Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The Score as Thought Experiment: Entering the Conceptual Field




The Score as Thought Experiment: Entering the Conceptual Field

A whitepaper narrative on the technical structure of my scores

Bil Smith

The score, in my practice, is not a neutral delivery system for sound. It is not simply a vehicle through which musical intentions are translated into performance. It is the work’s first arena of pressure. It is where form, resistance, instruction, image, and conceptual instability begin to interact. Before sound appears, the score has already started composing conditions.

This is why I think of many of my scores as thought experiments. They do not merely organize sonic behavior. They test what a score can be asked to hold, what a performer can be asked to interpret, and how far notation can move away from inherited musical syntax without losing compositional force. The page, or object, or image-field, becomes a site where musical thinking is redistributed across spatial design, linguistic structure, visual density, material interference, and behavioral suggestion.

The technical aspects of this work are inseparable from that conceptual position. The score is not made strange after the fact by theory layered onto it. Its technical construction is the theory.

The score as a designed field

My scores are built as fields rather than as line-by-line instructional systems. Conventional notation tends to privilege sequence. It tells the eye where to begin, how to proceed, and how events are ordered in time. My work often redistributes that logic across the page so that reading becomes less linear and more spatial. This is not an abandonment of structure. It is a restructuring of how structure is encountered.

Spacing, density, alignment, interruption, repetition, and visual weight all function compositionally. The performer is not only reading symbols or words. The performer is reading pressure. A large blank zone may act as delay, suspension, or withheld action. A congested block of text or notation may act as compression, overload, or simultaneity. Visual hierarchy replaces some of the command functions that meter and standard rhythmic notation historically performed.


Typography as notation

Text in my scores is not supplementary. It is often the score itself, or at least a primary structural agent within it. Typography therefore becomes a technical matter, not a decorative one. Font choice, casing, scale, weight, alignment, and placement all affect how a phrase behaves musically.



A condensed uppercase line produces a different performative pressure than a lowercase line set with more air around it. A severe sans serif can act with clinical directness. A more eccentric or charged type treatment can introduce friction, instability, or theatrical excess. Kerning and spacing matter because they alter pacing at the level of the eye. The score can slow the reader before any audible action occurs.

This is important because verbal notation is often misunderstood as loose or insufficiently technical. In my work, it is highly technical. The language may appear open, but its visual delivery is calibrated. Syntax governs one layer of interpretation. Typography governs another. The performer is receiving both.

Language as instruction and contamination

I often work with verbal systems because language can produce a precise instability that conventional notation cannot. A note on a staff tells a performer what pitch location has been prescribed. A phrase can do something more complex. It can issue an instruction while also destabilizing the terms of that instruction. It can remain exact in grammar while remaining indeterminate in execution.

That ambiguity is not a weakness. It is a compositional resource.

Many of my text-based scores operate by controlled contamination. Descriptive language bleeds into directive language. Technical language collides with poetic or pharmacological language. What appears to be documentation may become performance cue. What appears to be objective terminology may carry emotional or theatrical charge. This is how the score resists becoming a simple command sheet.

Technically, this requires careful calibration of phrasing. I pay attention to compression, repetition, semantic drift, and tonal contradiction. A cue must remain legible enough to activate response, but unstable enough to prevent automatic compliance. The score should generate thought, not just obedience.

Temporal design without conventional chronology

A central technical challenge in my work is how to construct time when I am not relying on traditional metric notation as the dominant framework. I often address this through spatial temporality, recurrence systems, and layered event logic.

Spatial temporality means that the arrangement of elements on the page becomes a time-bearing device. Distance between units can imply latency. Clustering can imply rapidity or accumulation. Vertical stratification can imply simultaneity or competing interpretive tracks. A page can be timed not by beats but by zones of engagement.



Recurrence systems are also important. Repeated words, repeated forms, repeated image structures, and repeated spatial modules create memory inside the score. A performer begins to understand not only what an element is, but how it returns, mutates, or refuses resolution. Repetition becomes a temporal engine.

