Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The AFTERSOUND Composition: Music That Begins After It Ends

 

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.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

"Codex, Capsule, Cadence: On Notation as Spatial Artifact" by Richard Towns

 


Codex, Capsule, Cadence: On Notation as Spatial Artifact

Refiguring the Score as Object, Site, and System

by Richard Towns


From Scroll to Structure

Notation, once a linear device for transmitting sonic intent, has fractured. In the wake of 20th-century experimentalism and 21st-century post-disciplinary hybridity, the score no longer behaves as a servant to sound, nor a silent intermediary between composer and performer. Today, it often asserts itself as an autonomous spatial artifact...a codex, a capsule, a cadence frozen in sculptural stasis.

To treat notation spatially is to relinquish fidelity to traditional temporality. The staff becomes scaffolding. The page becomes a site. And the composer, no longer a drafter of symbols alone, becomes a builder, archivist, and spatial tactician.




Codex: The Score as Encyclopedic Lexicon

The codex, as form and metaphor, recalls an earlier phase of human inscription before the industrialized flattening of books, when pages folded and stitched offered sequences that coiled rather than streamed.

Within the compositional context, the codex-score functions as a nonlinear archive, where each page or unit may operate independently or relationally, mirroring the logic of a modular system. We see this in Bil Smith's pharmacological circle lexicon, where each notational unit (or "capsule") is given equal epistemic weight, akin to entries in an apocryphal formulary.

These scores don’t rely on a single temporal thread; rather, they present a field of events; of conceptual fragments that resist hierarchy, embracing instead the semantic simultaneity of the codex.

A codex-score thus:

  • Denies the primacy of the first page or last.

  • Invites reading in reverse, tangents, or spirals.

  • Becomes an assemblage of potentials, not a route.


Capsule: The Score as Contained System



Where the codex suggests a flexible architecture, the capsule evokes a self-contained semantic organ.  It presents itself as a sealed vessel of intentionality. In Bil Smith's compositional vocabulary, each circle in his pharmacological lexicon acts as a capsule of encoded meaning, visually hermetic, but internally complex.

Each circle is marked not merely with aesthetic design, but layered with extramusical metadata: pharmacokinetic attributes, synthetic procedures, and routes of administration. These capsules perform dual functions:

  • As notation, they direct interpretation.

  • As objects, they resist legibility.

The capsule-score challenges the performer to decode rather than read, to confront a dense object whose musical outcome is not transparent but induced, administered like a drug, released slowly through interpretive labor.

This aligns with a broader trend in visual notation that seeks to:

  • Encapsulate musical gesture in visual or material form.

  • Encode external systems (medical, political, historical) into notational devices.

  • Prioritize material presence over performative ease.


Cadence: Temporality Rewritten



To introduce cadence into this framework is to reframe musical time as spatial negotiation. Cadence is no longer an aural resolution; it is a moment of spatial arrival, the point where the notational object crystallizes into perceptual action.

Spatial scores redefine cadence through:

  • Topographic logic: Time emerges through the performer’s traversal of space, across a table, down a wall, through a folded book.

  • Haptic delay: Scores that demand physical manipulation (turning, unfolding, rotating) create tactile cadences, where rhythm is governed by motion, not measure.

  • Visual density: The performer's sense of progression is calibrated not by bar lines, but by the saturation of symbol, color, or mass.

Jorinde Voigt’s scores, for instance, blur the boundary between line and phrase.  A single curved stroke may embody multiple registers of cadence, depending on how it’s approached. Likewise, in Smith’s Serio-Constructivist works, cadence is sculptural: embedded within visual form, but only perceived once enacted.

Notation as Spatial Resistance



When notation becomes spatial, it becomes political.

Spatial artifacts disrupt the temporal hegemony of linear scores. They resist commodification through unpredictability, through excess, through unreadability. They cannot be easily excerpted or performed without commitment. They do not serve performance.  They demand engagement.

This shift from notation-as-instruction to notation-as-object parallels broader trends in contemporary art:

  • The artist's book as sculpture.

  • The score as document, trace, or instruction set.

  • Performance as archaeology digging through coded objects to extract meaning.

