed artifact to change the terms of reception. For him, the paper room reforms the photograph. For me, the constructed page reforms the performance. In both, the intermediary is generative, not ancillary.


Reading as Archaeology

Performing these works is an archaeological practice. Players read for seams: where instructions thicken, where textures contradict, where legends fork. Annotations accumulate; each realization leaves residue for the next. The work grows by stratigraphy, not by a single definitive text. Demand’s destroyed sets are gone, but their logic remains legible in the image; my earlier drafts are gone, but their logic is fossilized in the final page. We meet our audiences (and performers) at the surface where that history has been compacted.

Curatorial Notes (from the Studio Outward)

If these pages enter the gallery, I prefer they be treated as sites, not illustrations for a performance that “really matters.” Show the scores at scale, with vantage points that enable mapping—overhead tables, fold-outs, oblique sightlines that catch reflective inks. Present rehearsals, marginalia, and multiple realizations as parallel artifacts, not documentation. The point is to stage the same demand these works make in the rehearsal room: engage the intermediary.



Influence, Precisely Named

Demand didn’t give me a look to borrow; he gave me a logic to adapt:

  1. Build the intermediary (model/page) that stands between source and outcome.

  2. Harden process into surface (photograph/score) so that labor becomes legible.

  3. Compel a new literacy in the viewer/performer—reading for joins, routes, and residues rather than for instant legibility.

That sequence continues to shape my compositions. It is why some pages appear obstinate; why blocks sit where common sense says “clear the path”; why certain legends seem too local or contingent. They are local and contingent—by design. The page is a model of a situation, not a shortcut through it.

Coda: Afterimage

I often think of Demand’s pictures as afterimages of making. My scores aspire to the same: to be notational afterimages that hold, in their complication, the memory of the processes that produced them and the performances they will provoke. If the work asks more of the reader, it is because I want the page to look back—politely, firmly—and say: the intermediary is where meaning starts.