Layered event logic allows different forms of time to coexist. A text fragment may suggest duration while an image interrupts it. A material surface may delay reading while a typographic cue accelerates it. The result is a score that does not move through time in one stable lane. It stages temporal conflict.



The role of the image

Images in my scores are never merely illustrative. They function structurally. A photograph, modeled figure, object image, or visual artifact can operate as a cue, obstruction, witness, or parallel notation system. In some pieces, the image becomes the dominant carrier of compositional instruction. In others, it operates by contradiction, refusing to clarify the text around it and thereby forcing a different mode of interpretive labor.



Technically, image use involves decisions about scale, cropping, resolution, finish, and degree of integration with text. A tightly cropped photographic fragment can generate intensity by withholding context. A full-body figure can establish a more theatrical or confrontational presence. Hyperreal imagery can invite forensic reading. Degraded or unstable imagery can produce uncertainty.


Because I often work with photographed models or figures, identity itself can enter the score as a performative factor. The image is not anonymous content. It has presence, and presence alters how the work is read. The score can become a site where notational instruction intersects with looking, projection, and social interpretation.

Materiality as interference system

I do not treat material choices as passive support. Surface is active. Whether a score exists on paper, board, acrylic, metallic substrate, photographic stock, or layered mixed media, the material condition changes how the work functions technically.

Reflective surfaces can interrupt legibility and force bodily repositioning. Thick relief can slow down reading and introduce tactility as a compositional variable. Gloss can produce glare, making access contingent on angle. Fragile or unstable materials can create a sense of risk in handling, which changes the performer’s relation to the score as object.

This is especially important when the score is meant to exist simultaneously as visual artwork and performable proposition. Materiality makes that duality visible. The work asks to be looked at and used, but not always comfortably. Technical design therefore includes the engineering of friction.


Non-standard symbolic systems

While much of my work is text-driven or image-driven, I also engage invented or altered symbolic vocabularies. These may not behave like conventional notation, but they are not arbitrary. They are usually governed by internal consistencies, relational positioning, or repetition structures that allow them to accrue meaning through encounter.

A mark may not denote a stable pitch or duration, yet it may still function rigorously as a vector of action, intensity, attack, or conceptual emphasis. What matters is that the score teaches the performer how to read it through use. The system does not have to be inherited to be technical. It has to be coherent at the level of the work.

This is one reason I am interested in lexicons rather than just symbols. A lexicon permits families of behavior. It lets marks, words, images, and objects belong to a shared environment without collapsing into a single code.


The performer as co-designer of the event

The technical design of my scores assumes an active performer. Not a passive decoder. Not a neutral executor. The performer is an interpretive engine inside the system.

This means the score must be built with enough structure to generate compositional identity, but enough openness to permit consequential decisions. Too much closure kills the field. Too little structure dissolves it. The balance is delicate.

I often design cues that do not specify a single outcome but do specify a mode of responsibility. The performer must choose pacing, emphasis, sequencing, physical relation, or sonic translation in ways that cannot be outsourced to notation alone. This is not indifference to form. It is a transfer of certain formal burdens into the interpretive event itself.

From a technical standpoint, this requires careful management of ambiguity. Productive ambiguity is shaped. It is framed. It is not vagueness. A score must make the right things unstable and the right 

Score-object duality

Many of my works operate in a dual register. They are scores, and they are also autonomous objects. This has technical implications that go beyond presentation. A score-object must function in two economies at once: the economy of reading and the economy of looking.

A work that sits on a gallery wall has to sustain attention as a visual construction. A work placed before performers has to sustain action as an interpretive structure. These are overlapping but not identical demands.

As a result, composition often involves balancing formal arrest with operational usability. If the work becomes only sculpture, it may lose its internal activation system. If it becomes only a utilitarian prompt, it may lose the visual and conceptual density that makes it fully itself. My technical process is often about negotiating that threshold.

Pharmacological, bureaucratic, and procedural aesthetics

A recurring technical feature of my practice is the incorporation of visual and linguistic regimes borrowed from outside traditional music notation. Pharmaceutical language, medical formatting, industrial labeling, bureaucratic documentation, and procedural design often enter the work not as ornament, but as compositional infrastructure.