Toward a New Ontology of the Score

The evolution of the score into codex, capsule, and cadence signals a new ontological space for music-making.  It is one in which the visual and spatial are not decorative, but generative. This is not an abandonment of music but an expansion of what music can be: speculative, sculptural, and lexically charged.

To compose such a score is to engage in architectural writing. To perform it is to inhabit a site. To listen to it is to trace its contours in real time, moving not through time alone, but through form, texture, and space.



The Score Beyond Sound

“Codex, Capsule, Cadence” is not simply a poetic triad.  It is a framework for thinking through notation as epistemology. It recognizes that to notate is to build, to enclose, to resonate.

And in that spatial gesture, the score ceases to be transparent.

It becomes visible.
It becomes embodied.
It becomes real.

The Typographic Score: Ed Ruscha and the Sonic Syntax of Word- Introduction: Typography as Sonic Architecture

 



In the expanding frontier of non-traditional notation, the intersection of typography and sound remains an underexplored yet profoundly fertile domain. Ed Ruscha’s word-based paintings, which treat typography as both semantic carrier and formal structure, offer a compelling visual framework for rethinking notation as a linguistic and performative system.


This essay examines how Ruscha’s typographic aesthetics—his use of displaced, fragmented, and emotionally charged lettering—can be repurposed as a sonic syntax within experimental music notation. It explores the idea of the typographic score, where textual elements assume performative musical functions, and notation moves beyond its traditional role as pitch and duration indicator, instead becoming a visual-linguistic event in and of itself.

Word as Score: The Ruscha Aesthetic and its Sonic Potential


Ed Ruscha’s work is driven by an engagement with
 language as an image, distilling words into isolated, suspended, or distorted entities that demand interaction beyond conventional reading. His works such as OOF (1962) and HONK (1962) present words not as conveyors of meaning, but as sensory objects, forcing the viewer to engage with their phonetic, visual, and material dimensions.
In the context of music notation, this suggests an alternative sonic approach, where words function as dynamic triggers for musical action rather than simply as textual markers. A typographic score, then, is one in which the design, font weight, kerning, spatiality, and distortion of letters inform the gestural and sonic interpretation of the performer.

Building a Typographic Notation System: Key Elements

1. Font as Timbre and Sonic Density
  • Heavyweight fonts (e.g., Ruscha’s bold block lettering) could signify fortissimo dynamics, thick sonic textures, or clustered harmonic density.
  • Light, delicate serifs might indicate whispered, ephemeral, or airy tones, guiding performers into highly sensitive sound worlds.
2. Letter Spacing and Sonic Time
  • Condensed typography suggests compressed, accelerated phrasing or glissandi.
  • Widely spaced letters might imply sustained resonance, delay effects, or spatial separation in ensemble performance.
3. Orientation and Distortion as Sonic Manipulation
  • Words tilted or fragmented in the score function as instructions for bending pitch, modifying timbre, or shifting rhythmic perception.
  • Ruscha’s fading or dissolving text could translate into gradual diminuendos, spectral dissipation, or textural deconstructions.
4. Word-Specific Phonetics and Performative Action
  • Words that contain plosives (P, T, K, B) could trigger percussive articulations.
  • Sibilant-heavy words (S, Z, Sh) might direct performers towards breathy extended techniques or noise-based sound production.
  • Onomatopoeic text elements (WHAM, BUZZ, CLICK) become direct performative cues, suggesting specific instrumental or vocal articulations.



Typographic Scores in Practice: Experimenting with Word-Based Notation
A typographic score does not simply integrate words as text annotations—it treats typography as the primary vehicle of sound encoding.
Example 1: The Sonic Grid of Letterforms
A typographic score could present words in a gridded matrix, where the vertical axis determines pitch range or harmonic spectrum, while the horizontal axis determines temporal unfolding or rhythmic density. Bolder, larger text may function as sound anchors, while faded or italicized letters function as transitional elements.
Example 2: Text as Kinetic Notation
Taking inspiration from Ruscha’s liquid-like distortions, a score could present words that visually melt, fracture, or collapse, requiring the performer to sonically interpret their rate of deformation. If a word in the score visually dissolves, a performer might gradually introduce granular synthesis, microtonal inflections, or bowed textures that fade into indistinction.
Example 3: Negative Space and Sonic Silence
Just as Ruscha often emphasizes negative space as an active design component, a typographic score might utilize blank gaps, word fragmentation, or obscured lettering as a way to articulate silence, spatialized rests, or non-action in performance.