These systems interest me because they carry authority, neutrality, and latent violence. They appear efficient. They suggest control. When imported into the score, they alter the affective and interpretive climate of musical reading. A page may feel clinical, sanctioned, or diagnostically cold even as it produces unstable performance situations.

Technically, this means paying close attention to forms of formatting that people already know how to trust or fear: dosage alignments, label hierarchies, warning structures, serial codes, form fields, and typologies of official language. These borrowed systems can be re-engineered as musical conditions.

Density, overload, and the management of excess

Some of my scores work through saturation. They are not sparse invitations. They are dense compositional environments in which accumulation itself becomes technique. Overwriting, overlay, visual interference, and informational congestion can all be used to produce tension.

The challenge is to make density legible as density rather than letting it collapse into noise. Excess must be organized. Layers must push against each other without becoming inert. A score can overwhelm, but it still has to generate pathways of entry.

This is where compositional editing becomes critical. I often think of subtraction not as simplification, but as pressure control. What remains on the page must continue to feel necessary, even when it is excessive.

Technicality beyond conventional notation

One of the persistent misunderstandings around conceptual or post-notational work is the assumption that when the staff disappears, technique disappears with it. My experience is the opposite. Once one leaves inherited notation behind, technical responsibility increases.

Every relation has to be built deliberately. The page has to invent its own grammar. The score has to establish how it wants to be read, misread, handled, seen, and activated. The composer cannot lean on convention to do that work automatically.

This is why I consider the score as thought experiment. It is a laboratory form. It tests conditions. It proposes models of reading. It stages collisions between image and action, between objecthood and performance, between linguistic precision and semantic instability. The technical work lies in making those collisions productive.

Conclusion

What interests me most is not the destruction of notation, but its displacement from the center of compositional authority. Once notation is no longer treated as the only legitimate container for musical thought, the score opens outward. It can become architectural, textual, photographic, sculptural, pharmacological, bureaucratic, theatrical, or all of these at once.

The score, then, is not simply what tells sound what to do. It is a conceptual field that conditions encounter. It composes before performance, during reading, and sometimes instead of sound altogether. Its technical aspects are inseparable from this larger ambition. The page is not there to stabilize music. It is there to test it.

After Notation: Reinvention of the Score

After Notation: Reinvention of the Score

There was a time when the score was expected to do one thing above all else: transmit musical instruction with enough precision that sound could be reliably reproduced. Its authority derived from legibility, from codified symbols, from the promise that inscription could become performance through an agreed system of translation. The score stood as an intermediary, stable enough to survive distance, abstract enough to outlast the body that made it. It was a machine for recurrence.

That understanding no longer holds with the same force. The score has not disappeared, but it has lost its monopoly over what composition is permitted to look like. What has emerged in its place is not merely an expanded notation, but a more profound shift in the ontology of the score itself. The score is no longer only a script for performance. It can be an object, a proposition, a visual field, a linguistic event, a curatorial structure, a behavioral prompt, or a site of interpretive instability. It can operate before sound, after sound, beside sound, or in full indifference to sound.


This is what it means to speak of after notation. Not the end of music writing, but the end of certainty about what a music writing system must be.

Traditional notation organized musical thought by rendering it commensurable. Duration, pitch, dynamics, articulation, and coordination were sorted into a visual regime that privileged hierarchy, repetition, and compliance. Even when composers stretched the system to its edges, the page retained a disciplinary function. It instructed the performer how to behave. It defined the terms under which musical action could occur. The page was not neutral. It was a technology of ordering.


Twentieth-century experimentalism exposed the limits of that order. Graphic notation, indeterminacy, verbal scores, conceptual scores, and performance instruction pieces began to fracture the apparent unity between notation and sound. John Cage, Cornelius Cardew, Earle Brown, Christian Wolff, and many others opened the field by loosening the bond between symbol and result. Their work demonstrated that a score need not specify every outcome to remain compositional. In some cases, the score became a map. In others, a provocation. In others still, a philosophical device masquerading as an instruction set.

But even that history now feels like a threshold rather than a destination. What has intensified in recent years is a turn away from the idea that the score must justify itself through performance at all. The score has begun to claim autonomy as a primary form. It no longer needs to apologize for being seen before being heard. It no longer needs to resolve its visual or conceptual density into an acoustic event in order to be taken seriously.




This shift matters because it relocates composition from the management of sound to the construction of conditions. A score becomes a way of producing attention, of staging interpretation, of distributing uncertainty. It may still generate performance, but performance is no longer its only proof of life. The score can exist as a complete aesthetic statement without ever being enacted. It can be collected, exhibited, published, framed, archived, and studied as one would approach an artwork, a manuscript, or a conceptual object. It enters the gallery as easily as the rehearsal room.


In this environment, reinvention occurs on several fronts at once.

First, the score is being reinvented materially. Paper remains, but it now competes with acrylic, metal, collage, photography, embossed surfaces, digital composites, sculptural relief, and object-based formats that resist the flatness historically associated with music notation. The score can be built rather than printed. It can possess texture, opacity, weight, glare, abrasion, or tactility as part of its compositional logic. These are not decorative additions. They alter the conditions of reading. A reflective surface may interrupt vision. A layered substrate may conceal sequential logic. A relief form may require the performer or viewer to move physically in order to apprehend the work. Materiality ceases to be support and becomes content.

Second, the score is being reinvented linguistically. Words are no longer subordinate captions to a symbolic system. They can function as the score itself. This shift is especially significant because language introduces ambiguity without sacrificing specificity. A verbal cue can be exact in syntax and indeterminate in execution. It can invite interpretive labor rather than suppress it. It can create behavioral, emotional, spatial, or conceptual thresholds that no conventional staff notation could easily contain. Language destabilizes the old expectation that reading a score means decoding fixed sonic instructions. Instead, reading becomes an event of negotiation.



Third, the score is being reinvented visually. The contemporary score frequently borrows from typographic design, conceptual art, architecture, advertising, pharmaceutical packaging, bureaucratic documents, scientific diagrams, and photographic culture. It does not merely illustrate sound. It absorbs external visual systems and repurposes them as compositional frameworks. This is one reason so many recent scores seem to oscillate between document and artifact. They carry with them the authority of other disciplines while refusing to settle into any one of them. The result is a form of notational hybridity in which music is mediated through the visual habits of contemporary life.

Fourth, the score is being reinvented as a structure of spectatorship. Traditional notation assumed a reader trained to comply. The newer score often assumes a beholder forced to decide. This is a different relation altogether. Instead of asking, “How do I execute this?” the encounter begins with a more difficult question: “What kind of thing is this asking me to become?” The performer is no longer merely an interpreter of given content, but a co-producer of the work’s conditions of appearance. Even the non-performing viewer is implicated, because these scores frequently stage a crisis of legibility that cannot be resolved passively. To look is already to participate.

This transformation has significant implications for authorship. The old score often concealed its own contingency by presenting itself as a final and authoritative script. The reinvented score reveals composition as a field of decisions, omissions, framings, and invitations. It foregrounds the instability that older systems tried to regulate. In doing so, it does not weaken the role of the composer. It redefines it. The composer becomes less a sovereign allocator of notes and more a designer of interpretive environments. Composition becomes the art of building thresholds across which meaning may pass without becoming fully fixed.





Such work often troubles institutions because it does not fit neatly into existing categories. Is it music, drawing, poetry, design, conceptual art, performance studies, or archive? The answer is usually all and none. That ambiguity is not a flaw in the work. It is one of its central achievements. The reinvented score exposes the inadequacy of disciplinary boundaries by operating across them. It behaves like a fugitive form, escaping capture by any single institutional language.

And yet this is not a rejection of history. The movement after notation does not erase the staff, the clef, the barline, or the discipline of conventional literacy. It emerges from a long argument with them. Reinvention does not mean amnesia. It means understanding that notation was never a natural language of music, only a powerful and highly specific one. Once that specificity is recognized, alternatives proliferate. The score becomes available again as a site of invention rather than inheritance.