Beyond Ruscha: The Future of Typographic Scores
While Ruscha’s work provides a foundational visual model, typographic notation has the potential to expand in multiple directions:
  • Augmented Reality Scores: Using digital typography that changes in real time, reacting to performer input.
  • AI-Generated Word Scores: Allowing machine learning models to generate new typographic sonic structures based on linguistic and phonetic analysis.
  • Neural-Responsive Typography: Using brain-computer interfaces to dynamically alter the typographic score based on performer biofeedback.

Word as a Sonic Event
Ed Ruscha’s typographic paintings demonstrate that words are not simply vessels for meaning—they are material forms, perceptual fields, and objects of physical interaction. In the same way, typographic scores redefine how notation operates, shifting it from a linear system of musical instruction to an immersive, visually-driven sonic event.
Through the careful manipulation of font, spatial layout, and typographic architecture, a typographic score does not merely represent music—it becomes an active participant in its realization.



Thursday, May 14, 2026

Notation as Fiction

 


Notation as Fiction

The gap between what a score instructs and what it is physically possible to play, and what lives in that gap that could not exist anywhere else.

Every score is a lie. This is not a criticism. It is a description of the medium.

The score tells the performer what to do. The performer attempts to do it. Between the instruction and the attempt there is a gap that no amount of technical mastery can close, because the gap is not a failure of execution. It is a property of the notation system itself. Notation can specify a pitch. It cannot specify the precise quality of the air pressure that produces the pitch, the microscopic variations in bow speed, the infinitesimal delays in the synchronization of ten fingers moving simultaneously, the acoustic relationship between the note and the room the room is having with itself. The score points at music the way a map points at territory. The territory is always more than the map contains. The map is always, in this specific sense, fictional.

The interesting question is not whether this gap exists. It does. The interesting question is what lives in it.

What Notation Can and Cannot Do

Western staff notation is one of the most sophisticated communication systems ever developed for the transmission of a temporal art across time and distance. It can specify pitch to a resolution of cents. It can specify duration through a hierarchical subdivision system of extraordinary precision. It can specify dynamic level, articulation, tempo, and the relationships between all of these with a density of instruction that no other notation system in any musical tradition has approached.

And yet it cannot specify a sound.

This is not a paradox. It is the fundamental condition of the medium. Notation is not a recording. It is a set of instructions for producing sounds that the notation itself cannot contain. The sounds exist only in performance, in the specific acoustic event that happens when a specific performer, on a specific instrument, in a specific room, at a specific temperature and humidity, with a specific degree of physical readiness, executes the instructions. The score exists before and after and independent of this event. The music exists only during it, and no two instances of it are identical.

Every performance of every work in the notated repertoire is therefore a translation. The score is the source text. The performance is the translation. And like all translation, it involves decisions that the source text does not determine, interpretive choices that the translator must make in the absence of instruction, gaps that must be filled by something the text does not provide.

What the translator brings to fill those gaps is not arbitrary. It is the entire history of their training, their exposure to previous performances, their understanding of the work's context, their physical relationship to their instrument, and the thousand small decisions that constitute what we call interpretation. But it is theirs. The score did not generate it. The score created the conditions that required it.

The Notation That Knows It Is Fiction

Most notation pretends otherwise. Most notation behaves as though the gap between instruction and execution is a problem to be minimized, a space where error lives, a margin to be engineered toward zero. The project of standard musical notation, from its origins through its development in the Baroque and Classical periods to its extraordinary refinement in the twentieth century, has been largely the project of closing this gap: adding more performance directions, more articulation marks, more metronome indications, more editorial annotations, until the score approaches the condition of a blueprint and the performer approaches the condition of a manufacturing process.

But a parallel tradition exists. A tradition of notation that knows it is fiction and uses this knowledge as a compositional resource. Notation that does not try to close the gap but instead makes the gap its subject, or its material, or its most interesting structural feature.

Morton Feldman spent much of his career developing a notation that was deliberately incomplete. His use of unmeasured time, of approximate pitch, of graphic elements that indicated shape rather than content, was not imprecision. It was a specific compositional philosophy: that the music he wanted could not be fully specified, that attempting to fully specify it would produce something other than what he wanted, that the gap between instruction and execution was not where the music went wrong but where the music actually happened.

His late works take this to extraordinary lengths. Scores hundreds of pages long, specifying dynamics so quiet they barely constitute sound, rhythmic relationships so complex they require the performer to abandon conventional subdivision entirely, pitch fields so dense that individual tones lose their identity and become part of a sonic weather rather than a series of events. These scores are instructions for producing conditions rather than notes. They are, in the most deliberate sense, fictions about music that could not otherwise be made real.

Impossibility as Specification

There is a harder version of this argument. Some notation is not merely incomplete. It is impossible.

Conlon Nancarrow wrote player piano studies of such rhythmic complexity that no human performer could execute them. He was not writing down music and then finding a machine to play it. He was using the impossibility of human performance as a compositional constraint: the pieces required the machine because they could only exist in the space beyond what hands could do. The notation, in this case, was not a set of instructions that performers were failing to execute. It was a document proving that the music required a different relationship to physical possibility than human performance could provide.

Brian Ferneyhough writes notation of such density and precision that performers consistently report it is impossible to realize as written. Every semiquaver has its own dynamic marking, its own articulation, its own microtonal inflection, its own timbral instruction. The result, in performance, is not the realization of the score but the attempt at the score, and Ferneyhough has said explicitly that the attempt is the point. The notation is designed to overload the performer's capacity to process instruction, to force them into a state of cognitive and physical extremity in which something happens that could not have been planned. The score is a machine for producing a specific kind of emergency.

This is notation as fiction of a very particular sort. The score describes an event that cannot occur. What occurs instead, in the space between the impossible description and the possible performance, is the music. Ferneyhough does not consider this a compromise. He considers it the mechanism. The gap between what the notation requires and what the performer can deliver is the compositional instrument.

The Score's Second Life

Scores have a material existence independent of performance, and this independence produces its own category of meaning. A score can be read. It can be studied. It can sit on a shelf for decades and be opened and read like a book by someone who will never hear it performed and may never be able to imagine precisely what it would sound like. In this condition, the score is functioning as literature, and what it communicates is not music but the idea of music, the architecture of an intention, the grammar of a compositional thought.

This second life of the score produces a strange reversal. In performance, the score is fiction and the sound is real. In study, the score is real and the sound is fiction. The reader is constructing, in their imagination, a music that does not currently exist and may never have existed in the form the score implies. The interior performance that a score reader constructs while studying it is always freer than any concert performance, unconstrained by the limits of instruments and bodies, capable of resolving the notation's impossibilities by imagining around them. The music a reader hears while reading a score is perhaps the only version of the music that fully realizes the score's instructions, because the imagination does not tire, does not rush, does not make the small compromises that performance requires.

Schoenberg's unfinished works exist in this condition permanently. The fragments of the opera Moses und Aron that were never composed exist in the imagination of everyone who has studied the completed portions. Schubert's Eighth Symphony has two movements and the sketches for a third, and the third movement has been completed by scholars and performed by orchestras, but the real third movement exists in the minds of everyone who has studied the sketches and constructed their own completion without writing it down. These are fictions produced by the notation's silence. They are as real, to the people who carry them, as any performance.

What Lives in the Gap

Return to the original question. The gap between what the score instructs and what the performance can deliver is not empty. It is one of the most populated spaces in music.

It contains the performer's understanding of the work, which is never identical to any other performer's understanding. It contains the acoustic signature of the room, which the score cannot know. It contains the history of all previous performances, which shapes what this performance will decide to do and not do. It contains the decision, made in real time under physical pressure, about which of the score's many competing demands to prioritize when they cannot all be met simultaneously. It contains the imperfections that become, in the best performances, not departures from the work but discoveries within it: the phrase slightly more compressed than the marking indicates, the diminuendo that arrives earlier than written and turns out to have been, in this room on this night, the right decision.

All of this lives in the gap. None of it is in the score. None of it could be.

The score is a set of instructions for creating the conditions in which these things can happen. It is not the things themselves. The things themselves are the music, and they require the fiction of the score to come into existence, the way a dream requires the sleeping body that contains it but is not, in any meaningful sense, produced by it.

The notation is fiction. The music is what happens when the fiction is believed.

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.