What is now at stake is not simply formal novelty, but a deeper question about how music thinks. If composition is no longer bound to one dominant script, then musical thought can unfold through surfaces, images, words, objects, and conceptual operations that were previously treated as secondary or extraneous. The score becomes a space where music reflects on its own means of becoming visible. It ceases to be merely preparatory. It becomes philosophical.

This may be why so many contemporary scores feel less like instructions than like thought experiments. They do not always tell us what to play. They ask us what counts as playing, what counts as reading, what counts as music, and what kinds of attention an artwork can demand before it yields anything like sound. In that sense, the reinvented score is not post-musical. It is post-assumptive. It takes nothing for granted about the relationship between inscription and event.

After notation, the score survives by becoming stranger to itself. It abandons the comfort of being only a tool and accepts the risk of becoming a field. It allows opacity, contradiction, and excess into its structure. It admits that performance may be one outcome among many rather than the single destination toward which all marks must point.

The most compelling scores now do not simply record musical possibility. They manufacture new conditions for it. They are not finished when the page is complete. They begin there.

Friday, April 3, 2026

On Multimodal Stimuli, WordPlay, and the Notational Unconscious. By Bil Smith

 


On Multimodal Stimuli, WordPlay, and the Notational Unconscious

by Bil Smith


There is a moment, and every serious practitioner of extended notation knows it,  when the score stops being a set of instructions and becomes something else entirely. A field. A pressure system. A weather event that happens inside the performer before a single sound has been made.

This work operates in that moment and refuses to leave it.

The composition you are looking at, or rather, the composition that is looking at you, deploys what I have come to call multimodal stimuli: a deliberate collision of sign systems that activates not one reading faculty but several simultaneously, producing a cognitive dissonance that is itself the first performance instruction. Before the hands move. Before the breath is taken. Before the body decides what it is about to do.



The Kay Rosen Proposition

Kay Rosen's SIGNIFICANT, rendered here as SIGN IF I CANT,  is not a pun. I want to resist that diminishment immediately. It is a structural revelation: the discovery that a word already contains within it a conditional proposition about the limits of language, the failure of signing, the paradox of significance itself.

Sign if I can't. The word SIGNIFICANT has been carrying this sentence inside it for centuries and no one noticed. Or everyone noticed and no one said it.

Rosen's intervention and her particular form of WordPlay, operates exactly the way the best extended notation operates: it shows you that the container and the contained are not separate things. The word is the meaning. The notation is the sound. The score is the music. These are not vehicles for something else. They are the thing.

What happens to a performer who reads SIGNIFICANT and then reads SIGN IF I CANT in the same glance? Something irreversible. The word has been opened. It cannot be closed again. The act of reading has become an act of performance which is precisely the condition I am trying to install in the performer before they encounter a single notational element.



The Traditional and the Opalcite: A Productive Collision

The score you are examining holds two notational systems in deliberate tension.

The first is the inherited vocabulary of contemporary classical notation; the apparatus of accidentals, glissandi, tremolos, microtonal inflections, multiphonics, and extended techniques that the new music tradition has spent the better part of a century developing and codifying. These elements carry weight. They carry history. They carry the memory of everyone who has ever sat before them with an instrument and tried to understand what they were being asked to do.

The second is Opalcite, a notational font of my own construction, built from a logic that is not borrowed from any existing system. Opalcite does not replace traditional notation. It does something more interesting: it creates a notational interference pattern when placed alongside it. The eye moves between the familiar and the invented and must constantly renegotiate the terms of its own reading. This negotiation, this perpetual re-entry into the question of what a symbol means and how it means,  is not a problem to be solved. It is the cognitive space in which the performance gestates.





Opalcite was developed from the conviction that notation is never neutral. Every notational system embeds assumptions about what music is, who performs it, what the performer's relationship to the composer is, and what a score is for. By constructing a new system from first principles and building letterforms and notational symbols that carry no prior obligation to any existing convention, I am not simply adding a new tool to the performer's vocabulary. I am asking the performer to become, temporarily, illiterate. And in that temporary illiteracy, to listen differently.



The Title as Score: IN FORM ANT

The word INFORMANT broken as IN FORM ANT performs the same operation as Rosen's SIGNIFICANT, but with a different charge.

An informant is someone who tells. Someone who is inside the form and reports from within it. An ant is the emblem of collective labor, of work distributed across many bodies, of information carried along paths whose total logic no single carrier understands.

IN FORM ANT: to be within form. To be shaped by the container while carrying something out of it. To be simultaneously the message and the messenger. To be, in the oldest sense, the performer.

This is what I am asking of the musician who sits before this score. Not to decode it. Not to execute it. But to be in form shaped by the encounter with these symbols, these texts, these colliding sign systems and to carry something out of that shaping into sound.



Multimodal Stimuli

The conventional score assumes a hierarchy: composer above performer, notation above interpretation, instruction above response. Multimodal stimuli defined as the deliberate layering of verbal language, visual language, traditional notation, invented notation, and typographic intervention  refuses that hierarchy at the structural level.

When Rosen's text sits inside the notational field, it does not caption it. When Opalcite symbols sit alongside traditional accidentals, they do not supplement them. When the heavy horizontal bars of this score,  those thick black lines that function simultaneously as staff lines, as architectural elements, as tempo-spatial dividers, and as pure graphic weight,  interrupt the notational flow, they are not decoration.

Every element is doing primary work. Every element is generating a claim on the performer's attention that is equal to every other element's claim. The performer cannot prioritize. The performer must hold everything simultaneously and then (and this is the act, the irreducible act of performance) decide.

That decision, made under the pressure of simultaneous and incommensurable stimuli, is where the music lives. Not in the sounds that result from it. In the decision itself. In the moment when a human nervous system, saturated with competing sign systems, each drawing on different cognitive and somatic registers, resolves into action.

The score is a machine for producing that moment.





Opalcite as Philosophical Position

I want to say something more precise about what Opalcite is and what it is not.

It is not a decorative system. It is not a private language invented to signal sophistication or to mystify. It is not an improvement on existing notation.


Opalcite is a phenomenological intervention. Its letterforms and symbols were constructed to be partially recognizable and to carry enough visual resemblance to known notational elements that the performer does not experience them as entirely foreign, but to differ from those elements in ways that are precise and considered. The partial recognition is deliberate. It installs the performer in a state of productive uncertainty: I know what this almost is. I know what it almost means. The almost is where I need to work.

This is the same cognitive state that Rosen's WordPlay produces. SIGNIFICANT almost says SIGN IF I CANT. It takes one more act of attention...one more willingness to look at what you are already looking at  for the embedded sentence to emerge.

Both Rosen's strategy and Opalcite are, at bottom, pedagogies of attention. They teach the reader and the performer to look again. To not settle for the first reading. To understand that the first reading of anything, be it any score, any word, any situation,  is always provisional, always subject to revision by the act of sustained attention.

The Score as Total Field

What you are looking at, the full composite of traditional notation, Opalcite, WordPlay typography, graphic weight, spatial distribution across the page,  is a total field. Not a sequence of instructions but a simultaneous environment.

The performer enters it the way you enter a room: all at once, with every sense, before any single element has been consciously processed. The initial encounter is gestalt. The subsequent work of reading is the performer's negotiation with what the gestalt has already deposited in the body.

I think of this as the notational unconscious.  It isthe stratum of information that the score communicates below the threshold of deliberate decoding. Traditional notation has a notational unconscious too: centuries of convention have loaded every symbol with associations, memories, and physical habits that activate in the performer before they consciously choose to activate them. Opalcite creates a different notational unconscious: one that has not yet been conventionalized, one that the performer must construct in real time, one that will be different for every performer who encounters it.

This is not chaos. It is a different kind of order .  It is one that places the generative intelligence of the performance inside the performer rather than inside the notation.



Coda: What Significant Signs

SIGN IF I CANT.

The score signs. It makes signs. It is the act of signing even when the conventional resources of signing have reached their limit.

IF I CANT: the conditional acknowledges the limit. It does not pretend that notation is omnipotent, that any system of symbols can fully capture what a piece of music is or what a performance should be. The score knows its own incompleteness. It builds that incompleteness in. It makes the incompleteness generative.

Opalcite, then, is not a solution to the limits of traditional notation. It is a companion to those limits. It says: here is another set of gestures toward something that neither of us can fully notate. Here are more signs. Sign if I can't.

And the performer, holding all of this;  the inherited vocabulary, the invented vocabulary, the broken word that turned out to be a sentence, the thick bars and the scattered symbols and the weight of all these simultaneous demands on attention, the performer signs.

In whatever form the music finds that day, in whatever body is doing the work, in whatever room is holding the sound: the performer signs.

That signing is the piece.


Bil Smith Laboratorie New Music

"The Grand Neologist" For Clarinet. Bil Smith Composer

 


"An Encounter And An Emergence". For String Quartet. The Full Score (PDF)


"An Encounter And An Emergence"

For String Quartet

Bil Smith Composer

A Commission from Tristel PLC

The Score


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New Notation: The Creation of New Notational Systems - New Fonts - "Pistaballo" and "Crated Palmetto"

In my work, notation cannot remain static if the work itself refuses stability. Contemporary composition requires a language elastic enough to register rupture, accumulation, contradiction, interference, and new relations between seeing and sounding. Traditional systems of notation continue to hold enormous value, but they also carry fixed assumptions about order, hierarchy, legibility, and performance. When a piece begins elsewhere, its notation must do the same.




I create new systems for each work because no single notational language can adequately serve every compositional premise. The score is not a neutral vessel. It is an active structure of thought. It determines how the eye moves, how information is withheld or released, how the performer enters the work, and how the visual field itself becomes part of the composition. For me, notation is not merely a means of transmission. It is one of the places where the work is composed.

The attached image presents two new fonts I have created, Pistaballo and Crated Palmetto. These are not stylistic embellishments laid over an existing system. They are instruments of notation in their own right. Each proposes a different visual logic, a different pressure of reading, and a different way of organizing the relationship between text, symbol, sound, and gesture.



Pistaballo operates through abrasion, congestion, and graphic stress. Its letterforms appear burdened, fractured, and overwritten, as though language were passing through a field of distortion. The characters do not offer themselves as transparent carriers of meaning. They produce resistance. They slow reading down. They force the performer into contact with language as material rather than language as simple instruction. In this way, the font does not just communicate information. It stages difficulty, and that difficulty becomes part of the score’s performative charge.

Crated Palmetto moves differently. Its forms are more orbital, enclosed, and modular. The letters seem assembled rather than written, as if they have been built from rotating parts or compressed into sculptural units. They suggest containment, torque, and internal motion. Here the alphabet behaves less like a stable typographic system and more like a set of objects in suspension. The effect is not decorative. It changes how language occupies the page and how the page proposes action.

What matters is that these fonts belong to the compositional logic of the work. They are not external design features. They alter the score’s behavior. They reshape how notation is encountered, how meaning is distributed, and how performance might emerge from the visual field. They establish different climates of reading. They propose different thresholds of entry. They generate different kinds of attention.

The need for an evolving language in contemporary notation is, for me, not theoretical rhetoric. It is a compositional necessity. New works generate new demands. New demands require new systems of inscription. If one continues to rely on inherited notation for every new musical condition, then the score risks reducing unfamiliar thought to familiar form. I am interested in building scores that do the opposite: scores that expand the conditions of thought, scores that allow each composition to discover the language it requires.

That is why I make new systems for each work. Notation should not arrive fully solved in advance. It should emerge from the internal pressures of the composition itself. Pistaballo and Crated Palmetto are part of that process. They are not just fonts. They are notational propositions, each one opening a different route through the unstable territory where language, image, and sound meet.